Newspaper Page Text
MADE MISTAKES, DID THEY?
ed Got up—display things spelled wrong and all mix¬
was poor—type old
fashioned— press work bad — paper
cheap—nothing Seuil work as it THE ought TIMES to be ? and
your to
it will be done right—Phone Xo. 10 .
By W. AL. FOWLER.
VOL, IV.
Was Butchered iu Broad Open - Daylight!
Note Heads High Prices—Look How They’re Cut
Xo. of Sheets : 250 500 iooo
Unsal Linen 6 lb ip 75 1 00 1 75
Hanson.....7 lb_ 85 1 25 2 00
Derby Linen 6 lb 90 1 35 2 25
Islington. . . .7 lb 1 00 1 50 2 50
Alexis Bond 6 lb 1 25 1 75 3 25
This is thefinest paper we can buy: It
comes in white, buff, pink, azure and
iue. ruled. Envelopes to match, Unled or un
Letterheads
No. of Sheets : 250 500 1000
Ilanson 10 lb $ 95 1 50 2 50
Derby Linen 10 lb 1 25 1 75 3 00
Islington. 10lb 1 40 2 <x> 3 25
Alexis Bond Sib ! 63 2 23 4 00
Tins, same as Alexis IJoud above: ruled
nnd unruled: live colors.
Statements
3!xSy inches— 250 5op I (XX)
IIunson 75 I IK) 1 73
Derbv( 4^x7) 63 90 1 30
J*
SIMMONS
ar 1
REGULATOR
MM
GOODFOREVERYBODY
and everyone needs it at all times of the
year. Malaria is always about, and the
only preventive and relief is to keep the
Liver active. You must help the Liver a bit,
and the best helper is the Old Friend, SIM¬
MONS Liver Regulator, the red z.
• Mr. C. Himrod, of Lancaster, Ohio,
says: “SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR
broke a case of Malarial Fever of three
years’ standing for me, and less than
one bottle did the business. I shall use
it when In need, and recommend it”
Be sure that you get it Always look for
the RED Z on the package. And don’t
forget the word REGULATOR. It is Sim
MONS LIVER REGULATOR, and there is
only one, and every one-who takes It is
sure to be benefited. THE BENEFIT IS
ALL IN THE REMEDY. Take it also for
Biliousness and Sick Headache; both are
caused by a sluggish Liver.
J. H. Zeilin * Co., Philadelphia.
WANTED-AN IDEASteSRffiS
thing to patent? Protect yourideaejjthey may
bring you wealth. Write JOHN WKDDER
BUHNA CO., Patent Attorneys, offer. Washington,
D. C., for their *1,800 prise
.Err:
-Y v ;3
nr. \
sr.:
a • f f ' lUA
tul
* 1
*
t
L m if
tm -Y- AA f! 1;1
- s
- CV
\
It’s Going
to be Cold
this winter and we have
more capes and clodks than we
wan t—we want to get rid of them
We’ll sell ’em if you want ’em so
low that it’ll pay you to buy for
next season, Come and look at
them.
Matheson M’d’se. Cti.
Blacksmithing.
BROWN JARRETT
has moved his blacksmith, repair
and horseshoeing shop to Bud Ben
nett’s place, where he will be glad
to see his customers*.
Toccoa, Georgia.
J. N West,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, /
Toe coo, Ga.
C.ira-r S»*v T»3»l» streets.
Toccoa V j,- i . J ^
The -N
"
“l Know Not Wbat the Truth May be, 1 Tell the Tale es It was Told to Me.”
COUNTY, QA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2g, 1896.
Bill-Heads
Xo. of Sheets: 250 8 1000
No. 2, (8^x14 (8^x7 in) 1 25 3 8 3 50
No. 4, in) 85 1 V? 3 00
No. 6, (8^x4!). . . .75 1 3 1 75
Shipping Tags
Number ot Tags „
: 230 5 °° 1000
^ • 90 1 40
No. 5 85 1 *5 1 75
No. 6 1 00 1 50 2 35
Envelopes
Number of Envel : 250 500 1000
\X White, White’6f 6 in,.. 75 1 oq 1 75
XX in 90 1 25 2 00
XXCherrv ^ream or Green 1 00 1 50 2 25
Laid,6* in i 10 x 60 2 75
Alexis Bond 6^ in 35 2 OO opaline. 35 O
Colors: white, buff, pink, azure,
Circulars
Number of Circu. 250 500 1CXX)
6x9'inches 75 1 00 I 75
THE TIME5
THE TIMES Is the official News¬
paper of Habersham County and the
City of Toccoa.
When you want to buy goods trade
with the merchants who patronize
your home paper.
IF IT’S NEWS THE TIMES GETS IT.
'
03
Doings of the Club at Its Reg¬
ular Weekly Meeting *
VI
SOME REMARKS BY THE PRES. AND
A LETTER FROM THE HON.
