The Toccoa times. (Toccoa, Ga.) 1894-1896, May 06, 1896, Image 8

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! •; in - I GOSSIPY VEIN \ • Climbing the Wall. Time* have been hard For several years past. And we, none of ws, know How much lunger ’twit last. The poor have got all, nothing— The rich’have it And the poor man’s sifter Goes "climbing the wall.” ■ lit thuds times there arc many Who can scarcely earn bread— Theywould.work if they could But all business seems dead. Tha wolf at tho door Wifi devour them all Si they-can't keep their sifter From "climbing the wall.” it. Mr. Jas. King, candidate for Tax Collector was In town last week. He says be feels confident of election. Mr. Sandy Ingles, candidate for Ordinary was in town last week. Mr. Ingles is making a thorough canvass of the county, and he thinks his chances are very good for election. J. J. Bowden, candidate for Representative is worthy of every in good and honest man’s vote Habersham county. Vote for him. Mrs. Dolph Mathewson and chil¬ dren, little Susie and Willie, from Toccoa,Ga., are the guests of Mr. and-Mrs. Jesse Carter.—-Westmin¬ ster ■ correspondence Qconce New* Mr- W. J. Suttlesbf Toccoa, Ga„ spent Saturday at Walhalla and Sunday ip Westminster. Mr. Sut tles was once a valuable citizen of Ocbnec and retains the same posi tiorijinhis adopted town.—West¬ minster correspondence. Oconee News. Hon. R. D. Yow of Avalon,and Mayor Matheson of Toccoa, passed thrbiigh the city on their way home from a trip down the Georgia road yesterday; They had been Monroe, inspect¬ ing the new cotton mill at gathering points for the new plant soon to be erected at Toccoa.— Gainesville Cracker. Straw matting to be closed out at cost this week. Matheson Merchandise Co. *' iX'aWr ) <-KmA' ■ v V . • ' For every quarter in a man’s pocket there are a dozen uses; and to use each one in such a way as to «Wtfv* the greatest benefit is a question every one must solve for tiiihself. We believe, however, that no better use could be made one of the»e quarters than to ex¬ change it for e bottle of Chamber Iain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, a medicine that every family should be provided with. For, sale by Wright & Edge, Dmiriristifei ■ . the of Tannery, A man by name Will * 11 Franklin county had an, a wall known negro boy at town arrested last Saturday d before Judge Cook on a 4 . ■ if larceny after trust. It ■ * Tannery ict gave some ne t F* ** 0 he claims was Green, a mm£. and negro when had " u» * nt to jdi in de IfiA W T , , h for . - 1 Tom Wright, of the drag firm of Wright & Edge made a trip to lanta last week. For some reason Tom is frequently seen in Atlanta nowadays. It is said that the Cocoa Cola of Atlanta is no better than that here in Toccoa. Editor Owen of the Carnesviile Free Press, was a caller on The Times last week, J. J. Bowden, candidate for rep¬ resentative, was in Toccoa week “smiling with the boys” and telling jokes. Jack is an able law¬ yer, a Christian gentleman and a true friend. Habersham County can,do no better than sending Jack to the legislative. On account of the illness of Mrs, Perry in Atlanta last week, Prof. Perry spent several days with Mrs. Perry. Prof, Fessenden teaching school in Mr. Perry’s absence. The Sunday Schools of Elberton will picnic at the falls next Friday. In this issue will be found the announcement of Mr. A. C. Ingr lis for Ordinary. My. Inglis is a , gentleman well qualified to filled that important office : he has the office of Receiver with credit to the county, and is well known throughout the county, and is worthy the support of every citizen of the county. Mrs. L. J. Safford of Demorest, mother of Mrs. Fowler, is a guest of the Editor’s family. Owing to sickness in his family Rev. Culpepper will not be able to get to Toccoa, jfrobably till tomor¬ row or next day. Mrs. J. C. Zachary has been <^u ite sick the past week but is im¬ proving. Everyone who will £ake the trouble to cut out this notice and forward it, with ten cents, to the address below, will receive a sample copy of DemorhsT’ s Magazine, containing a Pattern Order which entitles the holder to any pattern illustrated in any number of the Magazine published during the last twelve months, at the uniform price of four cents each; and fre¬ quently over thirty patterns are ill¬ ustrated in one number, thus afford¬ ing an almost unlimited variety to select from. Dkmor?st’s is pub¬ lished for >'2 a year, by the Dem¬ orest Publishing Company, no Fifth Avenue, New York. Free Pills. S^nd your address* to H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and Kind’s