Newspaper Page Text
The Fall Season is Here!
SO IS BEN. F*. BROWN, JR M 3
With a full and elegant line of Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes,
Hats, Caps, Furniture, Wagons, Buggies, Crockery, Glassware, Willow and Woodenware, DRY GOODS,
Etc.
I sell my goods at a profit,
one that is consistent with good
I buy COTTON and COUN-
nighest market price foi* same,
antee entire satisfaction.
SOUTHERN RECORD
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY
SOUTHERN PUBLISHING CO.
INCORPORATED.
J. B. JONKH, W. A. FOWLER,
PRESIDENT. GEN. MANAGER.
W. A. FOWLER. EDITOR.
Entered at the Post-Office as second class
mail matter.
Kate* of subscription: #1 .(X) 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 by correspondents. Articles
intended for publication must he ac- j
eompanied by writer’s name, not nec- ]
essarily for publication, hut for pro- j
tection to us.
Jewelry Repairing.
Mr. II. S. Hiltz, who recently
arrived in Toccoa, has opened a jew-
elry repair shop in the room over
the Matheson Merchandise Co’s
store building. Mr. Ililtz is a
pleasant, affable man, worthy of
your support and withal a fine
workman, There is no need to
send your watches and jewelry to
Atlanta to be repaired, for you can
get it done here at home equally as
well and at less cost. All nis
work is guaranteed. The Record
recommends Mr. Ililtz to the good
people of Toccoa and asks them to
patronize him when in need of
work in his line; he will appre¬
ciate the work you give him to do,
and you will appreciate the work
he returns to you.
Toccoa, Georgia.
Rev. Dr. J. Steck, editor of the
Gospel Temperance Union, Char¬
lotte, V w. N. t 1 »* C., spent a l» day »» V* or »* J • Ull two UIO in
. ...
return home has this to say of Toc¬
coa in his paper :
This place has a population of
about 3,000. It has a large cotton
mill, employing several hundred
operatives. It has an extensive fur¬
niture factory, employing about 100
hands, and various other industrial
institutions, employing many more.
No liquor is sold in town, and if
any finds its w T av within the corpo¬
ration it comes by stealth through
those who are determined that pro¬
hibition shall not prohibit. The
article is not allowed by any of the
factory officials, and any employee
getting drunk is at once discharged.
The pastors of all the churches are
pronounced temperance men, and
the church members stand by their
ministers in their brave fight for
the right. Thus the moral forces
of the place are too strong for the
illicit traffickers, w’ho are soon de¬
tected and punished. The Toccoans
are proud of their town, and well
may they be, both on account of its
sobriety, industry and prosperity.
Some Abuses.
Monday Judge Lumpkin charged
the Fulton county grand jury,among
other things, with the following :
“There is a matter to which I feel
it my duty to call your attention.
It has been charged publicly and
privately, and the air is full of ru¬
mors that abuses have been com¬
mitted by some of the bailiffs of this
county, in connection with criminal
warrants and arrests. It is rumored
that arrests are often made rather
as a mode of collecting money than
of punishing crime; and also, that
persons are arrested by bailiffs and
started to jail, and that the bailiff
in charge not infrequently makes
some sort of settlement with them
on the way to jail and permits them-
to go. These and similar rumors
and statements have been made un¬
til they are too common to be pass¬
ed unnoticed. I do not personally
know if this be so, or if any of the
bailiffs have indulged in such prac¬
tices, or if so who they are; but 1
deem it proper to call your atten¬
tion to the matter. If illegal prac¬
tices exist they should be stopped.
If they do not, the bailiffs of the
county should be relieved of unjust
criticism.”
Such things should be investigat¬
ed by our grand jurors. There have
been rumors ot wrongfully accept-
mg pay from prisoners by certain
county officers. L the officers have
been maligned then the grand jury
ought to set them right before the
people; if the officers are guilty,
then they ought to be punished just
the same as any other law-breakers.
