Newspaper Page Text
J’lje 'Toecoa -News
i m . keese. 7 Editors Slid Proprietors,
t. J. CHRISTY,'
TO THE PfBLIC.
Both from my inf ere-t in the
pro-^nt an 1 the future of Toccoa
iu>d ................. from force of circumstances I
again assume a one-half interest in
the me Toccoa loctoA Nfws A^imeruie Neither the pm
lev nor the politics of the News
* ill bo altered, except that, as Mr.
Christy believes in the 10 to 1 free
ni Ivor movement and I do not, we
Will drop the discussion of the fl-
liable paper, and we ask only such
Support ^nnnort as as we we shall shall merit merit.
A. E. Keese.
Col. B.H. Richardson, editor and
proprietor of tne Gonimhus
quirer-Sun, died quite suddenly at
his residshco in that city, one day
last week. Col. R. was a high-toned
Christian gentleman, a fearless,
ai)le and effective writer, and his
death will leave a void in the ranks
of Georgia journalism which will
not be easily filled. Peace to his
...........
r G.„ , ... \\ m. . Muhoms r , who , was a
gallant Gonoral tn the Confederate
army, died at his home in Virginia
one day Inst week. Though he
Vent “wrong” in politics several
years ago, , he was a brave, , .. ,
and most successful commander in
the Virginia army, and was a true
g ntl niiui in every respect, enjoy¬
ing the utmost confidence and re¬
spect of his fellow-men.
The boast of heraldry, the pomp of power,
And ail that beauty, ail that wealth e’er
gave,
Await, '..like, the inevitable hour—
The paths os glory lead but to tie grave.”
Tho paper trust that is organizing
to advance tho price of paper, pro¬
poses to have a capital of $35,000,-
000, if the lambs of Wall street
put it up, although *10,000,000
Would pay for all their new ma-
cbinory. It is claimed that most
of tho mills of the country 1
paper
Are out of date, with machinery of
antiquated kinds. The plan of the
trust is to make tho people pay the
loss incident to the abandonment
of those mills, or pay the cost of
keeping them in operation. There
ought t<» be some way to choke off
this trust before it gots breath in
its body.
Oi al! tho eloquent tributes . we
have heard and seen paid 1 to the
women of the South, we don’t re-
member a single ° one which struck
us with more force than the fol-
lowing, from the Toronto Tele-
gram:
1 vvi l sing you a song of a wonderful land,
Where the wlieelwomun doesn't exisr,
Where the giri that you love is as childish:nud
bland
vi 5 , , USS , 1,
Wtero skirt- uw Mw, don’t, divide »m, 'the
And the maidens don’t box or make bets;
Oh, the gir sof the South, we assure you with
pride. ‘
Don t talk slang and tmoke Ggurettcs.
Thoro Hbo ctonrlia ( Lwl Lloao hm-
’
. her , queenly , beauty . and
m . angelic ..
purity. iviiritv l May Miv dm she nniw never change, nlmimn ae oc
ftny change would necessarily lower
her from her present exalted posi¬
tion.
OI.TDA AND THE NEW WOMAN
Wo would not commend Ouida
as a teacher of morals, says the
Augusta t hronicle, but few novel-
ists ot tiie day have been able to
construct stories oi greater interest,
"\\ c are not prepared to say that we
should endorse Ouida as an author-
. , dross,
ny on woman s but as a pub-
he oh ". meter known to a vast army
of novel readers, her opinion on
ii,e new ™,anrtl. a
tain interest. tne sareasmot it
may not mnder an appreciation of
such poi lions of it as may appeal
to l he popular judgment. We give
it for what it is worth, as at least
an interesting presentation of the
question , iya wen u known woman,
llere it is :
won»^i% won » i » attfre auire hiw^been^<» naa oeeu so ugly, so uia-
figuriug and so preposterous as it is in
tins year of grace, ar a period when, in
newspap-r and pamphlet, on platform
and in fi ning-room, and in the various
Woman U? iTiniorhi^
tion as a bt iig superior to man. She
cannot clothe herself with common
sense or common grace;-she cannot re-
quaw^like prereknee Zl animals'
tin- for
skins, and slaughtered birds, and tufts
t.-rn out of the living and
crearnrod; slit* cannot show to any ad-
van age le natural lines of her lorn,,
b it disguises them as grotesquely as
mantua-mak *rs bifi her to do. She can-
put go into the country without mak-
ind h wa7sicMr r U gairer"* slie ace';
»nJ shf emuiites *uL
all his absurdities,
cruellies and follies; she wears his ugly
pot hats, ins silly, stifi collars; she co-
pies his insane elub life; and then tells
us that Sreof this parodv, incapable of mi-
tkntive. taste, and destitute of
eommon sense, is worthy to be enthro-
1Ud tile su P reme tvacher of
!»«
GREAT CHANGES COMING.
