Newspaper Page Text
\*
VE ARE HEADQUARTERS IN THIS SECTION FOR
ff ... I
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
Plantation Supplies,
Stoves, Tinware, Groceries,
FLOUR, HEAT, ETC.
LOWEST PRICES
SOUTHERN RECORD
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY
SOUTHERN PUBLISHING CO.
INCORPORATED.
1 . B. JONES, W. A. FOWLEK,
PRESIDENT. OE.Y. MANAGER.
W. A. FOWLER. EDITOR.
Entered at the Post-Office as second eiass
mail matter.
Rates of subscription: 81.00 per year; 50
cents for six months and 25 cents for
three months.
Obituary notices of ten lines or less free;
over ten lines 5 cents per line.
The editor is not responsible for sentiments
expressed intended by correspondents. publication Articles
for must be
companied by writer’s name, not
essarily for publication, but for
tection to us.
The Election.
The election at the different pre¬
cincts of the county on the question
of removal of the court house pass¬
ed off very quietly—there being
polled about 2,093 votes. Toccoa
voted solidly for removal—only one
vote being cast against her.
Toccoa cast 621 votes for rcino-
val and 1 against. This, with
Broad River and Currahee, shows
how solidly the people below the
mountains stand to each other.
For Against
Batesville, 1 83
Fork, 9 45
Cool Spring, 6 ^
Fair Play, 00 40
Falling Water, 5 45
Deep Creek, *4 S 3
Demorest, OO ,V '°
Mud Creek, 3 Il6
Cornelia, 'C vo to
Center Hill, -r a.
Polecat, - - yj
Currahee, V. n
Broad River, i*. «
Toccoa, ti h
Clarkesville, 3
Total, 92 r 1172
It would have taken 139S votes for
Toccoa to build a court house at
her own expense, hut as the matter
stands the people of the county will
probably pay $2.oS per hundred on
their property; however, we see
no way out of tlie muss but to grin
and hear it. It will be mighty hard
for the majority of the tax-payers
of the county to pay this tax, hut
ns they say by their ballots they
want to pay it, we believe they
ought to be accommodated.
Happy Reunion After Hany Years
Uncle Berry Knox is rejoicing,
and wants his friends to rejoice with
him.
Long, long ago there were twelve
little darkies of one family, owned
by John McNeal, and on account
of debt the little darkies had to be
sold. Berry, one among the oldest ]
was bought by Samuel Knox, and
Nelson, the youngest, was sold to
John Patrick, and was soon taken
to a distant country. After several
years the war came on and tore the
family asunder and scattered it in
every direction, and uncle Berry,
being married, stayed around in
hearing of the old home of slavery,
and one by one his brothers and
sisters died and left uncle Berry
alone, and for many years he has
been without father, mother, bro¬
ther or sister—only wife and an
only daughter to call his own. But
in a distant clime there was a wan-
derer being sold from one to ano¬
ther; and, after seeing the world
to his heart's content, he decided
he wanted to know if he had any
living kinspeople. After much
weary travel he got back to the
neighborhood of his birth. He re-
membered the old home place of
Berry, so he hunted for that and ,
knew it wlien he found it, and was
found there by Joe Knox, looking
around in a bewildered way. In¬
quiry was made and Nelson was
hunting Berry, so Joe at once took
him to uncle Berry, when a happy
meeting took place between the
brothers, after a separation of 45 or
50 years. Uncle Berry is now 70
years of age, and we can imagine
for ourselves that his cup is full to
^running over. He says if he had
the fatted calf he would surely kill
low.
e largest and finest assortment
lx \\ ritmg Papers in North-
Tf i0 “ THE R * COn,> S,a ’
0re '
f 6
TIIE WtE-mLEXm CONFERENCE,
An Account of its Recent Meeting
at Toccoa=-!ts Declaration
of Principles, Etc.
At the last meeting of the Gene¬
ral Assembly of the Southern Pres¬
byterian church, which met at Char¬
lotte, N. C., May 20-29, a f e ' v
representative men came together
and decided to issue a call for a con¬
ference to study the teaching of the
Scriptures relative to the second
coming of Christ. Toccoa was se¬
lected as the place for holding the
meeting, because of her central po¬
sition, accessibility, health, high
altitude making climate cool, and
her possession of a spacious audi¬
torium where the meetings might
be held.
in response to that call the Con¬
ference convened in Toccoa, Wed¬
nesday evening, Aug. nth, at 8.30
o’clock, continuing through Sun¬
day, Aug. 15th.
