Newspaper Page Text
made mistakes, did they?
ed G«tthings up—display spelled wrong and all mix
fashioned— was poor—type old
cheap--nothing pjpss work bad — paper
as it ought to be?
Send your work to THE TIMES and
it . will be done
right—Phone No. 10.
By W. AL. FOWLER.
VOL. IV.
Felt Want at Last Supplied by Us. 9
A Long
\ ■ prepared ' f . offer . i'*wyi line ■ &
dress goods line. We __ to them
It is not neeessary for the ladies to send off for anything in the are a
goods equal to almost any city store. Our store is one of the most attractivee places in Toccoa. Come in and see our display of
fancy goods, fine laces of every discription, from 1 cent to 90 cents per yard.
The biggest line of embroideries brought to a town the size of Toccoa—200 different patterns, and all grades m Cambric,Swiss and the finest Nainsook edgings and insertinsg; all the latest styles in Browrf
EmbroTdered ever yokes, prices cheaper than last Our line of white goods
Linen bands and Edgings ; everything imaginable in Colored Embroideries; all over tucking and embroidery for of etc., Dimity our checks are 30 per cent Linen Lawns, year. Our line of Wash «
the finest that money can buy, in all grades from the common checked La ^ n up to the finest quality of Nansooks ; a beautiful line fine and stripes etc. summer
Goods are simply elegant. Every conceivable color and shade in Domesti o and imported Dimities, Organdies, Lawns and Dotted Swiss. A very fine line of wool dress goods in all the new spring effects, light colors,
'Cream Pink and Light Blue We have all kinds of linings, that the dress makers need; all kinds of Silk Braids and Buttons for timmings. We are still selling remrfants of Calicos, Satteens and Ducks at half price. ,.
Those celebrated Rockland Shoes for gentlemen are the best on earth; invest $5 in a pair and you’ll have no other. Ladies should try our Paden Shoes if they desire a perfect lit toget^fer with finest quality,$2.25 to $4
Our cut price sale on Boys’ Clothing will last only two weeks longer. We are selling suits from 95 cents to *5, which are
worth fully one-third more. We have bnt one price and that is the lowest.
M’ALLISTER & KILGO, One Price merchants.
IT IS INTERESTNG:
The announcement that we,are about
r>7 to inaugurate our annual Spring Mark¬
down sale will he of interest to everybody
r who purchases Clothing and Furnishings
1 for men and boys. It isn’t necessary to
7 speak of the quality of goods we offer.
Every citizen of Toccoa knows that we
handle no shoddy goods, and the following
prices: Boys’ clothing from $1 per suit up; Men’s clothing from
$5 to $15 per suit; and they are daisies for the money. We also
have some odds and ends in Gents’ furnishing goods, which are
worthy of inspection. Theae broken lots are going at broken
prices—broken exactly in two in many eases.
We arc receiving invoices daily of new and seasonable spring goods for our lady what customers, that __\vhich
we will glad to show them. We propose to save our customers money—they know means.
EDWARDS & BUSH A, The Wreckers of High Prices.
Toccoa, Ga
My Kidneys.
Yes, your kidneys are one of the most vi¬
tal parts of your body. They arc the great
Blood Filters
and must be kept pure, clean and m their
norma! condition If you wnut to enjoy good
health.
The Weak And Nervous
have their kidneys affected. They need
cleansing and restoring to purified a healthy and state, the
then the blood becomes
bloom of health returns. In order to
your kidneys use
STUART’S GIN AND BUC1IU.
It is the one reliable remedy.
cheap and effective. It is an
remedy for kidney, bladder and all
disease. It has
CURED THOUSANDS.
Mr. E L. P. Mobley suffered for yeans
from excruciating pain tlw- bladder. STl
ART’S GIN' AND BUG HU “made him a
well man.”
Mr. \Y. A. Buiver“considers STUART’S
GIN AND BUCHU the best kidney,
nary anil bladder remedy in the world. ’
Sold byali druggists.
WRIGHT & EDGE, Toccoa, Ga.
DON’T USE DRUGS
Unless you need them, and then only pure drugs, such as are sold hy reputable and responsible drug¬
gists. We keep only the best, That’s the great distinction to be looked for, when you need them.
We keep a complete stock. A GOOD TIME NOW to begin that Spring medicine. We've got ’em
all. We recommend for the blood Wright & Edge’s Tonic Bicters, a’so our Sarsaparilla, and Celery
Compound.
Good Doctor Sponge
Nature’s remedies are pure air and water. The latter is best applied with a sponge. There is health
and energy in a sponge bath. It gives that tired feeling a chance to get through the pores of the
skin. Nothing can take the place of a sponge for a quick bath. The kind and Lquahty^i* a positve
luxury. See ours at 10 to 35 cents. WRIall r * fclXJfc, Druggists.
t
TRY kinds very Times’ Low of Stationery and writing floods material. very Department flood. Prices Try for us. are all
’ — »fc&9fc*Tr
■
.
