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THE TIMES-NEffS.
by w. AT fowler, editor
Doyle Sir Telephone 10.
-«1 Per Year; 50 Cents for Six Months;
Th#ee Months 25 Cents.
Entered at tho l’ostr-ffioe at Toccoa,
as second-class mail matter.
Papers will lie Stopped at the Expira-
of Time Paid for Without Notice.
The editor is not responsible for
sentiments expressed by correspon¬
dents.
Articles for publication must be ac
eompanied with writers name for our
protection. He may write tinder a non
de plume.
J: jST. WEST.
PHYSIC IAN AND M IICiLON
L’OCCA, GA.
Office Corner. Huge and Tugaio Street- .
M. Snefson t ,
DENTISY.
Office over Matheson Merc /ndise
Co’s, store on Doyle Stre* C.
Toccoa, tEORGIA.
E. P. SIMPSON & CO.
Corner Tugalo ami .Sage Streets.
TOCCOA GEORGIA
Hachinery and Machinery
Supplies
WHOLESALE DEALERS in SHINGLES
Agents for Reiser Manfg. Co.
Fire, Life and Accident insurance
We represent the following Life Compa¬
nies: Liverpool, London and Globe; Hart¬
ford,Home of New York ;Ph<enix of Brook¬
lyn: Insurance Company insurance of North Ameri¬
ca; Lancaster Fire Co. of Eng¬
land ; Greemvit-h of New York.
And the following Life Companies:
New York Life ami the Atlanta Mutual
Life and Accident Co.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
PIEDMONT AIR LINE.
Condensed Schedule of Pnssenger Trains
Northbound. ! | v. w ' Fst.Ml j No.l .* No. Ex. 18
1890. N No# ;UJ Daily,
Sept. 20, 1)aUy . Sun.
17' Atlanta, C. T. 12 00 m |ll 40 Pt? 'OOD-* pj ococoo-l-ldcnn-
Atlanta. E. T. i nn .,12 v 40 eppppppp
“ Norcross..... 1 14 P
“ Buford...... J hhhmhhmh
-
“ Gaiucsniltt.. I '2 9
“ Lula. 2 29 P
“ ( ornelia^.. ....... .• P
...
“ “ Toccoa Mt. Air/TT. '318
*' Westminster ...... 3 35 p P
** “ “ “ “ Central Greenville Gaffneys_____ Blacksburg.. Beneca hpartanburg. ...... ...... ... 5 0 4 4 30 18 45 18 p p p p 4 5 0 7 4 38 io 20 02 25 ■Opppgpppgp' vvawc •' ■
70 s p 7 18 tJJC •
“ Gastonia..... King's Mt......... 7 41
8 ___ 01 V
Ar. Charlotte .... 8 20 p 8 40 ’d'd •
“ Danville..... 18 00 a 1 80 •
Ar. Riohmond .. ^ 0 00 a 6 40 p 600
** “ Plilladelphla. New York .. 10 12 43 15 m a ocoCto
Ves. * Fst.Ml No.17
_
Southbound. No. 37 No. 35 Dail Ex.
bally.j Daily. y Sun.
s = Ig-fri f; 2 ©*. ® locate sssss p p p p
i pi
Lv. Richmond ... 2 00 a 12 55 2 00 aj
Ly. Danville..... 5 50 a 6 05 pi 6 40 a.....
“ Charlotte 9 85 a 10 55 p|l2 20
.... ......
“ Gastonia.............11 30 pi 110 p ! .....
“ King’s Mt....................! 185 p.....
Gaffneys...... Blacksburg .. 10 49 a 12 00 aj a 2 2 0 38 r)p...... p!......
“ Spartanburg. ..... 12 24
11 07 a' 1 00 a 8 15 p......
** Greenville... :12 28 p> 1 50 a I 4 20 p......
*• Central....... 115 p 2 33 a I 515pj......
“ Seneea....... 1 35 pj 2 58 5 47 p......
a
Westminster. 6 0Sp......
“ Toccoa........ 2 18 p 3 50 a 0 50 p.....