rhe 1 N v w 5 ork .uuwnng Morning Journal
voices the opinion of thoughtful
observers of " the *’ situation ** ■** wheD 1 it ‘
says:
The discovery that low basic iron
suitable for steel making can be pro-
SSi?S£Si?
try. Hitherto the Alabama iron has
btxn regarded as practically valueless
Sn'Sr^nt^MtSnVLcc^fulfy
? n nvm«l, as present reports declare,
it may have a tremendous and as yet
undreamed of importance m the indus-
vart quTnri'ci Jot
tins Southern steel by such firms as the
^IPrte^t^t'nf^J^rta?^ Fmhistry
is on the eve of radical and
r c n ~ r )m ’ a P an "S 1 16 ar »®
order for iron P ^ 8 ever sent to
America from a foreign country.
But the iron industry, says the
Atlanta Constitution, is only one
the great Southern interests
which now promise big profits in
the near future. The increase in
the number of our cotton mills in
the past twenty years is the most
remarkable thing recorded in the
industrial history of any country.
Home capital has built hundreds of
mills in the past few years and
- r ~»
are moving their ^ plants Southward,
a , lil)6 of industry
1 activity is 1
^ 10 ‘ ou ^ 1 ^* as come to the eonclu-
sion that the factor y is the
and that it will , do more than any
. ^ upbllildillg
1 &
0 lf coun O - urm u , wagon
and ear factories are springing up,
and there is a growing disposition
to engage in the smaller industries.
A few years from now the Nica-
ragua canal will be completed, and
with that cheap and short water
route to the countries on the Pacific
it without ... . • that .
goes saying our
Southern ports and markets will
® get theif share of the trade of
V astern South America . and the
0rient - We havea practical mo-
‘«>P o] y in cotton, and the world
cannot compete with us in iron,
ceal and timber. All that we have
to do is to manufacture our rpw
material and reach out for new
markets. In another decade the
South will be on the high road to
prosperity, and in another genera¬
tion she will be the richest section
of the republic.
COTTON, GOLD AND SILVER.
The recent advance in the price of
cotton is being used by the gold stan-
^advocates relation between to prove the price thatthere of cotton is no
and the price of silver. They did the
^ in e thin - 5,1 r ‘- ard to wbeat wben ^
took , a spurt up to about SO cts. a bushel
during the summer as the result of ma-
nipulations of the markets by specula¬
tors and grain gamblers. When wheat
dropped with back they dropped the subject
great suddenness. They will drop
the cotton argument with equal haste
before long. They predicted dollar
wheat then; they are pretending to an-
10 co ‘ ton
htate Journal.) It may be thought
criminal in Kansas to predict and hope
for better times for farmers and higher
prices for their products; but not else-
w here. It is quite certain that cotton
has advanced in price, and equally cer-
tain that the wild speeches on the free
coinage of silver in Mississippi and
Get rgia has not influenced the price.—
New Orleans Picayune.
And it may be asserted with equal
confidence, remarks the Augusta
Chronicle, that the rise in the price
of cotton owes nothing whatever
to the gold standard, or the reputed
better times. We want to see high
priced cotton, and we want to see
better times, but it is well always
to deal fairly with the people. The
price of cotton owes nothing what-
ever to the gold standard, and has
not * 3ee11 brought about by any talk
0 f prosperity and good times. Cot-
ton has brought a high price just
for the same reason that ►—> O-t does
that there is not enough of I—i . rt~ to go
around, or it is feared that such i*
the case ,
jf we had another ten million
bale crop we would have five cents
cotton today, Ve just as we had last
>ear, Year ana „ nd if it we had nad only onlv fix- Use mil- m H
lion bales this year instead of seven
and a } ia ]f millions cotton would
probably * be at fifteen cents, ’ for the
Simple T, , reason that , there , Would ,, not
. * to . , ,
t c.img ^ „ o around, ana there .