The following leading divines
were represented, either in person
or by papers ; Rev. J. W. Bach¬
man, D. D., Chattanooga, Tenn.,
Rev. R. C. Reed, D. D., Nashville,
Tenn., Rev. W. H. Marquess, D.
D., Louisville, Ky., Rev. J. B.
Mack, D. D., Fort Mill, S. C., Rev.
A. P. Saunders, D. D., Fredericks¬
burg, Va., Rev. A. L. Phillips, D.
I)., Tuscaloosa, Ala., Rev. J. F.
Cannon, D. D., St. Louis, Mo.,
Rev. R. P. Farris, D. I)., St. Louis,
Mo., Rev. Edward Mack, Norfolk,
Va., Rev. S. C. Byrd, New Orl-
cans, La., Rev. A. D. McClure,
Wilmington, N. C., Rev. A. W.
Pitzer, D. I)., Washington, D. C.,
Rev. J. W. Walden, D. D., Ath¬
ens, Ga., Rev. C. H. Hyde, Cor-
dele, Ga., Rev.O.W. Gauss, Platts-
burg, Mo., Dr. Marion McH. Hull,
Athens, Ga., Rev. Thomas P. Hay,
Edisto Island, S. C., Rev. G. L.
Cook, Climax, Ga., and others.
The standards of the Presbyterian
church are non-committal as to pre
and post-millennarianism,and hence
a man may he thoroughly orthodox
and believe in either the pre or post-
millennial coming of Christ. Pre-
mi llennarians hold that while the
Confession of Faith is purposely
non-committal, it leans strongly to
pre-inillennial teaching, as shown
in chap. 33, § 3 : “So will He have
that day unknown to men, that they
may shake off all carnal security
and be always watchful, because
they know not at what hour the
Lord will come, and may be ever
prepared to say, ‘Come, Lord Je¬
sus; come quickly. Amen. 5
When it is remembered that at
the time of meeting of the West¬
minster Assembly (1643-1649) the
church universally believed in the
pre-millennial coming of Christ, the
post-millennial theory not being
advanced until about 150 years af¬
ter that Assembly closed its sessions,
and the further fact that the Mode¬
rator, Dr. Twisse, was a strong
pre-millennarian, it would seem
that the spirit of that Assembly was
pre and not post.
With this belief the members of
the Conference, ever loyal to the
standards of the Presbyterian church
(the Confession of Faith and Larger
and Shorter Catechisms,) have la¬
bored prayerfully and diligently to
ascertain what God's Word teaches
about this subject. The result of
their deliberations we have in the
following declaration of principles
adopted by the Conference before
its adjournment:
1st. We declare the word of God
t0 and ^ our 0Ur only ° nl >' rule Source of of faith knowledge with
re-
terence to the doctrine ot our Lord s
second , coming.
2d. As we know that the prophe¬
cies of the Old Testament concern-
ing the first coming of Christ were
fulfilled in their normal or natural
sense, so we believe that the pro-
phecies of the Old Testament and
of the New Testament concerning
His second coming will be fulfilled
in the same way.
3d. We believe that these Scrip-
tures teach the personal, visible.
P re ' m ^ enn * a l return of our Lord,
4th. We believe that the present
dispensation is not for the conver-
sion of the world, but elective, as
clearly stated in the Scriptures.
(Ac !‘ *5 ; >+.)
5 ( 1 >. lhe duty of the church dur-
MATTRESSES,
SPRINGS, ETC.
i"g the absence of her Lord is to
watch and pray, to work and wait
and to go into all the world and
preach the Gospel to every creature,
and thus hasten His coming.
6th. We believe that the glorious
results following the coming of
Christ in the universal triumph of
the Gospel, are to be brought about
by (he power of the Holy Ghost,
even as the word of God every¬
where declares.
7th. We believe that, while the
fact of our Lord’s return is certain,
the time thereof is uncertain, ac¬
cording to His own words.
The above declaration is conspi¬
cuous for its brevity, clearness, suc¬
cinctness, and, as we believe, truth.