“ Mt. Airy............... 7 85 p 25
** " Cornelia.............i Lula.......... 4 18 a 7^40 *J8 y, 35
' Gainesville... 3 13 p 4 30 a p & 57
8 31 p 4 57 a 8 35 p -4 20
" Buford...... 0 07 p -I 4S
Norcross........ ........
Ar. E.T.! 0 43 p 00 27 ;
Atlanta. 4 55 p (5 20 a 10 30 p tc 30;
Ar. Atlanta. C. T.j 3 5 5 p 5 20 a 0 30 p 00 30 j
“A’ a. m. “P” p. m. “M’’ noon. “N” night.
Nos. 37 and 38—Washington and Southwest-
era Vestibule Limited. Through Pullman
alee pers between New York and New Orleans,
via also \\ between ashing ton, Atlanta and Montgomery, and
W New York and Memphis, via
train ashmgton, also Atlanta and Birmingham. This
cars between carries Danville Richmond-Augusta and Charlotte. sleeping First
class thoroughfare coach between Washington
and Atlanta. Dining cars serve all meals eu
route.
Nos. 35 and 36—United States Fast Mail, Pull-
ma ? SS??™? ww between New York. Atlanta
ju*d iNew Orleans. Pullman parlor cars be¬
tween Richmond and Danville. Pullman Sleep-
i»R cars between Birmingham and Charlotte.
sl8spUig cors ' )et ' veeu
The Air Line Belle train, Nos. 17 and IS, will,
from June 1st to Ootober 1st, 1896. be operated
between Atlanta and Mt. Airv, Ga., daily ex¬
cept wTh. Sunday. GREEN.
J. m. CULP,
Gon’iSupt,, Traffic M’g’r.,
__ W. D. O. W T ashington, D. C.
Gen'l A. TURK, S. H. HARDWTCK,
Pass. Ag’t , Ass’t Gen’l Pass. Act.,
. Washington, D. C. Atlanta. G^
____
DOKS NOT APPLY TO SEABOARD.
Hoftman Says Judge Speer’s Order
Refers to tho Southern Railway.
President Hoffman, of the Seaboard
Air-Line, save thut after consulting
with the legal department of the sys¬
tem he has decided that the injunction
of United States Judge Speer, order¬
ing the roads engaged in the rate war
to restore the tariff in effect Septem¬
ber 5th, did not apply to his line, as
the rates it has been and is now quot¬
ing conform with the laws.
“While the Seaboard Air-Line is
mentioned in the order,” said Mr.
Hoffman, “the injunction is really
directed at the Southern Bailway com-
pany and its allies, whose reduced
rates apply only to points ia competi¬
tion with the Seaboard, while our tar¬
iff applies to all points cn the system,
jlherefpre is to withdraw it will not rates. be necessary ” fog
our
(Tbs Iasi: words of 75.r Augustus
[arris were: “Do not let any one
disturb me. I want a long, long rts .”
WILSON LAW A SOBS.
AMPLE FOE REVENUE AND PROTEC¬
TION TO LABOR
McKlnlev's Letter Reviewed by John
De W r ltt W’arner. a Member
of the Committee of Congress
That Framed the Wilson BUI.
Mr. McKinley begins the unfortun¬
ate high-protection portion of his let¬
ter of acceptance by claiming that in
December, 1892, under the tariff act
bearing his name, the country was in
a condition of extraordinary pros¬
perity. He cites from President Har¬
rison’s message the statement that be¬
tween October, 1890, and October 22,
1892, 345 additional industrial plants
had been established and 108 exten¬
sions had of existing plants, and that
during the first six months of the cal¬
endar year 1892, 135 new factories
had been built. The facts were that
the two preceding years had been
those of steadily increasing industrial
depression. Omitting all instances of
labor troubles the cause of which was
either doubtful or clearly other¬
wise to be classified, there has been
collated and published as a challenge
to protectionists, with date and place
and circumstances in each case, nearly
twelve hundred instances of wage re¬
ductions during those very two years,
with strikes against them or lockouts
by employers in order to force accept¬
ance. The number of new plants and
factories and extensions of such quoted
by him from President Harrison is so
petty, when the size of this country
and the myriads of its industries arc
taken into account, as to be but a
trifling offset to the terrible record of
of disaster then daily being added to,
and in reality a humiliating confession
of the failure of McKinley legislation
which has promised better things.