O
would be a big scramble among the
f °r what there is just as it is
the case with the different coun-
• z.i i. t * 1rJ
ilt ' s 111110 btru 8 ff ie Ior gdia. T+ 11 .
g0Od t4iB " S ai,d Pr0S1,erit - V that the
8 oU1 m ™ =«' e claiming have raised
the price of cotton, why do we not
higher "*S Qer nrices P ri ^ 3 for lor wheat ' vaeat and 8Ud
corn.
It is not better times that make
better prices for cotton, but it is
better P rices for Cotton and the
raising of their own provisions that
make better time5 for our farmers .
It is , wise . not to mistake _ cause for
effect vv ? Dor to place the cart before
the horse.
Siibsoribe for this f apar NOW.-
4*
We take pleasure m placing
upon our exchange list this week.
The j> Rovston 0 y Ston Sentinel. Sentinel. This This is is a a
bf - ht clean ' and newsy little* aheot
punished b C E l -
wish him much success in his new
venture.
rhe Washington Po»t says it h»
come to pass that if one would find
a thoroughly representative Arne-
rican commanitv-where our lun-
3 guago f i 8 spoken 1 by all, where our
customs are r faithfully . perpetuated x .
Bnd where 8 whol «*°“ e and P r<>
nounced national sentiment lies
thS b ° tt0m ° f men ’ 9 ‘bought* and
inspires all their purposes and
look, speak, think and feel like the
men who wrested this country J first
frcm the untutored savag and
afterwards from the tyranny of
priuce s. There stands the strong-
hold of conservatism, the happv
me ditim between tyranny and an-
arehv. the stout, unyielding spirit 1
Q f enlightened republicanism
-
Pope Barrow* Bin
lhe failure of the Constitutional
a^ofJnientprovotling ^ rffrdmthw for the increase
„me Gnu in
many members of the bar to devise
son. othermethod to relieve the heavy
the Coan
additional cost to the state. Hon Pone
Barrow, of Savannah, an able andjlearn-
e d lawyer, has embodied his views in a
bill which he intends to have intro-
duced in the approaching session of
the Legislature. It is understood the
pJan rece i ves favorable CO mm en t
f rom lawyers in attendance on the
Bar Association in Atlanta last week,
Briefly the bill provides for three
^‘ str * ct Courts of Appeal, in which are
<™ brace >> the different judicial circuits
The first district shall be C0mp0 sed
of the counties comprising the Eastern,
the Brunswick, the Southern, the Al-
b any, the Middle, the Pataula and the
Southwestern circuits.
The Second district shall be composed
of the counties comprising the Augus-
ta, the Northern, the Ocmulgee, the
Oconee, the Macon, the Chattahoochee
and the Flint circuits.
The Third district shall be composed
of the counties comprising the Wes¬
tern, the Northeastern, the Blue Ridge,
the Stone Mountain, the Atlanta, the
Cherokee, the Rome, the Talapoosa and
the Coweta circuits.
The bill provides for the creation of
a District Court of Appeallin each of
these districts, to consist of three judg-
es, taken from the Superior and City
Courts, and makes the district court a
court of record. One term of the new
court will be held each year in certain
cities located in the district. The Gov-
ernor shall call a convention of judges
of the Superior and City Courts after
the passage of the act to formulate
rules of practice. These courts will
exercise appellate jurisdiction, to re¬
view by appeal all final decisions in the
City Courts within their repective dis-s
tricts, granting or refusing a new trial;
granting or refusing an application
for an injunction or receiver; dissolv¬
ing or refusing to dissolve an injunc¬
tion, or discharging or refusing to dis¬
charge a receiverr in ail cases of cer¬
tiorari.