The Toccoa 6
J. N. Wist,
PHYSICIAN AND SUROEON,
Toccoa, Ga.
Office: Corner Sage anil Tu^nlo streets.
M. Snelson,
DENTIST.
Office over Matheson Merchandise
Co’s, store on Doyle Street.
Toccoa. Georgia.
ONE GIV‘ES RELIEF.
--
UfANTFn—AN IDEA5 1we * n ^ h,n ,t
i
thing to patent 1 Protect your
bring you wealth. Writ®
•• I Know Not What the Truth May be, / Tell the Tale as It was Told to Me."
TOCCOA, HABERSHAM COUNTY, QA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18 , 1896.
dmiZUTsEk,
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THE BEST
Ol CDDINft nilwO MrniPlNP HI*»I#IwIImKi
Is SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR. Don’t
forget to take it. Now is the time you
need it most to wake up your Liver. A
sluggish Liver brings on and Malaria, other
and Ague, Rheumatism, constitution many and
ills which shatter the
wreck health. Don’t forget the word
REGULATOR ULATOR distinguishes youVmit'^Th^word^RK? it from all other
remedies. And, besides this, SIMMONS
LIVER REGULATOR is a Regulator of the
Liver, keeps it properly at work, that your
system may be kept in good condition.
FOR THE BLOOD take SIMMONS
LIVER REGULATOR. It is the best blood
r fier and corrector. Try it and note.
difference. Look for the RED Z
. idtore v . u.
on every other is other
any no
Liver remedy like SIMMONS LIVER
REGULATOR-theKingof Liver Remedies,
Bo SUTC you JCt It.
THE TIMES
THE TIMES Is the official News¬
ot Habersham County and the
of Toccoa.
When you want to buy goods trade
with the merchants who patronize
home paper.
IT’S NEWS THE TIMES GETS IT.
Help home enterprises and they
will help you.
Never send away from home to
buy what you can get at home just
as cheap.
The Times never makes an as¬
sertion unless it ha» good authority
for so doing.
“O wad some power*the giftie
to gie us—
To see ourselves ns others see us !
It wad frae monie a blunder free
us
And foojish notion.”
Do not be looking around to see
where you can get something for
nothing—everything something—-either costs its pos¬
sessor labor, money, of
or or both. Stay out tne
amen corner when you go to
church—you are not the proper or¬
nament.
_
When your property begins to
advance in price do not laugh in
your sleeves and say to yourself
how smart you were in not “help¬
ing those fellows build up home
enterprises.’ We all know that it
was not smartness. It w as pure
_
cussedness.
In this issue we publish the an¬
nouncement of W. B. Haddock for
County Commissioner. Mr. Had¬
dock has been a resident of Haber
sham county for 44 years dtid has
lived in Toccoa precinct for over of
forty years, with the exception
fliree and a half years spent in the
C >nfederate army. Mr. Haddock
- a practical carpenter and con
-rector. He has built two bridges
f ,rthe county, „/ both of which have
. n< rrU . rf ct r Silt jcf. lc tion and a ™ he ne
dunks hts is familiarity r consideration with , bridge- to be
one
t iouieht of by voters. Mr. Had
d *ch has lived on a farm for years
m Tug do vabey and is a man well
thought of by his acquainla aces.
A prominent county official said
a-t week, to the editor of The
Times : “Say, howdy ; I am glad
e’ve got one paper in the county
that is not afraid to stick its probe
into old ulcers and let the matter
oi—it will be better for the pa
tienf, which in the case of the
countv bourd of education, will
payers of Habersham count f —rest hope.
and again buoy them up with
County ought, matters and have 1 believe not been The run
Times’ as they will do
exposure ourcounty
thousands of dollars of good. So
far a» I am concerned I am willing
to be critisized, so long as you tell
the truth. Yes, most officers do
think they own their offices, just a*
soon as they get in them, instead
of remembering that they are ser¬
vants of the people, and are put in
the office to serve the people, for
the people’s benefit. They seem
to forget this, and think they own
their offices, and the offices are
to be run for what can be made out
them.”
We understand that S. Ben Yow,
Avalon, well known in Toccoa,
returned from New York
be has attended lectures
the Belvue Hospital for the past
months.
THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL CLUB
XIII
COPYRIGHTED, 1896
II
I
:<r
fin :>
£. If
m
4' i
1
<i 9
Doings of the Club at Its Reg¬
ular Weekly Meeting
A FEW REMARKS BY THE PRESI¬
DENT, ,
“Gentlemen,” said the Hon. Jno.