Miss Ellen Dortch was married
Wednerfay at the Governor's man-
ui Atlanta, to Gen. Longstreet,
the famous Confederate General,
As Miss Dortch, Mrs. Gen. Long-
Street was well known in Toccoa.
r # 0
The Debased Silver Dollar.
The silver dollar is worth one
hundred cents, and will buy as much
as a gold dollar, not because—as
the goldites claim—it is sustained
at par by the gold redemption pol¬
icy, but because the law, which is
all powerful in determining what
shall be money, says it is a dollar.
It is not gold redemption that sus¬
tains the silver dollar, because it
would be an utter impossibility to
make even an approach to redeem¬
ing the silver circulation in gold.
The government, under the terms
of a treasury order, and not by law,
tries to keep a reserve of $100,000,-
000 in gold, primarily against $346,-
000,000 of greenbacks, but if the
theory of the gold advocates is ten-
able at all it must be considered as
standing, in addition, against the
$150,000,000 of paper issued under
the Sherman silver purchase act,
and against the whole circulation
of silver dollars and silver certifi-
cates. This would be, of course,
simply nonsense. If the great bulk
of our circulating medium were on
so flimsy a foundation, the country
would indeed be in chaos.
The plain truth is that the silver
dollar goes at par because it is a
lawful dollar. It is not a matter of
deep consequence what the bullion
of silver is. The bullion of gold is
just as low, considered independent
of its use as a money metal. The
greenback goes at par because it is
based, not on the"gold in the trea¬
sury, but on the property of the
country—the taxing power of Con¬
gress on the vast material wealth
of the people of the United States.
To call it a fiction when the gold
organs of New York say that the
c * jca ,11 J. UU
cents is too mild a term for the pur¬
poses of the whole truth. It
miserably false, and those engaged
in the constant iteration and reite¬
ration of it are either disgracefully
ignorant, or vicious beyond expres¬
sion.
Our Misdemeanors.
What is to become of Haber¬
sham connty’s misdemeanor con¬
victs? The officers of our courts
have been, hiring them out to the
highest bidder, but since the Gov¬
ernor has sat down so hard on the
illegality of such cases, our county
must do something with her con¬
victs
We have a law under which the
county commissioners could work
these men on our public roads.
They are needed on our roads and
our roads Most certainly need the
convicts.
Now let our commissioners do
anything that will meet with the
approval of their constituents—
they have so far failed—and put
Habersham’s convicts to work on
the public roads. There is work
enough on our roads to keep our
misdemeanors at work for the next
ten years.
Let us work our roads.
Some Happy Farmers.
The return of prosperity with
its blessings of financial relief to
the farmer is an old story. We
have seen a few statements going
the rounds of the press of a Kansas
farmer who bought a small farm
last year, on credit, and paid for it
with this year's wheat crop, and
other farmers who have paid off
mortgages on their farms.
We do not know how well au¬
thenticated these stories are, and
where names are given they are
not known so far from here. But
it is our pleasure to be able to fur-
nish a galaxy of names that shine
in the agricultural firmament and
are known not only to farmers, but
the world at large. These are men
j who have taken the tide of dollar
wheat “at its full” when it led on
to fortune, and their fellow farmers
all over the country will rejoice
: J n their prosperity.
*
Ex-Secretary Frances with a few
congenial soirits cornered the
wheat market of St. Louis and
raked off $2,000,000 for their svn-
Minneapolis, dicate. Chas. A. Pillsbury,' of
is said to have made
a profit of $728,000 in his wheat
speculations thus far.
J. Pieroont ^ Morfnn ^ ’
York, has gathered in $700,000.
Philip D. Armour, head of the beef
trust, has gained $350,000. John
Cudahy, the big Chicago pork
packer, has won $280,000, while
Ex-Governor Flower, who recently
distinguished himself by delivering
an address in defence of the trusts,
has harvested the modest little
sumbf $125,000.