Tiie judges who compose these courts
shall select their own clerk, and the
sheriff of the county in which the court
*o session is made the sheriff ex-offi-
cio of the court. The judges shall be
allowed their expenses and $5 per day
" . lie .. t , ley ■ atte tt d the
aie a ce o tlie
District Courts. The costs are ar-
ranged so that it will put no extra ex¬
pense on the State. It is estimated
that the creation of these courts will
relieve the Supreme Court of one-half
of its labors, and greatly facilitate its
w T ork. The bill also provides in what
cases appeals may be taken from the
District Courts to the Supreme Court.
Our Sympathy tor Cubans.
It is not common for Fourth of July
speakers to say much of how largely
the American colonies were indebted
to foreign help for the achievement of
their independence. But every one who
has studied the history of that struggle
even slightly, must be fully
that had not France, Spain and Hoi-
um hed . it may be admitted that these
nations gave their aid from no enthu-
siasm for the Cause of Liberty and from
no love for the American people. It is
adffi !“ ed that ^ was Mlousy of the
Britlsh power and a desire t0 wipe ^ out
former d ef ea ts that impelled the courts
0 f Versailles and Madrid to give en-
couragement and substantial aid to the
colonists. But had that aid not been
extended one or two more c anmaio-ns P °
would likely have ended in the
throw of Washington and his cornpa-
triots, and Clinton would have returned
in triumph, to be honored with a duke-
dom by a grateful sovereign.
While these facts may not l>e much
= Tb^ no t en American ahouf Td thev are nor foro-otten
career as a nation cannot allow to pass
from his mind the timely assistance
which prevented the utter failure of
0 ur effort to become a nation. He
haps cherishes no fonder feeling for the
French, Spanish and Dutch than he
feels for the people of the great nation
against whom our assertion of inde-
pendence had to he made good; but it
«»** «■» »« " a 'e a readier sym-
patby for others who are struggling to
throw off a 1 foreio-n ° voke
*
This serves to explain in part the in-
terest of our people in the contest now
waged on the Island of Cuba,
We do not expect that our interests
will be in any way materially affected
the deliverance of that island from
the domination of oi Spain, but nut we we want want
tbem 10 succeed because we appreciate
the fact that from a distinct national-
to accrue to rhem
greater prosperity and happiness.- Au-
gusta Chronicle.
_____
Z
permitted to bully and despoil Vene-
zuela, while the United States looks on
♦“*"»« «,.!««»«; whether our
lamentlble attitude in the Corinto af-
fair is to be a precedent for all time to
come> England has been bullyin"
Venezuela for many years-is England
rf° on bullying her indefinitely with-
out a single wordlot remonstrance or
That ^^he’oolw ZZZ" ThereTh.e'ld
a confirmation of England s claims.
The United States should ‘arbitrate’
■*».- «. should ourse.ves fix the
that rtonid^i"^ endoT'"’’^"'’
andashamed of the immunity that these
foreign marauders have so long enjoy-
ed u P on the western hemisphere. They
want withdra y n , once for all, and
tec^ofTree want ^' government e 1 nired states ?n th^worid" to come
There Is no desire here to have Mr. Ol-
ney insist upon arbitration with Eng-
land ‘ AV hat we desire is that Mr. Ol-
P “*-
List of Lettsrs
Remaining in the post office at Toe-
coa, Ga., Oct. 1st, 1895, which will be
sent to the Dead Letter office if not
called for in 30 days :
W. O, White.
Wade Webb,
J. M. Vaughn.
-Shinsley.
Jasper Hembree.
Homer Head.
Meridth Brown.
J. C. Gay.
W. H. Aden.
Mrs. Sarah Green.
Mrs. Mary Ann Smith.
Persons calling for these letters will
please state that they are adver¬
tised. One cent postage due on each
one* J. J. BRIGHT, P. M.
October 1st, 1895.
A Tr'p to Batesviile, Oct. 5th.
Last Saturday at 12 o’clock I started
for a long talked of visit to Batesviile.
The sun shone warm, and all nature
was at its best. We chose to go the
“Mountain” road; one man: we met said
it was 7 miles further and the roughest
road we ever traveled, it was indeed
rough—up hill and down—and each hill
seemed to have more rocks than the
previous one. But so picturesque! It
was around the base of the “tallest hill,”
over the next one, across rocky bran-
dies that seemed to rise nowhere and
flow nowhere, so do they have to wind
in and arouild the hills. I was quite
surprised at the number arid size of the
vflllpv« nf porn ^ 0rn in ,n Hmeo tLoSe hills hllls
-
At w.30 1 arrived . at my father’s old
home. Although my visit was Uiiex-
'
pected, -
, , my welcome w r as none the , less
warrh. Do things ever change in that
grandly quiet spot? The house is just
the same, and the branch and spring,
though they did look a bit smaller. The
stove even is in the same spot I remein-
ber it when a child I visited there.