There may be differences of opinion
as to detail among pre-millenna-
rians, but all who can subscribe to
the above declaration of belief are
pre-millennarians. In an account
so short as this, we cannot even
touch upon the matter of the papers
read, all of which will be published
in pamphlet form by a committee
appointed by the Conference. We
only quote a short paragraph from
Dr. McConnell’s paper on “The
Millennium
“If anything more were needed
to add strength to the pre-millen¬
nial theory, it could easily be found
in the list of its illustrious advo¬
cates, such as Luther, Calvin, Knox,
Toplady, Wesley, Watts, Cowper,
Ileber, Chalmers, Bonar, Ryle, Al¬
ford," Trench, Jameson, Faussett,
Spurgeon, Moody and others. The
pre-millennial theory is not only
clearly taught in the Bible, but
comes to us hoary with age and in¬
dorsed from century to century by
the ablest representatives of Chris¬
tianity.”
The object of this Conference was
two-fold : First, the refreshing and
strengthening of those in the South¬
ern church who believed in the pre-
millennial coming. Second, the
bringing this doctrine before the
church, that it might be seen who
were pre-millennarians, and that
these might get together in their
endeavor to correct the erroneous
teachings which have prejudiced so
many people against the doctrine,
and declare the truth concerning
this “Blessed Hope.” Titus 2 : 13.
In both of these objects the Con¬
ference was a success, in that the
few who are interested in this study
who assembled from day to day
were greatly uplifted and strength¬
ened, and the call brought forth
expressions from a large number of
the leading divines in the Southern
church, committing them to pre-
millennial teaching. To show what
position these men hold in the
church, it is only necessary to men¬
tion such names as Dr. R. P. Far¬
ris, permanent clerk of General As¬
sembly ; Dr. A. L. Phillips, secre¬
tary committee on colored evange¬
lization, and as such president of
college at Tuscaloosa, Ala.; Dr. \V.
H. Marquess, professor of Old Tes¬
tament exegesis, English Bible and
Biblical Theology in Louisville
(Ky.) Theological Seminary and
chairman of the faculty in this in¬
stitution ; Dr. R. C. Reed, acting
secretary of Foreign Missions com¬
mittee during absence in China of
Dr. Chester; Dr. J. B. Mack, Syn-
pdical evangelist State of Georgia;
Rev. Wm. Black, Synodical evan¬
gelist State of North Carolina, and
many others holding similar posi¬
tions.
This Conference will in all pro¬
bability be made a permanent thing,
meeting annually^ or as often as
deemed expedient. A committee,
consisting of Dr. J. W. Bachman,
chairman. Drs. T. M. McConnell,
T. W. Walden, and Revs. A. D.
McClure, Edward Mack and S. C.
Byrd, was appointed to decide when
an d where the next Conference
should be held; and while no di-
rections were given the committee,
quite a number of the delegates
expressed themselves as favoring
Lookout Mountain as the place for
the next meeting,
It the public wish to read the
papers presented at this Conference.
they will find the same in a pam-
phlet to be issued in the near future
by a committee appointed bv the
Conference. It is probable that
this pamphlet will also contain ! he
opening sermon by Dr. McConnell
and the Closing sermon by Dr. Wal¬
den.
The Conference enjoyed very
much the presence of Dr. and Mrs.
Marion McHenry Hull, of Athens,
Ga., both of whom are now under
appointment to go to China—he as
a medical missionary and she as a
trained nurse; also, Miss Sallie
Davis, missionary to Indian Terri¬
tory from M. E. church South, and
sister of Rev. W. C. Davis, Clarkes-
ville, Ga.
The following hymn, written by
Rev. N. Keff Smith, D. D., and set
to original music, was dedicated to
the Conference :
THE LORD’S SECOND COMING.
The uay soon comes when loud and clear,
Throughout the realms of space,
The trump of God shall summon all
To see their dear Lord's face.
Rev. 22; 4.
O, come, Lord Jesus, quickly come,
With waiting saints we pray;
Come, sit upon King David's throne
And sovereign power display.
Luke 1: 32-33, Rev. 22: 20.
O, come—that all the sleeping saints
May meet Thee in the air;
Add then, descending to the earth,
Fore’er Thy glory share.
1 Thess. 4: 16, Rev. 5: 10.
And then shall we, who are alive,
Be changed by pow’r divine;
We shall be like our coining Lord,
And in His glory shine.
1 Oor. 15: 49, 2 Cor. 3; 18,1 Thess. 4; 18.
Come, that Creation, now in pain
And cursed by sin so long,
Its blessed liberty shall claim
And join Redemption’s song.
2 Pet. 3; 13, Rom. 8; 21-22.
Come, call again the scattered Jews,
To dwell in Palestine;
To crown Thee, Lord, on Zion’s hill,
And be forever Thine.
Dan. 39: 24, Jeremiah 30: 3.