This is a happy lot of horny-
handed sons of toil whose good
fortune will bring good cheer to
the agricultural interests.-—-Augusta
Chronicle.
If Bryan had been elected Presi-
dent the country would now be on
a silver basis, gold would have dis-
appeared and every dollar of our
currency would have less than half
the purchasing power, or the power
to transact business with, that it
has now. True, there would have
been no revival of prosperity to
provide for, but the crops would
have had to be marketed and mov-
ed and business kept alive some
way. How could it have been
done with 42-cent dollars ?-Indian-
apolis Journal.
There would have been no 42-
cent dollars. Silver would have
been as good as gold ; the average
of prices would have advanced 40
per cent., with the added advance
during the past few weeks; wheat
by this time would have been worth
about $1.40; all the western mills
would have been in full working
order; the present little advance
would have been much greater,
and our country would have been
the most commanding nation of the
globe.—Salt Lake Tribune.
Mrs. John Drew, the celebrated
actress, lork who died tew of days Kp«rf held
in «ew a ago,
a unique place in that profession,
as she was the oldest living member
of it who was still active in it. She
was seventy-seven, and had been
continuously on the stage since she
was six—seventy-one years—before
the public, and in all that time ne¬
ver one breath of slander has been
raised against her. She was a friend
to the unfortunate, and particularly
to those of her profession. Young
actors and actresses never sought
her aid and advice in vain. Joe
Jefferson, in speaking of her death,
said : “I have lost a true friend and
the poor a good friend. She was
charitable and helpful to those in
need. She was an obedient daugh¬
ter, a true wife and a good mother.”
She created many roles, but was
best known as “Mrs. Malaprop.”
She was the mother of Mr. John
Drew, one of the leading actors on
the New York stage.
It is said that Viceroy Li Hung
Chang’s American physician, Dr.
Coffman, recently found him read¬
ing very intently a copy of the New
Testament, whereupon there ensued
a discussion between the two as to
its merits. The viceroy was so im¬
pressed with it that he ordered it
taken to his bed room, where he
could read it again before retiring.
Dr. Coffman has been led to the
belief, according to a recent letter
from him, that the aged disciple of
Confucius may yet turn to Chris¬
tianity, which would be interesting
indeed, as a result in part of the
great Chinaman’s trip through the
civilized countries of the West.
Still, nationality is a great force,
and Li would hardly consent to be
deprived again of one of his pea¬
cock feathers or his yellow jacket.
When a man comes into the office
I and planks down the cash and says,
“Send me the paper for a year,’
j that’s business. When one’ says,
j “I want the paper, but haven’t got
the money now,” that’s all right,
When a man spends from ten cents
to a dollar a week for tobacco and
j then says he can’t afford to take the
paper, that’s a fabrication. When
a man borrows the paper every
week to read, that’s cheek.— Mari-
ett a * Journal
. who
itor knows how it
•
1- ln ^f Sa ? s : ‘It is said that a
C " ° r bread with
u!! h Sve'need 1 bread^hY!?^!
on, we need bread with our p. nts
or L and those subscribers w hoi
are so Inuc b in arrears don’t pay up
soon . we w^ill need bread without
anything on.”—Ex.
Col. Howard Thompson Here.
Colonel Howard Thompson, of |
Gainesville, was in* the city Satur¬
day. He may be said to be strictly
in the race for Congressman Carter
Tate’s seat, but he disclaims any
blame for precipitating a campaign
at this early date. He has never
asked a paper or a friend to agitate
his campaign before campaign time.
He is willing and ready to submit
his claims strictly, honestly and fair¬
ly to the people. He wants to take
no snap judgment in the matter,
and if he does not get to Congress
on merit he does not wish to go at
all.