Although tired, I w anted to rove over
the fields. We first went to the branch,
which looked one-fourth as wide as it
did when l was afraid to wade across tt.
Near the spring is a syrup mill, with a
patient mule ploddinground and round.
When I saul I would be afraid to ride
a „ mule, and , gave „„„ , as „„ a _______ reason that .,__. their .. .
ears w r ere too long, one of my cousins
said she thought “long ears becoming
to a mule.”
That night I put on a dress two hun-
dred years old—my great-grandmoth-
er’s. It is rmtde with a tight waist, long
coat sleeves, low-necked, the older la¬
dies wore capes to cover the neck. The
skirt is about two and a half yards, with
a demi-train. .... My grandmother dress- ,
s
es had the same stvle waist, but the
likirta skirts are nrp aiv . ix jards vnrrf-rei.i.. wide. But u.,t- for the ih.
low neck it could be worn now. There
must be thousands of the tiniest stit-
in on0 dress, all hand work. This
generation cannot do such work; we
use a machine.
Sunday morning, as there was no
pleaching, we spent in the fields, gath-
under fences, &c. The folks were some¬
what disgusted that I didn’t have to be
helped over foot-logs. I felt I didn’t
much care if I did fall in the water, it
w - as so clear and sparkling. I saw
where beavers had cut down saplings
an inch in diameter.
Now we are getting back to the house
for dinner. I must pay my tribute of
respect to the rocks. I hie one every
step, and the sharp edge at that. They
o« one e learns learns to to step sfen hio-h nigh and and mis« miss
them. I do not see how they could be
“missed,” though half of them were
thrown aw - ay.
Those people, for lack of a market,
Ie t enough waste to give them many
luxuries. The fruit rots on the ground.
Some mii t »n,y of a morning, an* that
P«* tbem all the milk and butter they
can use - calves get the rest, as
there is no market for it.
They have good crops this fall. I
wish I could go back and go out in
mountains chestnut gathering; How
I did wish for my paint brushes, and
time to sketch those same mountains.
I most speak of their church, (Provi-
deace) and school bu.ld.n* combined.
i be first floor is the church, and will
seat one thousand people. The upper
floor ........ divided into three class .
is rooms.
There are several “cabins, all occu-
pied but one.
The time has come to start for home.
l go reluctantly. We return the “River
Road,” right down the bank of the
Soque, 8 oque, clear clear and and sparkling. sparkling. On the
banks numerous white pine, and spruce
pine trees. All at once I notice the
water looks slightly cloudy. Did the
change take place at a bend in the
river? Who can tell? All I know is
^ ^
uou d ‘"“T strongly recommend e\ery
0De who relatives in the country
“ f «d see them at once, W they
a goot tone.
INSURANCE BROKER
TATA. IT TIE ID
To represent Ihe
W YORK and CHICAGO LLOTOS ■
Reliable ‘ 1 Eire Underwriter^ U
J^SSS&^dSSZ ’ ist3 ‘™
W. S. MONTEITH,
General Manager, Columbia, S. C.
Habersham Sheriff’s Sales
FOR NOVEMBER, 1895.
Clarkesville, Will be soid before conrt house door in
Habersham county, on the tir<t
Tuesday in Nov., 1895,for asli, and within
lowing ♦he legal hours of sale on said day, the fol¬
described property, to-" it.
A certain tract or parcel of land lying in
the town of Clarkesvilie, county ot Haber¬
sham and istate of Georgia, known as the G.
S Hunt house and lot, the same being the
property soid to Mrs - F.. J. Thyler, by Dr. J,
K. Burns bounded by the lot of land of Mrs.
Hunt on the east, Mrs. J. W. West on the
north, Pierre and property Webb - of Mrs. Thyler and La
or II. H on the west, and by
the street on the south, being part of the old
improvements Frankey Hughes place, together with all the
on the same. Levied on and
to be sold as the property of Anna E. LaPiere
IP sadstJ ' a mongage ti ta issued frpni tho
Superior of S. court of Habersnam county in favor
M. Chestnnt against said Anna E.
LaPiere.