get a free sample box of Dr. New Life Pills. A trial will con¬ vince you of tbeir merits. These pills are easy in action and are par¬ ticularly effective in the cure of Constitution and Sick Headache. For Malaria and Livor troubles they have been proven invaluable. They are guaranteed deleterious to be perfectly free from every sub¬ stance and to be purely vegetable. They do not weaken by their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the box. sys¬ tem. Regular size 25c. per Sold by Wright & Edge Druggists. People who know Jack Bowden, know him to be a gentleman, who is ifi every way capable and wor¬ thy to represent our county. Reg¬ ister now. and vote for him June 6th. V • , i re HATS! HATS! Elegant line Drum¬ mers Samples Straw Hats at less than Wholesale cost. See them, they are Jeems Dandies. Edwards & Busha. . % Mr*. M. F. Skrine would like to have her lady friends to call and her stock of new mllli - tf ixa, 5 o.'R.««*; u about 1 4 ■ — _ Smoking T IT !; Awarded ■ < . Highest Honors—World’s Pair, DR 1 w v CREAM \ RAKING POWBFR * MOST PERFECT MADE "th^duiterS! 40 YEARS THE STANDARD. Mr, D. Y. Davis, a prominent liveryman and merchant of Goshen. Va..,has this to s iy on the subject of rheumatism : “1 take pleasure in v recommending Chamberlain’s Pain Balm for rheumatism, as I khow from personal experience claimed that it will do all that is for it. A year ago this spring my in¬ brother was laid up in bed with flammatory rheumatism and suffer¬ ed intensely. The first application eased of Chamberlain’s Palm Balm the pain and the use of one bottle completely cured him. For srle by Wright & Edge, Druggists. The Colton Mill. Work is being pushed in clearing off the site for the cotton mill, and it is expected that surveyors and architects will have plans for the mills made and the position for the buildings and switches selected by the latter part of the week. Work will now be pushed rapidly. The first installment of the capital stock has all been paid in and notes, ta¬ ken for the balance—so the cotton factory is now an ASSURED FACT. Let the croakers, dissatisfied, disgruntled, dyspeptic kickers ac¬ knowledge the fact that the Toccoa cotton factory is a CERTAINTY, and go forward in helping the enter¬ prise along by words of encourage¬ ment—for that is all they have—in¬ stead of steadily decrying all that is good for Toccoa’s prosperity. We now want to push forward, and speak a kind word for EACH ALL the enterprises now run¬ ning and which will hereafter be started. By united effort our prosperity will be certain, by division we fal¬ ter and fail. Let the word progress be m every man’s mouth, and Toccoa will yet be a city of \yhich,we shall all feel proud. ; . Ayersville Dots. Special Correspondence to Th« Timm. Master John Ayers visited his father, near Elberton last week. Mr. W. H. Kytle , of Athens, vis¬ ited his parents here last Sunday. C. J. Mulkey, of Madison, S. C., visited hi* brother in Ayersville, last Week. We are sorry to learn that J. M Vaudjver is very sick. W. J. Ayers made Saturday. a business R. trip to Ayers Mt. Airy on Cornelia business^ W. w?ttt to .on wife and on B. P. Brown, Miss Einma were in Toccoa, shop¬ ping on Thursday. Mrs. Cilia Ivey, and little returned home, on Sunday, to Cor¬ nelia, after spending a week very pleasantly with parents and rela¬ tives. Mr. W. M. McCubbins, of Cornelia, was in town on Monday, to the delight of his friends. Mrs. W. Mulkey and Mrs. J. M Van¬ diver were in Toccoa on Saturday, shopping and visiting relatives. Mr„Press Worsham, of the South era, is visiting home folks in Cov¬ ington, Ga. Success to Thx Tim**. r «• Rxft « fl Notice • We want * correspondent gt fv ery postoffice in Habersham Coun¬ ty, who will give us the news, and not chaff,once every a or 3 week*, regularly. To the person sending regular communications, gotten up in a readable *tylej we will seBd them The Times free. * \ . r; hands, chilblain*, coma, rad , u akin eruptions, and positively » cures *25 n j . For-tobjr Wnght &Edge> ■ — * r.* in Toe - IK 5 y-: WANTED, ETC. Notices under this head will be received at one cent a word for two insertions. FOE RENT.—A SIX BOOM COTTAGE and large garden, good well and stables. Will rent, i-Sniftp ._Appl y at th is office. TO TRADE—«« shares of stoek in toe Prudential Gobi Mines, near Denver, Col. Will trade for 10ml. Apply at this office. How to Treat a Wife. (Form Faeitic Health Journal.) • First, get a wife ; second, be pa¬ tient. You may have great trials and perplexities in your business, but do not therefore, carry to your home a cloudy or contracted brow. Your wife may have trials, which, though of less magnitude, may be hard for her to bear. A kind word, a tender look, will do wonders in chasing from her brow all clouds of gloom.