We know very little of Colonel
Thompson, but he talks like an hon¬
est man. Another thing we heard
the other day of Col. Thompson also
leads us to think he is an honest
man. It is said that during the
past ten or fifteen years hd has paid
off about fifteen thousand dollars
worth of old judgments that were
held by different parties in Hall
county against his father. A man
who will do this is certainly scru¬
pulous of his family honor.
It would not surprise us at all to
find that Col. Thompson made Car¬
ter Tate see stars before the cam¬
paign is over, but we repeat our
advice of last week—don’t get to
running until running time. Give
the people one year at least in
which to have a few protracted
meetings without some one pulling
you around the corner to talk poli¬
tics to you.—Harmony Grove Echo.
In the World of Art and
As the result of the develop¬
ment of our public school system
and the cheapening of books, there
o — go Liudd ui mciJ
and women who seek broader edu¬
cation, or seek to extend their
knowledge along certain lines.
Their duties in life, or lack of means
exclude them from the universities.
The Cosmopolitan Magazine has
undertaken the task of bringing
liberal education in its broadest
sense, within the reach of those
who have the aspiration, but are
deprived of the opportunity. Doc¬
tor Andrew's, late of Browm Uni¬
versity, has undertaken the Presi¬
dency of the Cosmopolitan’s edu¬
cational movement. The work,
thus begun, is not intended to take
the place of regular university
work, but to supply a gap in exis¬
ting educational facilities. Those
who are really in search of know¬
ledge will find direction and aid.
It can do nothing for those who
have not the desire to study. An
intending student sends to the Cos¬
mopolitan, New York, his name,
occupation, previous courses of
study, studies desired to be pursued,
objects and purpose for which
course is designed, and the number
of hours, daily or w'eekly, study
which can be given. No charges
of any kind will be made to stu¬
dents.
Mize Musings.
Special Correspondence to The Record.
Mize, Ga., Sept. 6, 1897.
The fleecy staple is being har¬
vested lively now and fodder pul¬
ling and road working are in pro¬
gress.
Robt. Sulivan is erecting a nice
storeroom on north Narrow Street.
Prof. David J. Crump, who has
been teaching in Habersham coun-
ty, has finished his school and re-
turned home for a few days.
Our worthy and dearly beloved
preacher, Rev. J. C. Atkinson and
family came down and Mr. Atkin¬
son filled his regular appointment
at Prospect last Sunday.
Jno. Payne died at his home
near Rovston last Monday of fev¬
er. His remains were interred at
the Payne graveyard Tuesday.
M ill Moss, a promisiug young
lawyer residing in the lower part
of the county, passed away Mon*
day.
Prof. Ab Lender wood was in
this settlement recently with a pat¬
ent churn.
The Association which convenes
at Broad River will open next
Tutsday .
Plof p .* beab O’Sheal
- orn has fin-
*- s bed his school and will be a citi-
zen of Carnesville and a pupil at
the High School soon.
but that is a living profit,
business principles. and the
TRY PRODUCE, pay
Call and see me. I guar-
MINISTERS TAKE ACTION
the Departure of Rev. Chas. R.
Nisbet.
Whereas, for fifteen months Rev.
Chas. R. Nisbet has lived and
worked with us in the cause of our
common Lord and by bis upright,
consistent conduct, his earnest,
evangelical ministry, and his fidel¬
ity to the church has greatly en¬
deared himself to the people re¬
gardless of name or denomination,
and his life has been especially
interwoven with the lives of the
members of the “Toccoa Ministers’
and Workers’ Union”—
Therefore, Resolved, That it is
with sincere feelings of regret that
we part with him as he leaves to
resume his studies in Princeton
Theological Seminary.
Resolved, 2nd, That we hereby
assure him of our high esteem for
him as a Christian gentleman and
fellow laborer in the kingdom and
patience of our Lord and that we
pledge him our prayers for his con¬
tinued and increasing usefulness in
the cause to which he has conse¬
crated his future.
