Newspaper Page Text
Ti7 Jn 1 V
I DC i cccoa ewb
risai . E. KEEGE. \ „ j;,2 r ;b rrop^StO.o.
CiftlSTY. /
_
We have received No. 2, Vol. 1,
of a new monthly magazine, called
the “New Bohemian/ published in
Umoinmiti, H ; , by the Bohemian
Publishing Co. It is handsomely
gotten up, filled with bright, enter¬
taining and instructive reading and
is well worth the subscription price,
which is only $1.00 per year.
There is no accounting for just
what these Georgia editors will do
or say. Tliev are “an unco squad,”
v. iio seem determined to have a lit-
tie fuii us they go along, no matter
itt whose expense, < )ne of these
eminent “raunds” perpetrates the
following calumny upon his bretli-
len : “A pickpocket robbed a North
Georgia editor at the Exposition
last week, lie got a free pas a
red bandana and a pair of dirty
seeks. It is presumed the editor
was barefooted when robbed.'
Although a very poor and dan-
go roll h authority on religious
t'*rs, Col. Bob lngorsoll’s opinion
on politics may be worth something.
Ifo was recently asked his views of
the New York contest.
“I think,” ho replied, “that the
city of New York will go largely
Democratic. All that was gained
n year ago will be lost. It was gain¬
ed bv wisdom, by the best of sense,
and it is all going to be lost by
foolishness, by prudery, by phari-
seeism, by puritanism, by pretense
and idiocy.”
We know not how this may be in
truth, but it is given by Col. Inger-
aoll as his opinion, and Ingersoli
i**n prominent Republican.
... We heartily . ~r. -:- endorse and , adopt ,
J 1
the lolloping, sensible , words ,. from .
■
♦ ., he Augusta . Chronicle: . . ,
... •
We ore opposed . to , prize 1 . fighting. _
Its environments . , low
are and , its .
inlluonce . n
bad. But we are J lust as
much . ,
opposed to a man going
aroHiidWith , . , a pistol • , , . his , . liocket, ,
1 in 1 ’
find . A trying . to . shoot , whenever , , he |
*
. affront, , v fancied . .
receives an , , oth- ,
or
fTWise. We: believe in athletic .
training, ana ,. believe boys , and , men
should . , . be . able , ,
to use their .... fists m .
s 'h-deionee rather . than , a pistol. 1 .
♦»ut at the same time, . we don t
think .. . , lighting .. . .
, a leading
aecom-
piishment ■
or a necessary *, evidence
° lu lln<ss t , , ot ,
“* - 11 ie mitts
nu n entirely groat,the pen is might-
>er than the sword.”
___________
NO WORN-OUT FARMSv
A farmer writes to the Rural Now
Yorker, says the Atlanta
t-ion, that after fifty years of prac¬
tical experience lie lias come to the
conclusion that no good soil is ever
exhausted. If once good, it is al¬
ways good, though had usage may
cause it to be regarded as worn out.
In every section people frequent-
lv abandon their farms, or
them for a song and seek new lands.
which they give up in the course of
time. The farmer who' discusses
litis matter in the Rural New York-
«»*• ttatin the past few years
he has purchased two alleged worn-
out farms in northern
and they are now as good -is an
average Western farm year" He tr.A h is
and small • r^t fruits every and on
supplies city
seedsmen with seed, for which he
gets good prices. He once sold a
garden pea to B. K. Bliss for $6,000
aud another to James Yick for
$500, both of them still standard
varieties. Ife farms on the diver-
sided and intensive urine?’ le and
confident that ether farmers who
pay attention to their business can
be eqnallv'successful.