—To this we would add always keep a bottle of Chamber¬ lain’s Cough Remedy in the house. It is t ie West and is sure to be need ed sooner or later. Your wife will then know Hint you really care for her and wish to protect her health.* Fore s»le by Wright & Edge, Druggists. FOOD FOR HOGS. Experiment* at Several Station* Show the Deadly Effect* of Cottonseed Meal. Question.—C an you give me any satisfactory advice as to feeding hogs on cottonseed, or cottonseed meal? I have been told by some of my neighbors that it 1 b dangerous; others say that if the seed are thoroughly wet they are not in¬ jurious. Answer — At the Texas Experi¬ ment Station the report from a series of experiments is that cottonseed either raw, boiled or roasted cannot with safety be fed to hogs, even when com¬ bined with other foods, killing them in about six weeks. At the Kansas station the following conclusion was reached: That cottonseed moal even if fed in small quantities, or mixed with other food, proved poisonous to hogs. They diod in from three to eight weeks after being put on this feed—the larger ones holding out the longest. But it was also found that the cottonseed meal produced very rapid gains at first, and if the hog^were taken off before there any symptoms of disease appeared were no unfavorable results. The ex¬ periment indicated that hogs can be fed for a short time on cottonseed meal with the best results and without subsequent deleterious effects. From tests mode at tho Alabama Ex¬ periment Station it is stated that by combining crashed cottonseed with a liberal quantity of green rye, green oats, green sorghum, sweet potatoes or tur¬ nips it cau probably be fed to pigs and hog*-w|ithout great 4augor, provided the cottonseed is not mouldy or decom¬ posing, or allowed to remain in the feed troughs until partially decayed; also that the crashed seed can be combined with skimmed or separated milk and fed without probable injury to the hogs. It is further stated that after a pig reaches 50 noands in weight, cottonseed or cottonseedmeal in combination with corn or oowpeas, oan be made a profit¬ able radon up to the time of the pre¬ monitory symptoms of disease. As a rule, this period varies from three to six weeks. The first symptoms are weakness, staggering, fever, loss of ap¬ petite and few if any movements. When these systems appear the pig should at once be turned into a pasture, or the food should be changed to bran Slops and corn or other healthy foods. These experiments indicate that the ’cause of the injurious effeots of feeding cottonseed meal to hogs is not yet folly understood, and until that is the case it is not advisable for farmers to risk Hieing their hogs by experimenting with this feed, however abundant and cheap it may be. In tha course of time this muoh discussed question will be defi¬ nitely settled, and until then it would be safe for farmers to await the result now being sought at government ex¬ pense. From time to time we have an¬ swered questions on this line, and as Mro wnfcnVi 4T' them with great interest and anything 0 1 value will he placed before the farm of the stats.—State Agricultural De ’ MJmm n®r« OB . QoasnoN.—What , is tho bczt pUir to got Uoe off of hogs? —The simplest plan to get rid of lice is to put on your hogs. The way to do this ie to feed the hogs in a fence on •belled com. and while they oelj rid ttoa « wm as of it, will kin the pig*. Tire hget way ia it in a we* cr tarn day* A little efl or ted the * fmLm-SA -- .. a .? *■ STAR LIVERY STABLE, & Oar land, Proprietors. Carriages and Vehicles We have a new lot of Buggies, Phaetons, and other first-class ve on hand for the summers’ business, beside some new and stylish ^ and are prepared to accommodate our customers on shortest no¬ and for weddings, funerals, picnic and excursion parties and we entire satisfaction. Parties desiring to visit Toccoa - Falls will do well to see us before making final arrange foy the trip, HOGSED & GARLAND. ^ _ PARTICULAR PEOPLE. People who insist on knowing all about an article before buying it, who demand that price and.;.: quality must be just exactly right, * who form their opinions of deal-; ers by goods they have sold in thej past—those are the. folks wy like to do business with. „ , & We are rather particular our P selves in buying. !