As proof of Democratic depravity
Mr. McKinley then quotes from Presi¬
dent Cleveland’s message of August 8,
1893. It correctly characterized tho
condition of our country eight months
later, when its condition, still under
Republican legislation, had reached
such a crisis that Congress was called
together in midsummer to save our
finances from ruin by tho repeal of
the purchasing clause of the Sherman
act, for which Mr. McKinley had voted
and which the party which now poses
as a knight errant of sound finance
had vociferously pointed to with pride
in its platform of a short year previ¬
ous. The abyss from which the action
of the Democratic Administration then
rescued the country was but the end
of the descent upon which it had been
started by the twin “protection” sis¬
ters.
Mr. McKinley says that from 1880
to 1892 we had “a protective tariff un¬
der which ample revenues were col¬
lected for the Government and an ac¬
cumulating surplus.” Of these years
he was responsible only for two—1890
to 1892—during which his law was in
operation. So far from a surplus ac¬
cumulating under his bill the annual
surplus had fallen from $106,090,000
(in the year before the passage of the
McKinley bill) to $37,000,000 in the
first year of its operation, t£>$10,000,-
000 iu the second year, and to $2,300,-
000 in the third year, and had turned
to a deficit of $89,000,000 in 1894, the
last year before its repeal.
Sach is the demoralization of our
finances, resulting from Republican
legislation, with which our commerco
and manufactures have struggled for
years; and Mr. McKinley's figures by
which, charging to the Wilson bill the
ruin caused by the Sherman act, he
strives to make the McKinley bill
tolerable by comparison, are not
merely unfair, but, when rightly read,
the best proof that he is wrong. That,
under all the circumstances, our ex¬
ports of manufactured goods are so
nearly the maximum figure for our
most prosperous years; that the bal¬
ance in our favor of our foreign trade
is so large and so rapidly growing,
shows how much the Wilson bill has
done to offset the disaster bred by the
Sherman act.
Mr. McKinley charges the Wilson
tariff with failure to raise revenue
sufficient to satisfy the needs of Gov¬
ernment. What does he mean? Does
he not believe that, even from a pro¬
tectionist standpoint, all interests of
business demand that in adjusting a
tariff it should be so fixed as to remain
without substantial change for a con¬
siderable period, say eight or ten
years? If this bo true, must he not
also admit that its rates should be so
adjusted, not in view of the maximum
revenue probable under exceptional
prosperity or to the possible minimum
under an extraordinary depression,
but to the probable average of condi¬
tions during the entire term contem¬
plated ? To adopt the latter measure,
Mr. MoKinley must admit, would be
wantonly to overtax our people and
deraDge their finances by locking up
in the Treasury an increasing propor¬
tion of our inelastic circulation.
The monthly receipts and expendi¬
tures of our Government each vary so
much, both in fact and in relation to
each other, that any argument drawn
from comparing single months would
be misleading. But if we take the
first complete year under the opera¬
tion of the Wilson bill (the one ending
June 30, 1896, and one of extraordin¬
ary depression) we find tlie deficit for
the whole year to bo some $26,009,-
000 only. Even during that year not
merely had our pension expenditures
shown the beginning of a decrease
which must rapidly accelerate, but our
postal receipts had shown such a
tendency to increase as, through these
two sources alone and without any im¬
provement in business, to turn tho
deficit into a surplus before the act
shall have lasted half of its natural
life.
It is not, however, claimed but that
any conceivable revenue could be
turned into a deficit by Republican
expenditure. That, however, consti-
tutes no excuse for attempting to meet
limitless waste by pitiless taxation.