Our Georgia farmers make a big
mistake when they go West in
search of bet tor Ian dk. They should
stick to tlieir old farms, studv the
, best -
methods ,, of farming and studv
the markets, 1 . rri they should . bear .*
in
mind the fact that our home mar-
keu are growing better ever,- year.
our distributing facilities are im-
pro\ ing and our population of con-
sumers is increasing. Ait that they
have to do is to pay the same at¬
tention to fariamg that a merchant
does to his business. Their farms
are not worn out. and never will
he. if they will follow the methods
of the successful fai mers whose in-
tensive and diver-itied agriculture
lias accomplished such wonderful
results wherever it has been tried.
Stick to tbe old farms right here
. Georgia.- llievcan
111 be turned
into the most nroHncfiv* hit- 5 wf ^
•i • i 1
soil 1 U the t country, and , lU - the *t near
future they will, if A nroeerlv P ri worked
- ■,
, build .. , Up wealthy *
a rural popula-
"ion. The idea of wearing out a
J5«d farm IS all
'
GOJ DEN TRUTHS
i i ut jour
t akulable. I he mission of the
journalist is to educate the people
up to higher accomplishments, to
poiht out existing etrorS arid sug-
. re . f lor „ ms that ,. . tend . _ i to . improve • _ .
tin? condition of society, says the
Rome Tribune. There is no work
more fascinating than newspaper
u °i , k. r.-i 1 ne ^ furnishing • ot r useful . i
and entertaining information tc
an appreciative public is a beauti¬
ful calling.
It is for this reason that when a
newspaper perverts its higher call-
ing to ignoble ends it meets with
such swift and well-merited con-
demnation. The press is a great
power,the most irresistible on earth,
and when directed to the accom-
plishment of good deeds there is
no nobler mission in life.
The local paper is the mouth -
piece of the public, and through its
columns the various interests of
the individual are discussed and
through its agency their welfare
and tlieir woes are alike made
known. For that reason it should
be a calm, dispassionate censor of
the public actions of public men,
and a reliable recorder of passing
events. Where no public benefit
is to accrue the invasion of private
affairs is a dangerous expedient to
excite the emotions of its readers
and to cater to sensationalism.
A good, clean, high-spirited news¬
paper is a blessing and a delight to
any community and one of the
most useful institutions for any
people. One that is not conducted
on such an exalted plan and for
such noble ends and aims is a curse
and capable of doing untold harm
to the commonweal.
Andrew Carnegie, f ’ who has been
for f years a persistent . boaster , of the
greatness , ot f Pittsburg T ,•,, , as
an iron
and , steel , . manufacturing „ , centre,
has , declared , , that that
supremacy
, has gone to , Chicago . and , Lake T . Erie •
points. • , x He r had v j , been
solicited for
his , • views m • the plans , for c the ,,
pro-
posed itt Lake Erie and Ohio . River ...
-i bhip • Canal, n i and i it is • on this ,, . sub- ,
lect. . . he takes , the ,, , loss r,
up ot Pitts- ,.
u burg , s supremacy. TJ He UT “It ,
says:
x has , been my , business to , study , , the
question ,• ot • and . steel , .
iron manu-
tacture in the United i States, ^ and i
often r, T I have i passed x in review the
claims , • and j advantages , , of c
various
points, • , rittsburg > • x longer the ,,
is no
b es t point to manufacture steel in
the Ullited States. It takes two
tons , ot - . to . make . , of ,
iron ore a ton
finished steel. It takes only one
ton of coke to make one ton of steel
pig iron. Therefore, a manufac-
taring plant on the shore of the
lakes north of Pittsburg, getting
its two tons of ore by water, has
the advantage of having to trans-
port only its one ton of coke by
ra.il. The lake shore is the place
i.ow to locate new steel works.”
___
PASSING AWAY OF THE CRE-
DIT SYSTEM.