Ruffin, the president, “come to read or¬
der. De sectretary will now
de minits.” This was done. Sev¬
eral committees handed in their
reports, and some other business
was transacted, when Bro/Jones
arose and said :
“Mr. President I observe dur is
a undercurent in dis town what
seems to be opposed to dis elub. I
dont know de reason for dis, and
if any one doe3 I’d like fer him to
explain.” /here and
The president arose
said: “Bro. Jones I’d like to state
for your benefit and for de good of
dis club, dat 1 bab noticed dis same
things myself. You will find by
observation Mr. Brother dat dur is
nothing good in dis life dat dont
have a sorry imitation. Dar was
netyer a truer saying dan Mr. Shak
spear when he said “a prophet hab
no honor in his own kentry,” de
folks jess look on him as a natural
born fool till be is dead in some
other kentry, wiiare dey errect forty a
monerment to his memery
foot high. You hab heare it sed
dat merit hab its reward, in a gen¬
eral sense dat may be true, but
when personally applied it am a lie
of de worse kind. De man who
looks for reward for merit is not de
right kind of a man anyway. De
man who is liberal wid liis money
to help his friends, who build pub¬
lic instertutions for de poor to get
lazy in, who neglects Ins own biz
ness to help his nabor. De man
who carries de banner of de cross
wid love on one side and de charity
on de other, and expects appro¬
bation of his fellow creeters is only
a foofT De country may ulogise
him but his friends will critersisc
him and for ^ all de benefit he re
ceibe for it he may die in de poor
house. Dis organization hold am now
in a cohdition tp its head
above de small things in dis life.
Our watchword is “Excelsior,”
(not de kind dey use for packing
furniture.) It means, so’m I’m
told by a white gentlemen, upward
onward and outward. We must
swar upward above de small things
•Mife and onward beyond them,
keeping our eves peeled at de in¬
ward discrepances and to fling dem
outward from us. dats de word
“Excelsior.” Dis club congraty
i ate> dem self on de progress dey
bab made. Dar is no envey among
*s, w e arc united together. De
folks aTe working together,
B* sm
Cg /WA ATCHES
SUBSCRIPTION, SI PER
‘ a?
" ‘9 “
you dont find de cullud people- try
ing to pull each other down, dey
are trying to build up de town
and if de white folks dont
quit fooling and build dat will. cotton We
factory, we cullud folks
hab made much progress since we
oagamzed and we really do feel
sorry dat de balance of de people 5
kaint keep up widde percession.
we are sorry but we kaint wait.
I want to say in conclusion dat dis
club doe6 qntertain de kindest feel
inga for aRAe people and would
like to help item all widout expect
in any benefirler one kindness. ”
After the transaction of some ot
her minor matters the club closed.
Lon ny Peyton,
Secretary
Cornelia Culling*.
Special Correspondent to the Times.
They are telling a good story of thef onf
Jno. A. Reynolds, secretary
company who ure building Bald¬
win, our rival sister city. It is
said that John A. went to Char
lotte to see Mr. Ryder, the super
entendent of this division of th*
Southern, about having a side track
laid at Baldwin, and that in the
trade Mr. Reynolds to '
was give
Mr. Ryder a mountain bear. Jno-*
A. got the bear and gave it to an
Italian to deliver to Mr. Ryder, but
when the Italian got to Cornelia he
took the B. R. & A. R.,R., and
at Tallulah the animal gt>t away
and made i'or the hollows and dells
of Rabun countyj
The people of Rabun cqunty, it
is said, have instituted suit against
the for damages Baldwin for Partnership allowing Company the -
am
mal to run at large.
Whether there is any truth in'
the story I am unable to say, but*
nevertheless, it is a topic of com¬ ■
mon conversation here. K
Love Caught.
Alf. Love, the r6 year ©Id boy
who, with R. R. Ivins, week, burgafixed
a store at Aerial la*t was
caught by Murshal Goss, of West¬
minster, S. C., near Highland, N.
C., Wednesday of last week and
passed through Toccoa Thursday
in company with Marshal Goss otY
his way to Clarkesvdlo. Evans
was sentenced Tuesday to 5 years alwr
in the chaingang. Love was
sentenced to 4 years in the • chaifa
gang. t
New Managemest -
The Edwards House* is undergo-
ing repairs and will open under tbe
management of Mrs. Schofield,,
formerly of Cornelia and Clarkes
vi 11c.
Mrs. Schofield is experienced the in
the management of Hotels end
travelling public may be assured of
good attention if they stop at the*
Edwards House. *■
Honest Merchants. . * f
Edwards & Busha did somethingT.
recently few merchant# would do.
Prices of guanos were cut in Toc^
coa. and these gentlemen met m
cut and advertised in The
that they would j»ive the sftSI
amount rebate to the customei
who had already purchased guanc
from them. At that time they had
sold alx>ut 8o tons, and the rebate
would amount to fi.u
Fair dealings will a|j
trade. Keep your eyev
Times for bargain* am
dealings from our r asKSs^.v. J --
Trb Timeses gain »
Toccoa, We calk
of the railroad >
fact that a new fet
around the
are now f