O, come, that Satan may be bound,
Throughout “the Thousand years;”
That hearts no more shall break with pain,
Nor eyes be dimrn’d with tears.
Isaiah 25: 8, Rev. 20: 2.
And when those years have swiftly passed—
The Day of Judgment come—
Then devils all with wicked men
Shall meet their endless doom.
Jude (verses) 14-15, Rev. 20: 7-15.
Then heaven and earth and all things ours,
We’ll lift the song of praise,
To Father, Son and Holy Ghost,
Through everlasting days.
1 Cor. 3: 22, Rev. 5: 12-13.
Eastanollee Etchings.
Special Correspondence to the Record.
Eastanollee, Aug. 17.
A series of meetings are in pro¬
gress at this place this week”. We
hope much good may result.
Mr. James Norris and Miss Effie
Martin were married Sunday—Rev.
W. W. Stow officiating.
Rev. S. W. Mosely made a busi¬
ness trip to Gumlog and Shoal Creek
last week.
Miss Texie English, of
viHe, visited relatives here Sunday,
returning home Monday.
Whooping cough is in
every family in this neighborhood.
Mr. T. W. Kelly was married
a Miss Ivester last week.
Mr. T. M. Looney has
from Charlotte, N. C., after
maining six or seven months.
Messrs. T.B. Sumpter, Joe Clark,
Jim Kay and Harrison
have returned from a pleasure
to Burke county, N. C.
Country Cracker.
< t A newspaper without enemies
is scarcely deserving of friends.
The vicious and lawless never like
a bold, fearless newspaper, and
ery self-respecting publisher should
be proud of their enmity. There
are other newspaper foes, however,
who are more troublesome and con¬
sequently more to be feared. First
and foremost is the man who owes
a newspaper an honest debt and
will not pay it. Then there is
ambitious mortal who wants an of¬
fice and complains because the news¬
his paper cannot he consistently is champion
cause ; pretty likely to be¬
come an enemy. The man who
wants to shape the policy of a pa¬
per and is not allowed to do so, is
a sure enemy ; but the meanest en-
emy is the man whom the news pa-
per has befriended, and who delib¬
erately condemns The sheet after
securing from it all the assistance
he possibly can.”
Stands at the Head.
Aug. J. Bogel, the leading drug¬
gist of Shreveport, La., says : “Dr.
King s New Medical Discovery is
the only thing that cures my cough,
and is the best seller I have.” J.
F. Campbell, merchant of Safford,
Ariz.. writes: “Dr. King’s New'
it; Discover)' it is all that is claimed for
for never fails, and is a sure cure
Coughs. Consumption, Colds and
I cannot say enough for
its merits.’ Dr. King’s New Dis-
covery for Consumption, Coughs
am: Colds is not an experiment, it
has been ;r;ed for a quarter of a
century, and to day stands at the
head. It never disappoints. Free
trial bottles at E. R. Davis & Co’s
Store.
Dry Goods, Clothing,
Dress Goods, Hats, Caps,
Gents Furnishing Goods.
Underwear
THE BEST GOODS
Iron and Steel in the South.
The story of Birmingham is a
marvelous story of steady, uninter¬
rupted achievement- of progress
from small beginnings to actual
leadership in the business of iron
manufacturing in this country, says
an exchange.
The people of Birmingham began
in a small way to make iron for the
home markets, ignored if not de¬
spised by Pittsburg. Gaining first
a foothold in St. Louis, soon Bir¬
mingham iron began to be sold in
New York and Boston, and even in
Philadelphia, in competition with
Pittsburg iron, Pittsburg then
woke up to the fact that she actual¬
ly had a rival-one, too, that had all
the elements of iron-making at her
own doors, Then followed the
frank admission that Birmingham
could sell at a profit iron below the
cost of production in any other dis¬
trict of this country, That is the
proud position which Birmingham
holds today.
The next step natuarally follow¬
ed. If Birmingham could under¬
sell the other iron mills of this
country, why could she not under¬
sell the mills of the Old World?
The answer is read in the ship¬
ments of the first sixth months of
the present year— 160,000 tons,tons
as compared with 5,000 tons in the
corresponding six months of last
In a word, then, the manufactures
in and near Birmingham are pre¬
pared to underbid the furnaces of
the world, so far as pig in raw con¬
dition is concerned. It is not easy
to say how much this means, not
only to Birmingham, but to the
south—to our transportation lines,
and to various other interests that
will surely draw advantages from a
large industrial population in the
heart of the cotton states east of
the great river.