And if for any reason it becomes
desirable to provide for more revenue
it can be and it should be raised by
taxes on wealth, or by tariff or excise
upon articles comparatively those ol
luxury, rather than by increased tax¬
ation upon wool and sugar. For these
are the two articles which—the one in
clothing and the other in food—have
beoome at once the leading ones of
all those consumed by our people, and
those as to which the poor and the
rich are most nearly on a par as to per
capita consumption; and upon which,
therefore, any tax is ideally vicious
as an adjustment of burdens in pro¬
portion to want rather than wealth.
Even were Mr. McKinley correct in
his charge that the Wilson act is in¬
adequate for revenue purposes, hie
proposal now to increase taxation
would be none the less absurd when
we consider the actual condition of
the Treasury. At the beginning of
this fiscal year it contained of free cash
some $270,000,000, that is to t&s,
$170,000,000 in addition to the $100,-
000,000 gold reserve. It is true that
of the receipts of bond sales a portion
had been used to meet Treasury defi¬
cits—by far tlie greater portion oi
these having grown under McKinley’s
own bill. Bat as a net result there
remained at tho beginning of this
fisoal year, a couple of months ago,
sufficient free cash in the Treasury,
after making provision of $100,000,-
000 for the gold reserve, to have met,
without additional taxation, all defi¬
cits for six years to come, even though
pension expenditures should during
that time remain—as they cannot—at
their late high figures, and though
postal receipts should stop increasing
—as they will not—and though busi¬
ness should remain until 1902 as de¬
pressed as ft has been ever sfnee, the
Treasury was put at hazard. Under
such conditions, with a surplus in the
Treasury above the gold reserve, of
more than 10 per cent, of the entire
circulation in the country outside of
the Treasury, Mr. McKinley proposes,
without any necessity for revenue, and
solely as a sacrifice to the protection
fetish, further to tax our people and
further to contract the currency.
Mr. McKinley charges that American
labor is not sufficiently protected un-
der’the Wilson bill.
What would he have?
The average duty loviod by the Wil¬
son bill upon all imports, including
free as well dutiable ones, is above 20
per cent., which is about the total la¬
bor cost in American products. In
the more highly developed manufac¬
tures it is of course higher. Of these
those of irou and steel and textiles
constitute the greater part of our im¬
ports, and steel rails and cotton and
woolen sloths are probably the. most
representative items. Taking the re¬
ports for 1890 and 1891 of the United
States Commissioner of Labor, we find
that the total labor cost per ton of
steel rails “from materials in earth to
the finished produot” was then in the
United States $11,59, in Great Britain
$7.81 and on the Continent somewhat
higher than in Great Britain. To meet
this $3.73 difference per ton in labor
cost, the Wilson bill gives $7.81 per
ton protection, which, with the trans¬
port cost of such bulky articles, in¬
sures the American producer protec¬
tion of at least his total labor cost. In
cotton and woolen cloths the same re¬
ports show the labor cost then to have
been on the average well under 25 per
cent., while the Wilson bill protects,
them by duties averaging 40 per cent.,
or, with every allowance (and adding
nothing for transportation), giving
protection of more than the total la¬
bor cost. If, in fact, labor, with such
a tariff, is not sufficiently subsidized,
even from the protectionist stand¬
point, would it not be well before pro¬
posing further taxation to find out
what proportion of the tariff taxes la¬
bor actually erets, and into whose
pockets goes the bulk of the “protec¬
tion” claimed to ha imposed for la¬
bor’s sole benefit?
John De Witt Warner.
McKinley’s False Statements.
*’Work and wages have been cut in
two,” said Mr. McKinloy to the West
Virginia editors. Isn’t it dangerous
tc make wild and self-evidently false
statements such as this? Do they not
tend to cause people to suspect that
the man who utters them is either a
foolish fellow who never kuows what
he is talking about, or else a person
who is reckless with the truth? The
truth never needs the crutches of ex¬
aggeration, and their nee is a confes¬
sion that the tiuth is net there.—New
Fork World.
Farmers ami the Sail Trust
Each keg of nails used by the farm¬
ers this year will cost more than twice
as much as last year. The highly pro¬
tected nail trust will make fortunes
for the few firms which control the
nail industry. How will that help the
farmers ?