The ruinous days of the credit
s > Tstem are passing away, says the
^His hoped to come
tl S am 110 more forever. But for
phenomenal natural resources
soil and? climate we‘would have
been a bankrupt people. Buying
"’este™ corn to fatten a few dozen
lazor *backed shoats, buying W est-
ern bacon to feed the laborers' who
were employed in growing bumble
bee cotto ^ and Western hay to
keep the lean mules from starva-
tiou *
Just think of a moment. Re-
call tlie condition of things ae they
listed only ten years ago, and fig-
ll1 ^ ouk ^ y° u can, hotv any coun-
try' of ordinary resources could
have stood thin fearful drain. It
some thing remarkable that there
left a single landholder in the
Soutk passed’ through that ex-
^ cueme 1 1 .........V, unprohta »10 - crops rais- •
(A1 “ 1 1 less ipco than fh„ n tHa the co-tot „„u.; culti-
‘
vaticm *
™»gs have changed. Our peo-
'ole are an intelligent f. normln P J
' "
I,, , 'YL , u \ Z , f P aSS
throngti a t ternole ordeal, , but . they ,
are about over it now, ’ and condi- Vrv/nui
tioilS of , life in the South havh ad-
themselves to the new order
ot things-.
LET IT BE REMEDIED;
We copy the following
ly sensible remarks from the
land Progress. It is a burning
shame that the great State of Geo*
^rv’a cLmtl 1 Kn - r. Pd I. r ?tmOniOU3"and ; j
UlljllSt J to her citizens, ’ and we hope IIO P e
the , _ Legislature . ,
now m session will
take immediate steps to remedy the
evil. The News believes in simble L
‘ in all things imm,. and ana on on all ail OC
casions. and we are Satisfied it is
nothing but just that the State
courts as witnessed. The Progress ”
g .
it is a dead shame that a great State
like Gbbfgii will require her cititens
to leave their work and attend courts
a s witnesses for the State without pay-
ing them a cent, even for expenses.
his Many a poor man,with not a cent in
family pocket or anywhere else, and with
a forced dependent on his daily work,
'S to attend court at the call of
a Solicitor or a grand jury: He does
not get a cent, and how he liveS is A
mystery. If the State uses a man’s
time it should pay for it.
Too much latitude is also allowed in
summoning witnesses. Solicitors and
grand juries indiscriminately send for
witnesses and often do not use them.
The law needs changing, and needs
it badly.
Georgia's Plibbf. School System,
We do not believe we go beyond the
truth when we say there is a general
desire throughout the state for an im-
provement of the public school system,
Recently the State School Commission¬
er called attention to the desire, and
suggesteda plan by which improvement
could be effected. He will make some
important recommendations to the
Legislature which may lead to an ex-
question." Such a discussion would-be
a welcome one, because it would draw
the attention of the people to the im¬
portance of providing better public
school advantages for their children.
It is well understood that the burden,
which the people are now hearing in
behalf ot the public schools is a heavy
one, while Georgia is far behind
one of the New England States in the
matter of public education the school
burden on her taxpayers is about as
great. She has neither wealth in pro¬
portion to her area nor the density of
population possessed by any of the
NewEngland States and, besides, a very
large proportion of her population is
composed of negroes, for whose chil¬
dren schools must he provided, but who
contribute very little toward the school
fund.
First-class public schools came with
wealth and population, neither of
which the South has yet to the extent
each is possessed by t he North, Presi¬
dent Dreher of the Roanolw College,
Virginia, in a recent address pointed
out the difficulties under which the
South labors in the matter of providing
educational facilities, and presented
figures showing that the South in i>ro-
portion to her population and wealth
spends as much for educational purpo¬
ses as do the New England States. One
statement that he made' was that in
1894 the New England and Middle
States expended $59,361,708 for educa¬
tion. Thirteen Southern States expen¬
ded $18,873,265—that is, in proportion
to their resources they expended as
much as the New England and Middle
States. Another ?h ! ing that must not
be overlooked in considering the sup-
port that is given to the public schools
in the South is that the Southern peo-
pie have to support their colleges and
universities while at the North such
institutions have liberal endowments.