But Birmingham is not content
with iron making alone, She has
immense beds of recently discovered
brown ores, low in silicon, from
which by means of the open hearth
basic process steel can be made.The
Birmingham Rolling Mill company
has verified this statement. It can
make steel at $12 a ton—steel that
takes the place of billets from Pitts¬
burg, which cost laid down m Bifl-
mingham $18 a ton. Birmingham
now proposes to undersell Pittsburg
in the markts of the eastern states
from $2 to $4 a ton.
If the story of iron-making in
Birmingham is any guarantee
her development in steel-making,
Pittsburg wtll soon have a
warm competitor in the latter in¬
dustry. Capital will not be lack¬
ing ; and the brown ores promise in
a few years to make Birmingh am
the center of both iron ane steel
manufacturing in the United States.
FOR ALL WOMEN
£JtNE-TENTHS of m
all the pain
andslcknessfrom
which women
suffer is caused ft
by weakness or
derangement In
the organs of r
menstruation.
Nearly when always | ____|
a woman is not well these
organs are affected. But when
they are strong and healthy a
woman is very seldom sick.
Is nature’s provision for the regu¬
lation of the menstrual function.
It cures all “ female troubles.” It
is equally effective for the gtrl in
her teens, the young wife with do¬
mestic and maternal cares, and
the woman approaching the period
known as the “Change of Life.”
They beaefitted all need it. They are all
by It.
•o
Fbr advice in cases requiring special
The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chatta¬
nooga. Tenn.
TH0S. I. COOPER, Tupelo, Mist., says:
and "My sister suffered from very Irreqular
painful menstruation and doctors
ootild not relieve her. Wine of Cardul
Copy Presses
Copying Ink, Copying Books
all kinds of stationery at The
Stationery Store.
How Is Your Stationery?.
Are you nearly out? Look and see—
right now; don't wait until you have used
up your very last envelope or letter-head
or bill-head before you order some more.
Make it a point to order your printing
before yov^'fvave exhausted your supply—
so that the printer will have time to turn
out a good job. Another good point to bear
in mind is that your printing should he
taken to The Record Job Office, Toccoa,
Ga.
CUBAN OIL cures Cuts,
Burns, Bruises, Rheuma¬
tism and Sores. Price, 25 cts.
FRUIT.
The reports vary very much as re¬
peaches, ranging from 10 per cent
some counties up to a full crop in
others. After a careful study of re¬
ports, I conclude that the shipment of
peaches from Georgia this season will
be light, while there will be plenty for
home consumption. The same may be
said of pears. Apples and grapes prom¬
ise a full crop. Plums, cherries and
strawberries are all more or less injured,
but will make fair crops.
STOCK.
The report on stock of all kindg, as
regards both condition and numbers,
compares favorably with last year,
showing a slight increase. No diseases
reported, except cholera among hogs,
which is doing much damage in a few
counties.
The Farm be-** Boy.
The boy on the farm is just about the
same kind of a boy you will find every¬
where. He ia susceptible to the same
influences, and, given the same oppor¬
tunity, he will accomplish about the
same results as his fellow in the town
or city. With perhaps this to his ad¬
vantage: The farmer boy is nearer to
nature’s great heart and comes to un¬
derstand her ways; and again, the soli¬
tude of the farm gives him opportunity
for oommunion with self, if he is a
thinking boy, to come to better under¬
standing with himself and to know hia
powers and limitations better than his
his urban prototype.
Boys everywhere need the stimulus of
self interest, and this is too often de¬
nied them on the farm. What ho does
goes into the general fund, as it were,
and he does not see how much he is do¬
ing to swell it. If the farmer would
keep his boy on the farm and make him
a factor in its successful operations; fit
the young man to take his place and
carry on the work when he is gone, or
keep him from seeking a home and for¬
tune out in the great world so full of
doubt and uncertainty, he should at an
early period of the boy’s career give
him something to do for himself, the
returns from which will be his own.
If the farmer raises sheep, then a few
well bred sheep; if horses and cattle,
some colts and a cow or two; if near a
market a, ooop of nice chickens, or a
garden plot for his own cultivation
—something that shall be the boy’s
own peculiar property and the returns
from which shall be his to do with
just as he he will. Not only will he
grow in independence and learn for
himself the lessons of failure and suc¬
cess; he will have an enthusiasm for the
work in hand, whioh of itself will be a
guarantee of success; without which
life itself, in its best sense, is a failure,
and a vexed problem in many home*
will be forever settled.—Exchange.