LOUIS DAVIDSON.
The club had been called to or
der. The minutes read, and the
regular order of business had been
gone through, when the President,
looking over his spectacles with
much dignity brought his gavel
on the table top. “Gentle
men,” said he, “It hub 01 ly been a
few months since dis club hab been
We hab labored under
some inisadvantages in selecting
from de mass de cream of de cullud
elerment of dis camunity anil even
after fve had skum off de cream
eben den, I say, some ob dem* dat
was skummed clabbored on us and
had to be expulsed. Now I do
want to say dat my hair rises wid
pride when looking back over dem
troubled waters wid one eye, I cast
de odder forra'd and in de radge
ob wision observe de moving tide
of humanity swaying backward
and forrards under de good influ¬
ence emernating from dis club. It
do afford me much pleasure to state
to dis club, dat I notice in de pa¬
pers dat a branch ob dis club has
been organized in de City ob Wash¬
ington. It do also gib me pleasure
to read to you a letter which I hab
received from one ob our most
prominent citizens, now resident in
de far west.” After a little search
the following letter was produced
and read :
“TotheHon. John Ruffin, Pres,
of the Anti Zoological Club, Toc¬
coa Citv, Ga: My Dear Sir—It
is with profound gratitude that I
learn from The Toccoa Times of
the rapid strides being now made
in our citv towards attaining to
that higher moral and interlectual
plane of society, to which some
have heretofore aspired but none
have been able to reach, I’m now
satisfied that by your skilful guid¬
ance, backed by your moral courage
and sound judgment, the society of
our dear little town can aspire to
climb even as high as Haman, I
have also been toki that the Anti
Foological Club has elevated the
colored society of Toccoa to such u
height that the ladies walk on tip¬
toe and at certain season of the
year the gentlemen refuse to en¬
tertain eVen such callers as the
Hon Mr. Gribble and will not even
receive the card of/the Hon Mr.
Kimsy. Go on with the work my
friend and may you meet with the
best of success. )iVe will organize
a club here soon.
Ever your friend,
Hon. Louis Davidson. ”
“Dat is a very fine letter” re¬
marked thePrest., “yit de gentle¬
man seems a little mixed on de
name ob de club. But before we
ciose dis here meetin’,” continued
de president, “I would jess like ter
say dat de gentleman what prints
er little 2x4 paper in dis town ,lvas
made some remarks erbout de Sec¬
retary of dis club. He said he
need side whiskers and a bath tub.
Business Cards
From 1.50 per 1000 up.
Ask for Specimens
as nd prices of our work, We un
ft quivocally guarantee to do the
best work of ANY printing estab
ij s i imen t in north-east Georgia,and
as GOOD as can be done in the
state if you’ve ever had pricey
lower than the above quoted ones
send us the original bill with your
order and we’ll duplicate the price
and give you a neater job.
If you are not satisfied with your
work you need not take it.
THE TIMES ,
Toccoa , Ga.
1 dont like to talk erbout some ob
de white folks of de town,as I haint
the liburty to express dar needs,but
frum er careless obsurvation ob de
gentleman in dis connection,! real¬
ly think he ought to git de tin whis¬
tle outen his throat and git some
new brains and den study good
manners. He needs dem all.”
A committee was then ap¬
pointed to look after a sick
brother, after which the meeting
closed. Lonny Peyton,
l - Secty.
POLITICAL POINTS
There is talk, so we hear, of
Representative Boyd of Lumpkin
county entering the race for solici¬
tor general of this circuit, and that
Howard Thompson is likely to be¬
come a candic^te for congress.
Now there you are! That’s a
new move in the Rugged Ninth!
“Howard continued is too smart informant, a pqliti
tician,” our
“net to be hunting office, when he
hasn’t got one. If it is true that
he will no be » candidate for solici¬
tor general next fall you can be as¬
sured that Howard has allowed his
ambition to crawl up a notch or
so, and that he is looking for some¬
thing else, probably the nomina¬
tion for Carter Tate’s seat, Then
there are Peeples and Bill Simmons
of Gwinnett, both of whom are
likely to shy their castors into the
politican ring—wanting to go to
congress—both is are good men, too.
Carter Tate sawing wood and
saying nothing; he has made an ef¬
ficient congressman, but he has
been elected twice and the boys all
want a chance at the public pap
themselves, so Carter wont have a
walk-over this time.
“Then CoL Robertson of your
county is a mighty good man to
represent us and could win hands
down if he would make a canvass
for the nomination. This,I under¬
stand he wont do, as he is one of
the old time Jeffersonian demo¬
who thinks the office should
seek the man,and not the man seek
the office and I.am sorry to say a
man must scramble for office if he
wants to get it these days. Col.
Robertson wont scramble but I sup¬
pose would accept the nomination
if tendered him.