Also, at the same time and place, one cer¬
tain house and lb in the town of Toccoa city,
coun tv of Habersham and State of Georgia,
tunning east and west one hundred feet north
and south fifty feet, being a cut of Bowers
lot, and lying on the north side of Savannah,
street, the same being the lot of land pur¬
chased from J. W. Mulkey adjoining of W.
L Vickery on the east, C. H. Oglesby bn the
north being the plaee whereon Nancy Jar-
rett now lives; levied on and to be sold'as the
property of Nancy Jarrett, to satisfy a mort¬
gage ti fa issued from the. Superior court of
Habersham county in favor -of G. W. Ed¬
wards agauist sdid'Nancy Jarrett,
Al-o at the same time and place, a certain
tractor parcel of land lying and being in the
town of Toccoa city, Habersham county,
ocmmeucing of the To thiity feet from the noithwest
corner coa cemetery on the south
side of the road leading from Toccoa to
Giarkesvil'e, and on the wide, west side of Bright,
street, being thirty feet running thence
we-t sixty feet along the same side ofGlarkes-
viile road, running thence south one hundred
feet, running thence cast sixty feet to Bright
street, running thence north atong Bright
street one hundred feet to the beginning cor-
ner; levied on and to be sold asihe property
of A - A. Me A bee to satisfy a mortgage ti fa
issued from the Superior court of Habersham
county in favor of Edwards & Da Tee against
said A. A. McAbee.
.. ... .. , ,
house and l;>t in the town of i'oceoa city:
sa r d lot 2 o 0 feet by 50 feet, fronting on Tq<>
{“.g j.'jj Vhehoutii byDi\ M^Jmiki’n’s^umie
p ace the north by what, is known as :ho Kliza
]™ld on and'mbe soYd a S H ihe° property‘of
C. B.|tiolme> anti Andrew Johnson t • satisfy a
“f'n county ^n fa-JJi'y ofTlh Nhwe/l
against saidC. B. Holmes and Andrew Jolm-
SL 'u.
Also at the same time and p’ace, a certain
lot of household goods t -wit: I tub, 1 frame,
i crate frame, 2 chests, 1 ert. marble, 5 taol >,
2 bureaus, 1 sofa, 1 washs*and 1 bed spring,
2 bundle.- pa is. 1 book-shelf, 1 trunks, 1 hat
ra ck ( 10 boxes staiid. goods, 1 ert table leaves. 1
safe, 1 lamp 4rocker chairs, 3 barrels,
SMSitfeW H
property of Mrs. B. Derby, to satisfy a fl
against said Mrs. B H. Derbv Levy made
:ihei '.etumed ill to nfle by H. A. Kellar. 'Deputy
Also at the same time and plnce, one lot
of land in the town of Toccoa city - , in said
COrfnty of Habersham, lying north of Savan
null street, bounded oh fell north by Mrs.
C. Oglesby, east by W. L ^.ckcry, south by
J. G. Young’s lot containing 400 x 50 feet be¬
ing a cut of S - T* Mulkey’s lot known as
the Bonner lot, running east and wvst 101-
feet, north and south 50 feet bemg cut oft of
the north, and the Bonner lot; levied <>n and
to ne sold as the property of Nancy Jar-
reit and Ed Jarrett to satisfy a fi fa issued
from the lustice court of the 440th district
G. M. of Hab rsham county, in favor of F. A.
Mabry against said Nancy Jairett and Ed
Jarrett.. Levy made and returned to me by
E. T' Henderson, L. (J.
Also.at the snme timeand place, a certainlot
in the town of Cornelia, Ga , said county, in.
blo^k No - 7 of said town, fro iting N. E street
and adjoining lots of B. W. Grant. J. H. Hie s,
Arthur Walden and others, as shown in the
P l£, n <?f said town; same beina - 25x50 f.-et.
Levied Upon and to be sold under t'cc'.ion
1970 of the eodc of Georgia, as the property
of S. L. Fuller, to ?atisfv afi fa issued from
tue Justice court of the 449th distri-t G. M..