Wheat, Seed Cotton and Corn*
Question. —How much in pounds of
the three fertilizing elements—nitro¬
gen, phosphoric acid and potash—are
taken from the soil per acre by a cron
of 10 bushels of wheat; how muoh by
a crop of 1,200 pounds of seed cotton,
and by ten bushels of corn.
Answer.—A crop of 10 bushels oi
wheat will take from the soil 12 pounds
of nitrogen, 6 pounds of phosphoric
acid and 3.95 pounds of potash. Should
you take off ot the land at the same
time 1,200 pounds of straw, there would
be taken from the soil an additional 6
ponnds of nitrogen, 2.63 pounds oi
phosphoric acid and 9 pounds of potash,
besides 3.42 pounds of lime and 2.63
pounds of chlorin.
In a crop of 1,200 pounds of seed cot¬
ton per acre there will be taken from
the soil 29.20 pounds of nitrogen, 10.20
pounds of phosphoric acid and 10.69
pounds of potash; in addition to these
should be added 4.25 of lime. Most oi
these elements are contained in the
seed, the lint containing no nitrogen,
only a trace of phosphoric acid and s
very small amount of potash.
In a crop of 10 bushels of corn, in¬
cluding the stalk as well as the ear,
there is taken from the soil 14 pound*
of nitrogen, 6 pound of acid phosphate
and 12 ponnds of potash.—State Agri¬
cultural Department.
Blank Books and writing mater¬
ial of all kinds at the lowest prices
at The Record Stationery Store.
Tell us
Your
Faults,
And when we make your picture
Will Cover Them !
much as possible.
We endeavor to please, and our
pleased patrons will tell you of our
Call and see samples and then
your work done wherever you
please.
OEO. L. MATTESON,
Photographer.
iver y T s^ E anf Fetd stable
HOGSED & GARLAND, Proprietors.
We constantly keep on hand splendid teams ard
hides for the accommodation of the traveling public
our local custom. Prompt and polite attention paid t
orders —none too small nor none toe large for us to fin “
Horses and Muies for Sale,
We keep for sale or trade Mountain and W e st
mules, which we wiil sell for} less cash or good eni
than anybody else afford to do—for dealing jw- “
can i n j K
flesh is our business.
—New or Second-Hand, always in stock at prices which
simply defy competition.
J. H. VICKERY & SONS,
General
IS@1 3 KfSg SEC 3 Merchandise,
Groceries,
^54 R Jb Clothing,
* Bouts, Shoes,
W Hats and Caps.
Toccoa, Ga.
CHEAPEST IS NOT ALWAYS TIIE BEST.
We Sell the Best Goods at the Cheapest Price.
Electric Bitters.
Electric Bitters is a medicine
suited for any season, but perhaps
more generally needed when the
languid, exhausted feeling prevails,
when the liver is torpid and slug¬
gish and the need of a tonic and
alterative is felt. A prompt use of
this medicine has often averted
■ongand perhaps fatal bilious fe-
vers. No medicine will act more
surely in counteracting and freeing
the system from the malarial poison.
Headache, Indigestion, Constipa¬
tion, Dizziness yield to Ele-ctric Bit¬
ters. 50c or $1.00 per bottle at
E. R. Davis & Co’s.
Fire
Insurance
Liverpool & London & Globe,
Hartford, Horae of New York,
Phoenix of Brooklyn, Insurance
Company of North America,Lan¬
caster Fire Insurance Co. of Eng¬
land, and Greenwich of New
York. See us before placingyour
insurance.
LIFE COMPANIES—New York
Life and Atlanta Mutual Life
and Accident Co.
Machinery
And Machinery Supplies, Agents
for Geiser Mf’g Co.
WHOLESALE SHINGLES
E- P-
gimpsoi?
(§0. TOGGOA, GA.
J
SHERIFFS SALES
For September.
Will be sold before the Court house door
in Clarkesville, Tuesday Habersham county, on the
first in September, for cash, and
within the legal hours of sale on said day,
the All following that described property, to-wit:
being in tract or parcel of land lying and
the counties of Habersham and
White in the State of Georgia, same being
a part of lot No 157 in the 2nd district of
originally the David Habersham county and known
as H Loggins place, more fully
described in an agreement signed by the
heirs of Dadid II Loggins recorded in"book
“T” page 628 of the records in the office of
the clerk of the superior court of Habersham
county, containing one hundred and fifty
acres more or less except one half of the
mineral interest in and to said land, which
is reserved. Levied on and to be sold as
the property of F M Yearwood, under ami
by virtue of a fi fa issued from the superior
court, in favor of Mary P Griggs ana Mar¬
tha A Houston against said F M Yearwood,
said fi tv being for the amount of purchase
money due thereon. Deed filed as required
by law. Notice given defendant as required
by law.