UNCLE SAM AFTER THE SULTAN.
Said to Be Taking Part in the Move¬
ment to Depose Him.
The St. James Gaz tte (London)
publishes a dispatch from Miian,
Italy, staling that the Secolo, of that
city, says that the departure of the
Italian living squadron f >r the Levant,
is the initiative step towards forcing
Turkey to grant the rtf irms demanded
in the case-! of Armenia, and that it is
taken by Italy, support* d by the
United Stales and Gnat Britain.
The Secolo adds that jo the event of
the -nitan’s refusal P gr».nt the re-
fejms he will be deposed.
A dispatch it m Romo to the bf.
James Gaz-tte >»vs that t i Roma
states that the 1 taliau sbq will co-
operate with tlose or Gnat Britain
and tie; U * .1 <
Dwabf oxen, thirty inches in
height, are common in Ceylon.
“HIGH PRICES” FALLACY.
The Masses Would Be Injured by
Dearer Goods.
The support of the McKinleyite
doctrine of high taxes and dear goods
comes almost entirely from the men
who have been persuaded that higher
prices are better than cheapness. It
is because of the belief that more pro¬
tection will raise prices, and that in
some way this will help the producers,
that in spite of the utter failure of Mc-
Kinlevism four years ago, there are
still some people whef are willing to
try it again.
"When it is a question for each in¬
dividual whether he pre f ers to pay
high or low prices for commodities,
there is no difference of opinion.
Every one wants to buy where goods
are sold cheapest for any given qual¬
ity. Nobody wishes to see the things
he needs made dearer, either through
natural or artificial causes. This is a
law of human nature.
When it comes to selling goods the
case is different. The people who sell
want high prices for their products,
and the promises of the protectionists
to aid them by shutting out foreign
competition with heavy taxes, is there¬
fore very attractive. Without consid¬
ering what the ultimate result will be
the producers are inclined to favor
the policy which makes goods dear.
The fallacy of high prices argument
lies in the fact that each and every
one of the 70,000,000 Americans are
consumers, and only a comparatively
small number of them sellers of goods
which are affected by the tariff. The
millions of farmers, planters, farm
laborers, etc., cannot have the price
of their products, of which a surplus
is annually exported, increased by
tariff laws. The millions of workers
in mills, factories, mines, etc., cau get
no advantage from a policy which
merely increases their employer’s pro¬
fits and in no way advances wages,
which depend on the competition
among employes. Even if the employ¬
ers could be compelled to divide with
their workers some of their profits
this would not compensate for the in¬
creased cost of living resulting from a
general advance in prices.
The whole question of cheap goods
versus high protection prices is there¬
fore a matter of figures. The best inter¬
ests of the 70,000,000 people who buy
things are all on the side of low prices.
The selfish interests of a few manufac¬
turers are on the side of taxes which
makes goods dear. It should not be
hard to decide which policy is fairest
and best.)
The People Versus Plutocracy.
In the matter of the action of tho
People versus Plutocracy, the formal
pleadings of the parties have raised
the issue of the standard of monetary
currency. But the verdict in the great
trial now proceeding before the Amer¬
ican people should be given not only
with strict regard to the evidence pro¬
duced, but also with reference to the
character, and credibility of the parties
producing it. The Democratic party
has always been the friend of the toil¬
ers of the Nation and has ever stood
as the champion of equal rights and
individual liberty. It represents the
best interests of all the people. And
yet it is claimed that they are now en¬
deavoring to accomplish the ruin of
the country, to depress labor, bring
about panic, shocking credit and par-
alyzmgevery industry. Can it bo pos¬
sible, is it reasonable to believe that
the Democratic party is about to com¬
mit hari-kari? • That its special object
is to render the people miserable and
to spread universal ruin V
The Democracy which we love and
for which we stand has ever been the
firm and faithfui friend of tho poor
and weak as against the rich and
strong. The Republican party is at¬
tempting to pose as the guardian of
the people, who will hardly be de¬
ceived by the cheap, false halo with
which it seeks to decorate itself. That
party comes into court with unclean
hands, stained by the crime of a
stolen Presidency in 1876. It did not
hesitate the most daring and despic¬
able treason by assassinating the in¬
stitution under which we live, and
undermining the best hope of every
lover of the human race—government
of the people, for the people, by the
people.