But as liberal a* we are here in Geor¬
gia iff the support we give it the public
school system could be vastly improved
without greatly increasing tlie burdens
of the taxpayers. We do not speak of
the public school systems of the cities,
because the cities, as a rule, have satis¬
factory schools. It is in the country
districts that the need of better schools
exists, and m many of them the people
would gladly consent to aVi additional
tax for schools if the way was opened
for such a tax. There would of course,
have to be arranged a clearly defined
district school system, so that the ma¬
jority in each district could say wheth¬
er or not there should be a school tax
levied.
With the coming of immigrants who
the counties of $he State the feeling-in
many localities in favor of better pub-
lic schools is becoming strong. In
counties in which the people are anx-
ZTZZ
votingenoughmoney tokeeptheschools
open six or nine months each year,
Such a change Would speedily result in
better school houses and a higher stan-
We don’t know whether or not the
Legislature intends to take this matter
siFrrice plan for bj^domg^o^and the 6 proriding ^
gradual improvement of
^*-^vaun a h Morning
To ’ Our Patrons*
Miss Birdie Mae Jones will hereafter
have charge of the society column of
the News. She is authorized to solicit
job work, advertisements and subscrip-
tionsand to collect for the News. Miss
Jones is one of our most popular and ac-
! CO L ouipnsuea mDlisbed j voun«- oun B ladies laaies, and ana we we trust
a ll our people will render her what
distance they can in getting up items
for lierdCpsrtu.ent, and that the mer-
chants and’htreiuess men generally will
not fail to give her orders for all
-nd local advertising they
w -] s h d on e. Keese & Christy.
— 7~- -7G-
List of Lettsrs
Remaining ... in the post office #t
coa, Ga.. Oct. 1st; 1895, which will be
sent tori he Dead Letter office if
called for in 30 d»ys J +-
w n V’ whjv vv-vAf"
j Vaughn
_Shin He v
Jasper t - tt Hembree. u
Hbmer Head.
fg&F” w. H-. Adenb 9 ''
Mrs Sarah Green
Mr« JUrs * Marv 31arj Ann -t 110 *8rnlrh 5?m,rn -
Persons calling for these letters will
P lea e >tate tlTa " the .. >’ ar e adver- ,
t,sed ' ° ne cent postage due on each
Tw October I , 1st. , _^ 1895, Jl BBIGHT - p -«•-
i—'O * o 0OL T T * If N.
*’ f ' k ,is t. Homer 1$ one of the editors
of the Boys’ Column, and is a young
,nan of sterling worth and wields a
trenchant pen.
One _ ( —)
more sport added to the list.
Hendrix Bright has put on long pants.
The thing (—)
worst “about” a young
lady is a vouns man’s arm
M hear that (—)
e there is a man in Haw-
kinsviim lle ^a,wh» r» has a „ „ eon v „. one hun-
dretl J’ ears old. The last lot of butter
received at our house evidently came
from llawkinsville, and was made from
the first churning of that identical
bovine.
rTM The physicians . (—)
say that smoking
makes men bald-headed. Smoking in
the parlor after the lace curtains have
been freshly put up is apt to have that
effect when the smoker’s wife finds it
out. We Speak from experience.
Three of our “gilt edge” sports went
over town one night Igst weekasking for
something to eat. The boys succeeded
in fooling some of our people, who gave
them some cold peas and corn bread,
which they devoured vigorously. Boys’
we won,t teU on 7° u this time t but trv
that trick again and see what we Will
do.
(-)
The skating rink is the latest thing
with the boy? now. We have some fine
skaters, among the number are, Luther
Hayes, Ed Bryant, Frank Taylor, ten
Moseley, Ralph Baylor, and Fluiner
nms>
Jimmie.—Papa what does it mean
when it says: Cast your bread upon
the waters and it shall return after
many days?
Father.—It means, my boy,that your
mother never made it.
Why did (-)
John Simpson leave the
sociable so suddenly Friday night? We
bet the girls can asnswer the question
(-)
There is a new way to open up a cor-
respondence. Here is a sample of the
closing.