Also two justice court fi fas, one in favor
of J C McConnell & Co, and one in favor of
Comer, Hull & Co, issued from the
court of the 1486th district G M of said
county against the said F M Yearwood.
Levy made and delivered to me by W A
Addison,LC. prs fee 8 16
Also at the same time and place a certain
house and lot in the town of Toccoa, said
county, said lot fronting north of Savannah
street width fifty feet and running back some
one hundred feet with a six room
dwelling W Edwards house thereon adjoining lots of G
and Mrs Kellar on the east,
Wm Gilliard on the west and Savannah
street and Susan Dardin’s lot on the
and known as the Mastin Watkins house
and lot. Deed made, filed and recorded in
clerk's office as requred by law. Levied on
and to be sold as the property of Mastin
Watkins under and by virtue of a fi fa is¬
sued from the justice court of the 440th dis¬
trict G M of Habersham county in favor of
Hogsed W'atkins. and Garland and against said Mas¬
tin Notice of levy served as re-
quired by law. prs fee 5 39
Also at the same time and place the fol¬
lowing and lot described property to-wit: House
lying and being all that tract or parcel of land
town of Clarkesville, being on the Toccoa road in the
Habersham county,
state of Georgia, and fronting on said road
163feet, fronting on the Presbyterian church
lot 80 feet, 119 and 113 feet, laid off in a
curve and hounded by land formerly owned
by Miss E W Clark 160 feet, and by the land
of the estate of W T Elrod, deceased, and
fully described in a deed from W T Elrod
and E C Elrod to Mary V Coe, dated March
9, 1878, and recorded in Clerk’s office Hab-
ersham county, April 2d, 1878, in Book B B,
pages 117 and 118. Levied upon and to be
sold as the property of Carrie M Porter, to
satisfy, under and by virtue of a mortgage
fi fa issued from the Superior Court of said
county, in favor of Charles L Bass against
said Carrie M Porter. Notice given as re-
quired by law. 36 ^9
Also, at the same
tract orparcetof 1““<1
laud lot No 171 to the loth
said county, and known as lots Nos 19,
and 21 in the city of Cornelia, according
the survey made by John A Reynolds.
vied on and to be sold as the" propertv
eo L Anderson, under and by virtue of a
144%h dUtetet°r M% JUa Ce ’ S c r rt A the
of J~“ B F district Palmour G against M of said said -a county, Geo L in Ander- favor
son. Notice of levy served as required bv
'* 7 ; 5453 •
and known as lot No 37 in block No 8 in
town of Cornelia, and known as the Dr F
G Moss place. Levied on and to be sold as
ayrnsayrre penor court of Habersham county, Georgia,
in favor of Mary E Coleman vs D J Ander-
son, J L Brown, J M King and Arthur M
Burrell. Written notice given 6 as required
bylaw. §4
A. M. GRIBBLE, Sheriff.
If You Don't See it in the Record,
it Didn't Happen.
If John Jones
Sells Some
Property,
If John Jones buy some
property, if John Jones
transfers some proper¬
ty, if John Jones builds
a house, if John Jones
lives in Ilabers h am
county and does any¬
thing in the real estate
line, it is told on the
real local page of
The
Southern
Record.
This and other good
features is what makes
The Record so desi¬
rable.
The Record Costs $i a Year.
Less Than 2 Cts. a Week.
Remember that adver¬
tising in The Record at¬
tracts buyers.
A Household Remedy,
And it never fails to cure Rheumatism,
Catarrh, Pimples, Blotches and all diseases
arising Balm, from impure blood, is Botanic Blood
(B. B. B.) Thousands indorse it as
the best remedy ever offered to mankind.
The thousands of cures performed by this
remedy are almost miraculous. Try it, only
si.00 per large bottle.
A PHYSICIAN’S EVIDENCE-AN HON¬
EST DOCTOR.
Although a practitioner of near twenty
years, m v mother induced me to procure
Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. 15.) for her. She
had been confined to her bed several months
with Rheumatism, which had stubbornly
resisted all the usual remedies. Within
twenty-four B., hours after commencing B. 15.