The counting out of that matchless
statesman and Democrat, Samuel J.
Tilden, from the Presidency, should
never be condoned or forgotten and
the professions of patriotism coming
from the party that perpetrated that
wrong bears upon it the stamp of
fraud and insincerity.
If the country needs to be saved,
let it be saved from the clutches of a
party -guilty of the foulest crime in
American history—tho disgraceful
robbery of the Presidency in 1876,—
New York Suburban.
BRYAN’S LATEST ITINERARY.
Where tlie Democratic Candidate Will
Go After Leaving New York
Chairman McConville, of the demo¬
cratic national speaker’s bureau at New
York, has given out the following itin¬
erary: Mr. Bryan leaves New
York at midnight of Sept. 29;
Washington early on the morn¬
ing of Sept. 30 ; Martinsburg at
11 a. m. ; Kevser at 3 p. m.,
Oct. 1 ; Clarksburg at 10 a. m.; Par¬
kersburg at 2 p. m.; Wheeling at mid¬
night, Oct. 2; Charleston at 10:30 a.
m.; Huntington at 1 p. m., from which
place he goes to Cincinnati, taking the
Ohio and Mississippi train to St. Louis,
where he addresses the silver demo¬
cratic clubs, Oct. 3. Oa the morning
of Oct. 5, he leaves Memphis and in
the evening of that day he leaves Nash¬
ville.
Sarcasm is the laigoage of the devil,
for which reason yon shonld re¬
nounce it.
THE ATHENS
Mutual Fire Insurance Company,
General Offices, Atlanta, Ga.
This company is operated on a purely mutual plan, backed by a
guarantee fund, beside the assets of the company.
The company writes small lines on preferred risks, and will not car-
ry over $2500 on any risk or risks exposed to any one fire, lias com*
plied with all laws of the state governing Fire insurance companies.
Participating but Nnn-Assessible Policies issued.
The Profits eaeli Year are Divided Among Policy-Holders.
We give you absolute indemnity at actual cost! Losses paid
promptly. Agencies in all cities and towns of the state. A Georgia
company soliciting tiie patronage of Georgia people.
Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 13, 1S96—The Athens Mutual Fire Insurance
Co. has authority to transact the business of fire insurance in the state
of Georgia tor the year 1896. W. A. Wright, Ins. Com.
We Guarantee to Save You at Least lo per Gent on Insurance
Before insuring your property call on me.
■ MASON,
Agent Athens Mutual and Mechanic Mutual Fire Tns. Cos.,
TOCCOA, GA.
Toccoa Ileal Estate Exchange
Buy, Sell and Rent Property.
Office: Times Building. Toccoa, Ga.
No. 1—12 acres of land near Tugalo, on the
Southern Railroad, one mile from church
and school, no fences, both rocky and free
soil, watered with well, spring and stream.
Olid 3 room house, two 1 room houses and
and one large barn, also a two story gin-house
a four story grist and Hour mill. It
pays now $300 rent clear, has a fine water
power and any amount can be gotten at a
small cost. Price $2,000.
No. 2—108 acres of land 1 1-2 miles from
Tugalo, on the Southern Railroad, one mile
from church and school, fenced with rails,
lias a large orchard and a good vineyard.
00 acres in woodland, 40 acres in cultiva¬
tion, is watered with well, sprin s and
stream. One 8 room residence and several
servants’and out buildisgs, also good sta¬
bles. Price $1,300.
No. 3—250 acres of land 5 miles from
So «thern Railroad, one mile
,
..0
acres woodland, 150 acres open and (»
acres bottom land. Two 3. and one 4 room
residences also good stables etc. Can be cut
‘a tl ° nS ’ 18 ' e £i
with 1 p.,\.r ’thnl lngf<amlstream w 1 1Ke
-
so t . i ait time.