() f Habersham county, in favor of Elizabeth
Kimser against said 8. L- Fuller Notice giv-
“ e 5 TmfbyiA W MalteuaxTL d C S "‘ i
, Als >, ai the sume time and place, p-irt ot
lot No. 2 in tbe 10th land district of said
county, the sume being a part of the lot the
place whereon William H. Love lived at the
time of his death, and a reck corner near Mrs.
Love’s stables on the main road, thence along
said road southeast one hundred and seventy
feet to a stone corner, thence south along tiie
factory road and with Bumstead’s line five
hundred and seventy nine feet to a stone
eorner, thence we-t 210 leet to a stone corner,
thence north six hundred and sixty eight feet
back lately to beginning the or Wm. original Crane corner, place, the place
known as con¬
taining three acres more or less. Levied m
and to be sold as the property of A. J. Crane
for the purchase money of the same, to satisfy
a fi fa issued from the Justice court of the
409th di-trictG. M of Habersham county, in
“Ski™lud^e 1 ,'.
statutory deed made, filed and recorded as
required by Section 3654 of the o de Levy
made and returned to me by J. A* Mufienav.
Also, atthe same time and place, that
tract ingiuthe or parcel thirteenth of land (13) situate, lying of and bt-
district Haber
sham county Georga, consi-ting of one
four (44) less of the South- ’SJt
acres, more or
east part of lot No. 122, aggregating 194 acres
moreo r less, and bounded north by Mrs. S. E.
Garrett; on the East by Sam Edmonds, and
jOW 2*"£
be as thewgfrty of X. HOIEW to
0 f Habersham county in favor of The Scot
tisli Ameriean Mortgage Clompany- Limited
vs. tbesa.d N. H. c. Ellard.
^ ‘° h * ?l->thr ala'll
ln * the rwe! f t h district of Habersham
county. JSnWSS Georgia, cons sting of lot No. ( 1 ^ 4 )
aadooe hundred T^ n
andthirty (13a.
thereof ail body of hu’drek p‘"t
in ope three and
e’gbty (380) acres, m*re or lee. Levied <>d
aYid to be sold as tiie p^opedv of Jesse M*
Ta ylor tosafis-y aft fa issuM from the 8 npe-
rioramrt oi Haberi-bum couniy ;n fnvor of
Lbnfted vsAmTeaTd Jes.4 M ."T^vlor 0 ”’ l ’
A. M.GRIBBLE, Sheriff.
THE TGC GO A NEWS.,,
TOCCOA. GEORGIA
KEESE & CHRISTY, PROP’RS
k m —
i ( >
Having taken charge of this well known jour¬
nal, we now appeal to the people tc come to our
aid and assist us in making it
ONE OF THE BEST IN THE STATE.
We do this the more confidently, from the fact
that we are ourselves Georgians—having both
been raised in Northeast Georgia, and loving
everything tending to advance her interests,
and being proud of her past history and the high
position she is now taking. Therefore, we feel
that we can labor earnestly and comscientiously
for the advancement of every interest, of
OUR PEOPLE & SECTION,
Which we propose to do at all times and under
all circumstances, to the best of our ability.
NOW IS THE TIME
To subscribe and get all your neighbors to db
likewise *
Tf Pr Vis-so.. aC;*- m ■ ■tm? <<i*> 1 ■■■grr ft
is 1 'ir
SEND IN YOUR NAME& MONEY
At once, and keep posted on the local, general
and political neWs of the day, as we propose tc
give a full summary of each.
While it will not be a bitter partisan, the
NEWS is
#g TRICTLY J} EiiOCRATI G IN P RINCIPLE^ /
And will ever be found battling for the main¬
tenance of the grand principles enunciated by
Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson and the other
fathers of the Republic.’
ADVERTISEMENTS
Will be inserted at usual fates. Special rates
1. advertisers, Write, or call and see
US and get rates and terms,
T Vte . T are also prepared n to oXecute, L
in the hest
style of the art and at moderate prices, every
J^Lxid Of
JOB PRIMTIN -wl *
Call and See us, or address
KISS® 4 CIRfSfT.
tre CCOA. GEORGIA;