\Ve won’t spend and a penny unless the price, islpw the We quality high. ‘ f quantity f’ of Box have a large Papers from 15 cents ftp to 75c per . : unruled. We box, ruled and have some of the finest paper in Georgia—Just as good as can be bought., v ...... . Good writing paper at 25 cents per pound, pack of envelopes for 5c; Legal cap paper* 30 cents per School Satchels for 10; School Composition Books for 5 cents;* Crayon (six different colors) Pencils for 10 cents; Lead .pen¬ 10 cents per dozen; 200 sheets of pencil tablet paper for 5 cents, lots’of other things too numerous to mention. THE TIMES, Toccoa, Ga. Announcements UOTIC E.—Announcements in Thjc Times are £.'<.50 cash in ad vancc,lfor 5 lines or less. All over 5 lines 12 1-2 eeirts per line. FOEs REPRESENTATIVE. I HEREBY ANNOUNCE MYSELF A candidate for Representative of Habersham county, subject to the action of primary of June i>th. If favored with the office I shall use my best endeavors to faithfully repre¬ sent your interest. WHEN, ,J.J. BO H,THANKING FRIENDS FOR PASTFA vors; I announce myself a candidate for re-election a* representative of Habersham county, subject to the the democratic of primary. citi¬ Earnestly soliciting vote every zen, I am, respectfully M. T. Pkrkins. for clerk of court, TO THE VOTER8 OF HABERSHAM County :|-I beg to announce the myself office aa of a candidate for re-election to subject the clerk of Superior court, to Primary te be held June <>th. Thanking if you for past favors and assuring I will you, favored with yonr support, that as heretofore, discharge the duties of the of¬ fice to best of my ability. J• A. „„,„ ERW IN. Tvr aY FOR ORDINARY. WE ARE AUTHORIZED TO AN nounee the name of Judge B. E. Edge of Hab¬ as a candidate for the office of Ordinary democratic ersham county, subject to the primary. ______ TO THE VOTERS OF HABERSHAM county: I most respectfully announce sub¬ my ject candidacy the democratic for the .office primary of Ordinary, of June 6. to the I promise, if elected, to serve you to best of my ability. A. C. IIy GLI8. FOR SHERIFF. WE ARE AUTHORIZED TO AN acamfid^to^^l^Uo^th^crfflce county,subjert to the Sheriff of Habersham action oi the Dem ocratic primary. roti tAA OvLLECTOR. _ MYSELF as I HEREBY ANNOUNCE ottoecoim a candid^e for Collector * 6 ^^ Echols. JejMlmary. Johu M. Mt. Airy, March 16th. TO THE VOTERS OF HABERSHAM Co i—I hereby announce myre« * candidate for the office of Tax Collector, resp^ully subject to the Democratic primary. I solicit your YT>tea. 16th. ._ Cornelia, March FOB COUNTY COMMISSIONERS. WE ARE AUTHORIZED TO AN nouoce the name of W. B. Haddock as a for County Commissioner# sub¬ ject to action of the Democratic primary. ^ AUTHORIZED O. A. CoOp^r TO AN uounce the nomeaf Capt. sub¬ «s • candidate for Countar Commissioner, ject to the Democratic primary. FOR 5ALE. The Glenn Davis Glade Creek Farm containing 234* acres of the beat » iam countv. «t*4 X tenant bouses, deuce and 1 house, barns, *3» • i a- HO R-SES ‘ Bqught;jsold and Ekéhan‘ged McClure’s livery .Stable, Opposite Simpson House. ' Chir buggies are new and neat ;our horses are the best money can buy. We the patronage of the traveli ng public. W only charge $2 per day for horse and bug gy. Give us a trial. Stable on Tugalo street, opposite Simpson house. TOCCOA, GEORGIA. $10 A DAY TO AGENTS Anvone little who wants to and who has a Pish enterprise Washer business. can secure It £10 a day in the is 1 looming now. Everybody wants a OU max nowadays. One agent cleared £20 evevy day.'for a year: a good chance; best Dish Washer made; no soliciting; Dish Washers sold at home; a permanent One posi¬ mil¬ tion in town-, city wide-awake or country. hustler lion to be sold. A can clear £ir> to $20 a day easy; washes and dries in two minutes. Co¬ Climax M’fo Co., 50 1-2 Starr Av*., lumbus, O. nr. SODA V Water DRINKER* l We think our soda water is ihe best in town. We want you! to know so. Come once—once will be enough to give you that knowl¬ edge, and the satisfaction of know¬ ing you’re drinking pure fruit fla¬ vors goes with that knowledge. BUSINESS! i Yes, that’s what we’re doihg, We and a good volume of it, too. lay it to the fact that we handle u.-.. styles and seU-for t he least money. A large invoice of tan shoes in new styles has been a dded to our fine stock of shdes. A beautiful line of Ladies and? Misses fine shoes. A full assortment Hitts, of Shql^e*, Laces,. Silk Fans; Etc. JUST RECEIVED 1 A special drive in Mens’ Summer Shirts—r White and colored. * < Amt * Vickery, Cannon &; -V r - > J. ft RENNET, Funeral Director • a m - , Undertaker.- vJ All calk in town or promptly attended to. moderate. ord^t and Edwan _ * Biown or at Residence. 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