No. 4—03 1-3 acres of land 5 miles ffom
Toecoa, on the Southern Railroad, one
and one-half miles from church and school,
no fence, free soil. Fifty-three acres ot
with woodland, 10 acres bottom. Watered
springs and branch. One log house,
stables etc. Price $300.
No. 5—075 acres of land 5 miles from
Toccoa, on the Southern Railroad, 2 miles
from church and school, fenced with rails,
there are a fe\v|fruit trees, both rocky and
free soil, watered with well, springs and
streams. About GOO acres or woodland and
50 acres cleared. Two tenement houses.
Price $3.50 per acre; will make terms.
No. 6—407 ,. , ri _ acres of ,. land , near lugalo, , on
koutnern Kailroad, one and one-half
miles from church and 1 mile from school,
no fence, < 0 apple and 30 peach trees. 342
acres woodland, 05 acres rocky and 20acres
bottomland. Watered with well, springs,
branch and creek. One dwelling and two
tenement houses and one barn. Mortgaged
for $1,200. Price $2,500,
No. 7—287 acres of land near Tugalo, on
the Southern Railroad, one and one-fourth
miles from church and one and one-half
miles from school, (3 schools close) no fence,
50 fruit trees of different varieties, 1-2 acre
vineyard, both rocky and free soil, 225 acres
of and woodland, is watered with well, springs
7 streams. residence The which buildings consist $1,300 of and one
room cost 3
tenement houses, and 2 ordinary barns,
Price ~
$2,000 for tract.
No. 8—321 acres of land 1 1-4 mile of Tu¬
galo, on the Southern Railroad, church and
school on the place, no fence, small orcli-
ard, rocky wells and free soil. Watered with 3
good and buildings plenty of springs and one
stream. The are three 4 room
cottages also 3 barns, of G stalls each, well
framed. The water power is exceptionally
good. Would exchange for other property cash.
if suited. Price $10 per acre, part
No. 9—700 acres of land 1 1-2 miles from
Toccoa, on the Southern Railroad, one and
one-half miles from church and one mile
from school, fenced with rails, 100 fruit
trees, of different varieties and a small
acres of tine cleared unland and 80 a.-res of
and stream. There are one 5 and two 3
room framed residences, beside several
500; very will good barns on the place. Price $8,-
make terms.
„ •So. 10—94 of land omiles from _ Toe-
acres
coa, on the Southern Railroad, 1 mile irom
church and 1-2 mile from school, fenced
with rails. The soil is divided. There are
64 acres of woodland, watered by well
PROPERTY.
lor Renter Sale—0 room cottage, with
100x230 feet lot, near in, stables, etc. Price
$000, or will rent for 5.50 per month.
For Sale or Rent—0 room Cottage anu
large lot, near in. Price $800, or >0 per
month rent. Part cash.
EVERY MAN HIS OWN DOCTOR.
m* «. HA9HX2PON AYEES, M. D. i
♦
A 609-page XUnttrtted Book, oontaining valuablo information pertaining U
diseases of the homaa system, showing how to treat and core with simplest
of medicines. The book contains analysis of eonrtahip and marriage; rearing
and ma n agement of children, besides valuable prescriptions, recipes, etc.,
with This a full complement of facts in materia medica that everyone should know!
most indispensable adjunct to every well-regulated household will be
mailed, postpaid, to any address on receipt of prioe, SIXTY CENTS. Address
ATLANTA PUBLISHING HOUSE,
116 Loyd St., ATLANTA. GA.
springs and streams. The buildings are
one 1 room log dwelling and a common.
barn. Price $50o cash: will make terms.
No. 11—134 1-3 acres land 41-2 miles front
Ciarkcsville, (la., on the B. R it A. 11. R.,
1 mile from church and 2 miles from school,
fenced with plunk and rails. There a few
peach trees. Free soil, 100acres woydland,
watered with well, springs and stream,
One frame residence and store, 5 or 0 rooms
also 4 frame tenement houses. Price s 1 ,-
500; part cash, balance easy terms.