Apples tire good,
Peaches are better;
If you love me
You will answer this letter.
(-)
Messrs. Roy Capps and John Simp¬
son spent Saturday and Sunday on
Tugalo river and while returning hofne
Sunday evening their horse oecame
frightened and ran away. The harness
were, all broken and the cart complete¬
ly demolished, but fortunately neither
of the boys were hurt.
We are sorry to note the indisposi¬
tion of our venerable friend, Ralph D.
Martin.
(-)
WANTED TO BE AN EDITOR.
na\e von you any mv ovnr.rioncn experience in in f Hie he
business?” we asked of a verdant look-
ing youth the other day.
“Yes I have,” he replied, “I should
say I have had some experience. Havn’t
I corresponded with the Glarkesville
Advertiser for six weeks?”
“That will do very well,” we replied,
blit when we take young men on our
editorial staff’ we put them through an
examination.
“How much are twelve times one?”
“Twelve, why any Pottle boy could
answer that.”
“Who discovered America?”
“Klumbus, them q-uestions is jest as
easy as-.”
“Who was the first matt?”
“Adam, 1 know all these questions
boss.”
“What was his other name?”
“Ebenezer Adam.”
“Have you a good constitution?”
“Putty tolerable boss.”
“Well we shall ask you just one more
question and if you prove equal to it
you can go to work.”
“Let’s have her squire. I didnt cor¬
respond with the Clarkesville Adver¬
tiser six weeks for nothing, Let her
come.”
“Well if two diametrical circ’Cs’with
octagonal peripheries should collide
with a centrifugal idiosyncrasy or, to
put it plainer we will say a disenfran¬
chised nonentity, what effect would
the catastrophe exert on a crystallized
codfish suspended by the tail from Toc-
eoa to Gainesville?”
As the full force of this ponderous
problem broke . his
upon bewildered
brain, he slowly dragged ? his number
twelves , from under , his , chair , . and , made ,
for the door.
M e heard . ... him descend . ... the stairs . .
go
out ffnd close the door. We then placid-
ly resumed our duties, regretting that
s0 promising a youth should have been
weighed in'the balance, and was found
wanting;
(—r .
Our young friends Robert Simpson
aud Lawrence Vickery j went “possom”
hunting Tuesday night and got lost,
The boys didn’t catch any possums but
caught “thunder 11 when they got home.
* )
Judge E. J. Christy,of the News, vis-
»«d Clarkesville Sunday. It is report-
e( ^ th at he intends matrimony in the
above named town in the near future-
" e wish . , to _ be understood , , as t takiug . . the ,
affirmative side of this issue, and ex-
tend our congratulations ahead to the
one who shall win this prize.
/_
An individual down south describes
Carlyle’s face as resembling “a heap of
stones overgrown with brambles.”
, '*
- •
A a, Mr. Middleton, Savannah. Lee Frenkel,
Winchester; B B Cason; Mrs WE CasJa; J
H Crawford, Martin, Ga; E B Kirk, Louis-
... Kv . ’ w r ’ N r- ’ R P R„nu r
Bowman; • H N , T Moss, bo Ry; p Dr r John T . \ Me- ’
j unfeini City; J Havne; Miss Robinson.bhoa
Cr€ek !- Mi ^ Narah and BvriA Edward?
shoal Creek; Blanto,, Edwards Shod Creek:
-h** T Jouss, 8 C. !
iNSlillflNGt BROKER
WANTED
To represent the
HEW YORK and CHICAGO LLOYDS,
{Reliable pire (Underwriters.
able Applications for gin h<*use risks at reason-
rates so icited Address
W. S. MONTEITH,
General Manager, Columbia, S. C.