“You’ve got-a good man, and in
fact, two of them make right in your
town who would good con¬
gressmen, either of whom Would
make it quite warm for the fellow
who kept up with him. I mean
Col. Ed. Schaefer, who ndmbers
his friends by the thousand in this
section,and ex-StateSenator Lewis
Davis, Whoso ably represented you
a couple of years ago. Any one of
these men would make good con¬
gressmen, blit you cant tell just
where the lightning is going td
strike.” \
It is stated that Flel^th Johnson
of Gainesville is a candidate for
solicitor general of this circuit, and
as stated in last week’s paper, M.
T. Perkins of Habersham is also in
the race. Perkins is a good elec¬
tioneer and he will likely run a fast
race.
The Times man met Lawyer J.
J. Bowden one day last week and
on inquiry Jack admitted the soft
impeachment legislative, that be honors. was a can¬ He
didate for
ran a fine race at the last election
and was only beaten 28 votes.
County officers to be elected this
fall are commissioners : representative, of ordinary, and
three roads
revenues, sheriff, clerk, treasurer,
coroner, tax receiver, and tax col¬
lector. .k- %$..
JUST OUT OF REACH jfijh
Some homely Philosopher remarked
L that “all the good things of life seemed
to be on the other side of a barbed wire
£ fence ” Now in order to remove this wire
from about one of the best things in Geor¬
==r? gia, we will receive subscriptions to this pa¬
r- between this and February 1st, at the
per
trial price of TEN CENTS FOR THREE
’■Q mm MONTHS, provided you are not now a sub¬
JE T 4 scriber. This is only to introduce The
fc- Times into new homes. Send in your sub¬
‘-r lid
— scription NOW this proposition is
-S3 as open
only a few days. THE TIMES,
_— TOCCOA, QA
The Harmony Grove Echo, dis¬
cussing ninth district politics, says:
“Carter Tate will, of course, want
to keep his seat, so there will be the
rub. In our opinion the man who
runs ahead of him will have to get
a good move on him. Carter goes
fishing with the boys in the sum¬
mer and kisses the babies, and
wKen congress is in session he stays
at his post and it’s a pretty hard
matter to beat such a man as that.”
Lives there a man, in either of
the great parties, with soul so dead
that to himsfelf he has not said, and
also to a few confidential friends
who are acquainted with members
of the Associated Press, this is my
own, my native land, and therefore,
by the force of curcumstances, it
must be generally achnited that I
am the logical candidate for the
presidency? If such there be, let
him use all due caution and slip
away to the bounds of the frozen
north if he would escape booming
the chief attraction «*f some dime
museum.—-Denver News. V
The editor of The Times is in
receipt of a letter from Mr. J. W.
McLaury, formerly of Toccoa, but
now of Charlotte, N. C., and
among other things he says ; “I am
pleased with The Times and con¬
gratulate you on your splendid edit¬
ion last week. ”
The Toccoa, Ga., Times, came
to our table last week with a four
page supplement, heavy book pa¬
per, filled with nice illustrations
and great big juicy advs. Whoop
’er up, Allen. Your Texas friends
are watching you, with pride.—
Springtown (Tex.) Sun.
The chairman of the Republican
committee of Habersham county
has called a meeting at .the court
house in Clarkesville on Thursday,
February 20, for the purpose of
electing delegates to the Republi¬
can District convention and also to
elect delegates to the State conven¬
tion.
Our reduction of subscription
price to 10 cents for three months
seems to be waking the denizen
up in “this neck of the woods” as
our esteemed friend, Editor King
of the Carnesville Tribune would
write it. W'e have added about 50
new names to our list in the past
week.
Captain of the Band.
Atlanta Constitution m giving
the views of different citizens of
the state as to - whether we shall
have two conventions this year in¬
stead of one—one to'elict delegates
to nominate a president and one tc
elect state officers, 6ays :
“Mr. W. R. Bruce.captain Toc¬
coa band ; ‘I read The Constitu¬
tion’s editorial on this subject with
great interest and strongly favor
the plan suggested. »,»
What Band is it, Bob? You are
not a white capper, are you?
An Explanation
Tn last week’s paper we spoke of
Mr. E. P. Simpson sending Dr.
Allyn and family to South Ameri¬
ca and retaining them there at hit
private expense as missionaries.
We desire to say in justice to Mr*
Simpson that he (Mr. .Simpson)
knew nothing of the editor’s in¬
tention to publish said article or
had knowledge that’ the editor
knew of the matter, or 4 >ad"
found out that he (Simpson) was
the financial backer of Dr. Allyn.
There were only one ot two peo¬
ple in the ill.' city who knew Mi of the
matter at * - - r
IN SOCIETY’S DOMAIN and
Personal About People You Know
Ordinary W D. Hill, of Clarkes
ville, Ga., spent Saturday in our
city.