No. 12—150 acres of land4 miles from
Toccoa, on the Southern Railroad, 2 miles
trom church and school, fenced with rails,
has a few fruit trees, both rocky ami free
soil, 75 acres woodland. Watered with
well, springs and stream. Two tenement
houses and one water power mill. Price
2 , 000 .
X o. 13-227 acres of land 1-4 mile front
trees® JSSfiS ?'1 siral’lrtne- ■si'**
100 peach and a| pit .,4 ,ud a
...... . , Xin u .
‘
acres woodland, about 75 acres inmikiva-
tiim - Watered with well, springs and
creek. Several small tenements and a log
barn. Price seven dollars per acre.
No. 14—300 acres of land <> miles from
Toccoa, on the Southern Railroad, 1 1-4
miles from church and 11-2 miles from
school, no fence, different varieties of fruit
trees, land. rocky and free soil, 200 acres wood-
Watered by 3 springs and several
branches. Five dwellings 2 to 5 rooms. It
ifJ? J. *’L-it” ttrst-elnsa iann. 1 * along Land side oi runs land. up to 1 rice do
‘ ev f n < G ^ rs l ,er a< ae > VV1 ^ n,a ^ e terms,
No. 15—700 acres more or less, 4 miles
from Ciarkcsville, on the B. R. &A.R. K.„
1 mile from church and school, fenced with
plank and rails, orchard and vineyard cou-
tain 6 acres, very little rocky soil, 1500 acres
ol woodland. Watered with well, springs lit
and streams, one spring cost $1,000 to
w ater cold as ice. One rock dwelling cost
$8,000 ten years ago, also good large bam
and stables. Price $10,000: one half cash
balance on easy terms,
x - J ..._ arl Y .T °i , , lar ?.J , _ mi1 from
° ®*
rtinpsxl, l e > G , mile: from loccoa, 10miles
f rom Harm ®ny Grove and 12 miles from
Avalon, . . on the Southern Railroad, church
on the place, 1 mile from school, no fence,
vineyard. 100 ajpple and 100 peach trees also a small
woodland. Nearly all free soil, 200 acres of
Watered with wells, springs,
streams and river. One good 6 room dwel-
ling 2 houses; stories high and two 2 room teue-
meat also good barn. Price $0,000.
Terms easy with 8 per cent, 1-3 cash. Thero
are several other small farms adjoining it
that can be bought at low prices, and by
their addition the place could be made as
large place as is a purchaser might want. The
a good one and cheap at the price.
No. „ 17- , 148 ,o of , . land 11-2 miles from
acres
Toccoa, on the Southern Railroad, 11-2
from church and school, fenced with
rai 3u | a s good » ^ * or vineyard, more f rui mixed t trees soil, of all 70 kinds acres al- of
\voo< fiand, and 78 acres under cultivation.
Watered with well, springs and streams.
One 4 room residence, and two tenement
houses: one 2 and one 3 room, also good
stables. Price >1,-00 cash
No> i$-80 acres of land 1 \> 1-2 miles J from
^ * Ju?” ?\ K« ■i 1 roa ‘ « 1 1 v',
^ / [ ^ f ., Ind . T-
.
nixea oilj a.-res woofRand 40
’ s P rn ?K‘» and streams. One large farm
,
No. 13—harm of .ki« acres,3 1-2miles from
Glarkesville, 2 miles of church and schools,
orchard and vineyard, 4 room new frame
dwelling, with kitchen:'two bath room,detached dining
room and tenement houses
three barns, outhouses, A'c. (;5 acres creex k
bottom land in cultivation, ami balance
rolling, $3,000: with good hardwood timber Price
one-third cash and balance 2 and 3
years, at 8 per cent.
For Sale—Handsome Cottage of 6 rooms
nicely finished, with large lot and two ten-
ement houses on back, which pay 4.50 per
f.S n,a ^ 8 ra I' p vines and in fruit ft nd trees, very
fato^t 1 $1,400; will make suns-