Man
^tiJI
your SyfqpeJKy ’
SP 1
Who doe^ ijot
tsvke. iijtercjt’ •••
* GQ0U$H leari) t*o ’HjKt • j
D r Uchenors Antise ptic
Alv/ayi |t& *Vrc& Lc&mpyr
•tj)» htepi+ift Ai. yoi/r d'ftr*
jt €/taK^9° ft
Habersham Sheriffs Sales
FOR NOVEMBER, 1805.
Will be soul before conrt house door in
Clarkesvllle, Habersham county, on the lir<t
Tu a fay in Nov., 1895,for ash, and within
* lie lejfal hours of sale on said day, the fol¬
lowing described property, to-wit.
A certain tract or parcel of land lying in
the town of Clark'svil’.e, county ot ‘Haber¬
sham and t?tate of Georgia, known as the G.
S. Hunt house and lot, the same being the
property sold to Mrs - K. J. Thyler, by I)r. J,
K. Burns bounded by the lot of land of M.ts.
Hunt on the east, Mrs. J. W. West on the
north, and property of Mrs. Thyler and, L,a-
l’ierre or H. H- Webb on tlie west, and by
the street on the south, being part pf the old
Franker Hughes place, together with v all the
improvements sold on the same. Levied on and
to he as the property of Anna E. LaPiere
to satisfy a mortgage li fa issued from tha
Superior of S. court Chestnnt of Ha liersnnm county in favor
M. against said Anna E.
LaPiere.
Also, at the same time and place, one cer¬
tain house audio, in the town of Toccoa city,
county of Habersham and State, of Georgia,
running east and west one hundred feet north
and south fifty feet, being a cut of Bowers
lot, and lying pit 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. II. Oglesby on the
north being the place whereon Nancy Jar-
rett now lives; levied on and to be sold as the
prop rty of Nancy Jairett, to satisfy a mort¬
gage ti fa issued from the Superior court, of
Habersham couni y in favor of G. W. Ed¬
wards against said Nancy Jairett.
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,
ocmmencing the Toccoa thiity feet from the the ^ipitluyest
corner of cemetery on strath
side of the road leftding from Toe oa to
Ciaruesvil e, and on the west side of Bright
street, being thirty fact wi le, running thence
west sixty feet along the satin-side ofOlarkes-
ville road, running thence south one hundred
feet, runningthence running thence < ast north sixty, #!■<?<? along to' Bright Bright
street,
street one hundred feet to the beginning cor¬
ner; levied on and to be sold as the property
of A- A. McAfiee to satisfy a mo tgage ti fit
is-ued l'roui the Superior uVuft of Habersham
county in favor of Edvvaids & Dance against
said A. A. Me A bee.
house Also, nt the lot same time and place, a ee - tain
and in the town of Toceou city:
said lot *260 feet by 50 feet, fronting on T oc-
yoa Falls road fifty feet, and bounded as fol-
A’ <'ti 1 lig southjvy DlL Junkhi’s home
p ace th(illol r(tj & y w i,-»tis known asthe Eiiza
Irwin lot on u hid there is a two room house,
mortgage fi fa issued from the Superior court
of Habersham county in fav-'v of L B - Nbwell
soil.
Also at the sgme time and p’ace, a certain
' ot of household goods t;-wit: I tub, 1 frame,
1 cr.de frame. *2 chests, X ci t. inarm' 1 , otaou s,
2 bureaus, 1 sofa, 1 wxshstand 1 bed spring,
2 bundle# pads, 1 book-shelf. 1 trunks, 1 hat
rack, 10 boxes goods, 1 ert table leaves. 1
safe, 1 lamp stand. 4rocker chairs, 3 bairels,
3 bundles chairs, l bundle ea-les, 1 stove, 1
sideboard; Levied on and V > Lit sold as the
prop; rty of Mrs. B li Derby, to satisfy a li
fa issued from the Superior court of Haoer
sham county in favor of Adams & Hampton
against said Mrs. B H. Derhv; Levy made
and leturned to me by ELA. Kellar. Deputy
Shei iff'
Also at tlie same time and pi ice, one lot
of land in the town of Toccoa city, in said
comity of Habersham, lying north of S.ivan
Jiah,street, OgUsby, bounded on teh north by Mrs.