Dr Doyle, of Seneca, S. C. visit¬
ed Toccoa Mends last week.
W. L. Vickery spent Sunduy
with his family in Toccoa.
T. D Kemp spent Sunday with
his family at the Simpson house.
Mr. L. B. Nowell will return to
Atlanta this week.
Earnest Deaton is recovering
from a case of the measles.
We hear the wedding bells will
ring ere long.
- Conductor Avery, of the South¬
ern has recovered from u short spell
of sickness.
W. L. Clark is now keeping
books for G. W. Edwards.
The meetings of the Bible Study
Club have been changed from seven
to seven-thirty.
Frank Green w'as seen shaking
hands with old friends on our streets
last Saturday.
Mrs. C. C. Walker will give an
“At Home,” to a few personal
friends Thursday night.
Miss Murion Brewer, of Elber
ton, Ga., is visiting Miss Ann ; e
Lee Freeman of this city.
The Woman’s Literary Club will
meet Saturday afternoon at half
past three with Miss Ola Jones.
Mr. Henry Holley’s family have
all been down with the measles—
and all were down at once except
Mr. Holley.
D. J. Hayes, of Carnesville, was
in the city Tuesday and called on
Teh Times and left some of -the
ing* lubricating oil that runs the print¬
press.
One of our exchanges makes the
following very interesting remarks
on how we use our time : One of the
most valuable demonstrations of
the closing quarter of this
cal century, is that a broad educa¬
tion can be obtained by very busy
peoble outside of colleges and uni¬
versities. Tens of thousands of
people all around the world are ac¬
complishing this by utilizing the
fragments Of time by reading the
very best of books. -There is
scarcely one person in a hundred,
even of the very busiest people,
r.n h ^:"SlX“ n r r l“-.Z:
rrH’SrtTv^:
mind by so using one hour out of
every twenty-four, in four va»rs
time, oft the could history, get literature, a birds-eye philos¬ view
ophy and science of all the world.
A great many people lose enough
time each winter in unneccesa 5
sleep to master a thousand pages
history. And by gathering up the
fragments of time now going to
waste during the day, the same
persons might master a natural
science each winter.
Judge J. B. Estes was a visitor
in Toccoa Saturday. Judge Estfffc
says Keener, the Rabun county
murderer, for whom, he is attorney,
is undoubtedly insane and that he
aims to argue his case before hare a jury him
in a week or so and try to
scot to the afj lum,. i
t \V, ■' r
b™ !
lift* -
SUBSCRIPTION, SI PER YEAR
NO. 3o
Death of Mrs. D. E. Hogsed.
Last Sunday afternoon at threef
o’clock there gathered a large host
of friends in the Methodist church
at this place to pay tribute to the
memory of Mrs; Sarah Martin Hog*'
sed.
The dealh of this estimable chris*'
tiun woman occured at her home
Saturday, January, and twenty-fifth, six.
eighteen hundred Mrs. ninety
For a number of years Hogsed
had been subject to lung trouble few
nnd for this rduson, moved a
years ago to Toccoa, from Nnrcoo-'
chee Valley which had been their
home. This climate was very bene¬
ficial to her and she strengthened
and seemed to be doing well until
early in the summer she begun fail-/
mg and from then on was 1, a con¬
stant sufferer. After months of
sickness-and well, pain, He who doetiY
all things saw fit to take her
to a better and more glorious home.
All during the intense suffering of
her life she bore the pain uncofh-'
pl^iningly, submissive was always her God, so patient Death
and to
held no terror for her. Fbr a num¬
ber of years she bad been a devo¬
ted and loyal Methodist and in her 1
death they sustain a great lose. She’
left a husband and five little ones tef
await the summons to that family
reunion where there shall be no',
more partings. The heartfelt sym¬
pathies of the whole community iw
with Mr. Hogsed.
Could You
Get a world cheaper paper Thk in Times, the wbolcf
wide than tak¬
ing into consideration size, news*'
iness and all round first class court- *
of trv newspaper giving all the new*
the world? months, Just think, if Ten
Cents for three you have
never before been a subscriber.'
You can subscribe at this price and
send the paper to friends and ac¬
quaintances at a distance and it
will save the writing of nmnerou*
letters.
Would it not pay the merchant*
of Toccoa to subscribe for a num¬
ber and send them to tbeir custom-'
ers with their compliments. They
certainly would read their adver
tisments thereafter* Could yotf
make a better and at. the same
time cheaper a present?
Bonds for title-and warranty
deeds for sale at The Times office✓
• 1 R*ad our proposi
tion to new subscribe
ers at the top of the
first page. From now
till Feb. 1st, new sub¬
scribers will betaken
at TEN CENTS- for
the three yionths.
This MCI
does not hold
after Feb. 1, —
The
— WgtPE?
* Blank 'Scb
f or at t h