I observed marked relief. She lias just
commenced her third bottle, and is nearly'
as active as ever, and lias been in the front
yard with “rake in hand,” cleaning up.
Her improvement is truly wonderful and
immensely gratifying.
<J. H. Montgomery, M. D.,
For sale by Wright & Jacksonville, Ala.
Davis & Co., Druggists. Edge and E. R.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
SSss
2Es- 7—is—
^iEr>rONr air link.
yood.nieil Srtmdulo at Pav.en^.r Trains.
Iu Effect Mr/ 8, 1R07.
Ves. No. 18 F.t.SIt
Northbound. No.11 No. 08 Ex. No. 30
D aily Dally. Sun. Dally.
______
Ky. Atlanta, O. T. 7 50 *' m -p *158 '0
“ AtUuta, K. T. 8 60 1 00 6 tt P
r p
“ Norcrosu..... dgl P
T. 5 f lL.v.* 10 03 9 t3
u or 9 ft*: •
* Gainesville... 10 8a a S 25 p O 9
Cornollal’ * 46 p *3 9
« 11 M S3
!.’!!.* is »
Ar. Lr. Mt. Airy 11 a..... 3 *3
" Tooeoa.......11 Westminster M 8 85 p
“ S 1290m 1* V. a
eD ? ca ,......4 V
ueutr&i ...... lot) n 4 S8& n
“ Greenville 2 81 5
“ Spartanburg. ... 3 it p G p
** Gaffneys..... 4 23 p p
H Blacksburg.. 4 4? p........ T 03
" King’s Mt 8 13 p p
■* Gast< onia .. 680 p...... 20
bv. p . ... a
Charlotte 8 40 £» £
*- r Danville 11 28 p’l 2 ... 1 SO p
lr. Richmond 6 GO ft :f 800 ai...... 6 40 p
...
Ar.Washington.. “ Bsltm’ePRft. . : 8 42 a c—to &SSS ?
Philadelphia...... , : 8 00 a P
“ 10 15 a
-- Y ? r * ........ : • 13 43 m • »1»«» c»l
SonthboaaCL FefcWl Vet. | No. 11
ffo 33 No. 87 Dally
Daily. Daily.
Ev.lT. Y.,P. It HJ 7 T^ n- 88
" Philadelphia. 50 a 1
" Baltimore. 0 21 a 68
WadUngtoa.. ..
" 11 IS a
P
Richmond ... 12 65 p 2 00 a 8 00 a | ......
r, Y Charlotte" Daorille ’ " SS8 P 50 a 8 05 a]......
C».Gaston P ’A a .....
“ King Mt.’". P 110 p.......
s 8S$?S?SiS7 Wp.
Gaffneys..... Blatotsburg .. p fe: IS; ......
ll P EStBS:
' 1 a 818 p
a 1 sis;
Soneca..... a £ ?, ess? tttr.
Westminster’ Toccoa....... is' Ex.
^ 3 a 3 18 p 633 n S an v
f - ^*7----- TS 7 98 i> Tsr* 6 33
...... 4 09 3'ig 5 P #97 a
©imenVtiie”’ 4 35 a p 803 p a
Buford a 8 81 p 8 85 p 7 20 a
Norcross ... 8 07 p 7 48 a
Ar Atlanta, E. . T. • 0 1 *i 10 - • •. * ■ m,. •• 9 48 p 8 27 ft
Ar - -Atlanta, C. T. 10 &I355 ft 4 55 p 10 80 D 63o»
' 5 pseaop
A a. m. "P” p. jjj. *<M” noon. “N” night.
ESS &^‘SMtf'-HiSSS
»ry, risWashingt and also betwew’New First
f" thorougnfare ,Atlanta and Birmingham.
133 coaches between Washing*
Dining oars aerv« ell me»I»
Nob. 85 and between^ 8ft__United States Fn«t Moil
pn 8 .olid
vln Southern Rftiiw»r,A. 8W.P.8, R.,
“ r and coach ?■ ?*- R-. tarcrAgh being ccanposod withatrt ohaage of baggage for
b'os. 11, 37 and 18—Pullman alseping oar8Be*
iwoen hb Richmond and Charlotte, via DanTille,
to 5l ? uri ? U and 37, northbound No & 18
W. Oen’l H. GRESEN. j m
8upt„ ' M*g’r
Washington, D. Traffic .
„ a Washington. £)<
Q ?5 1 Cf a9 A . «l. 8. Asw’ttWiPaw. H. HARDWICK, Xg>
-
w ** h hl P *>. C. A-tant*
-—