C. G. east by W. L Vickery, south by
J. Young’s lot containing 400 x 50 feet be-,
ing the a Bonher cut, of S' T- Mulkey’s lot and known as
lot, running east west 10(4
feet north aqd south 50 ffiql be ng cut off of
tke north, and the Bonner lot; levied <>n and
to ne sold as the property of Nancy Jar-
rett and Ed Jairett to satisfy a ii fa issued
from the Justice court of the 440th district
G. M. of Hab rsliam county, in favor ofF. A’.
Mgbry Jariett. against said Nancy Jairett and Ed
E. T Henderson, Levy made and returned to me by
1 L. C.
:‘h Also.at the same tirneand place, a certainlot
the town of Cornelia, Ga , said county, in
block No- 7 of said town, fro iting N. E street
and adjoining lots of B. W„ Grant. J. H. Hie ys,
Arthur Walden and others, <is shown ih the
plan of uppii said town; «ame be’frg 25x50 fiet.
| 1%7Q Levied and to be sold under Section
of the eode of Georgia, a< the property
df S. L. Fuller, to satisfv a fl fa issued from
tne Justice court of the 449th district G. M.,
of Hahersliam county, in favor of Elizabeth
Kimsev against said S. L - Fuller Notice giv¬
required .
en as by law. Levy made and re¬
turned tome by J. A. Mulleuax, L. C.
Als *, at the sajtiv time and piftde, part ot
lot No. 2 in tbe luth land district of said
efranty, P.lace tbe same Williagi being a part of the lot the
whereon H. Love lived at the
lime 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
i feet to a stone corner, thence south along the
f a( q or y road and with Buinstead’s line five
hundred and seventy nine feet to a stone
corner, thence we-t 210 leet to a stone corner,
thence north six bifndred and sixty eight feet
back to beginningor original corner, the place
taining lately known as the Win. Crane place, con¬
three acres more or less. Levied on
and to be sold as th^ property of A. J. Crane
for the purchase money of the same, to satisfy
a ti fa issued from tlie Justice court of the
409th di-trict G. M of Habersham county, it?
Favor of E. P. West A Co . against aid A. J.
Crane gtntiitory principal deed and M. filed T. Perkins indorser,
made, and recorded as
required by Section 365+ of the cede Levy
ZJaad flaTtM
tract ingin or parcel thirteenth. of land situate, lying and be-
the (;}3),.district of Haber
SSLS^I^ISS the Northeast .S5SS
part of lot No. 121 and forty-
fou r <->4) acres.more or less, of theSouth-
east , part oflotNo. 122, aggregating 194 acres
more or less, and bounded north by Mrs. S.E.
Garrett: on the East by Sam Edmonds,
w^tbyJ 1 R^Indera^iL 0 ^!^!^ anVto
be sold as the property of N. H. C. Eilard to
satisfv a fi fa issued from tbs Superior court
of Habersham county in favor of The Scot-
tisb American Mortgage Company^ Limited
rs> tbe331(1 ' s - 11 • Eilard.
A so at the same time and place, will be
sold that tract or parcel of land lying and be-
ing in tbe t we. fth (12th) district of^Habersharn
county. Georgia, cons sting of lot No. (184)
and one hundred and thirty (130) acres, more
or less oTlot No. (188) one hnndred and
e thereof iglity-eigbt, ’^ing in of the Southeast part
all in one body three hn> drek and
eighty (380) acre?, more or lee. Levied on
mid to be sold a? the falssu^d n’-oDCitv ofJf-«se M
Tavlor ^urtoi to satis-y Habersham a^ff from in Ihe'snpe- fi.vor of
nor county
nl - hS“™5 . TKlor° mta '’ y ’
A. M.GliIBBLE. .Si crifl’
T HE: TOCCOA. NEWS,,,
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