J. B. Allen,
D. W. Hiott,
J. C. Atkinson.
Toccoa, Ga., Sept. 7th, 1897.
In Memory of Hr. J. B. Whitmire.
It is always sad when the mes¬
senger of death enters the home.
And we are all subdued by the
presence of the grim monster. No
matter how indifferent we become
to sacred and holy things at other
times, there is an awakening in
our consciences to the fact that
th«v- - *- ~ '** * — j - — x ---.—
er who is mightier than we and to
whom, one day, we will have to
bow when we see the pale pulse¬
less form that was once so full of
life and bouyancy. And it is par¬
ticularly sad to see the young die.
We know the old must soon pass
away, but the strong healthy
young man or young woman re¬
minds us of the trees of the forest
that can stand the blast of a great
many winter’s ere they show signs
of decay.
Just so we felt about our friend,
Mr. J. Barton Whitmire, who so
recently was the victim of death.
It is hard to realize that he has
gone from the dear home on earth
where the loving hearts of his
father, mother and wife were ever
ready to welcome him. Their
hearts are indeed bereft. No ton¬
gue can express the deep meaning
of the words, “He is gone.”
Being an only child he was
peculiarly dear to his parents.
The father feeling that in his de¬
clining years he would have a prop
in the strong manhood of his son.
And the young wife who was so
tenderly loved and shielded from
the hardships of life is stunned and
dazed with the awful reality of a
life of loneliness and empty-heart-
edness. His neighbors and friends
in Toccoa will miss his kind asso-
ciation. His lace was one which
always brightened up when spoken
to. And the writer was often im¬
pressed by the nobility of charac-
ter that shone in his countenance
We all have faults. He ma y
have had his. But our own per-
sonal observation of him caused us
to feel that he was living an up-
right, moral life, and better .till
he gave some close friends the signs
of his serious consideration of spi-
ritual things. It would be worth
all • 1 the ., world beside
to his loved
ones if he had left a record on
line to compare with his moral and
social life. But he no doubt was
contemplating uniting with the
church, and he took some special
interest in the recent union meet-
ing held here. So, with the admo-
nitions and constant prayers of his
pious loved ones, we cannot feel
bu t lhatGod was Hiercifal, and tha,
e had touched his heart with the
divine fire ; that he had made his
peace with the Father above, and
intended soon to proclaim to the
world that he was a Christian.
Oh, dear friends, look up and let
not the clouds of sorrow obscure
the glorious sunlight of the love of
the Heavenly Father, whose pro-
perty it is to always have mercy,
J. H. VICKERY & SONS,
mtt General
SI <9 i X A II Merchandise,
m 1 *9 ? 1 Groceries,
R fj Clothing,
if m Bouts, Shoes,
m Hats and Caps.
4 % Toccoa, Ga.
THE CHEAPEST IS NOT ALWAYS THE REST.
B e Sell the Best Ooods at the Cheapest Price.
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 you have 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 be
taken to The Record Job Office, Toccoa,
G&.
* CUBAN OIL cures Cuts,
Burns, Bruises, Rheuma-
tlsm and Sores. Price, 25 cts.
The prayers and sympathy of all
attend you, and it such could avail
your wounded, broken hearts would
be healed and your home would once
more assume the brightness and joy
it lost when he went away.
Mattie D. Allen.
Toccoa, Ga., Sept. 6, 1897.
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for
Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chap¬
ped Hands,Chilblains, Corns, and
all Skin Eruptions, and positively
cutes Piles, or no pay required. It
is guaranteed to give perfect satis¬
faction or money refunded. Price
25 cents per box at E. R. Davis &
Co’s Drugstore.
W
-w-v* ** IF
PERSONALITIES.
Nansen, the arctic explorer, has been
unanimously elected professor of zoolo¬
gy at the Christiania university.
Sir Alfred Milner, who has been ap¬
pointed British high commissioner of
South Africa, is only 48 years old.
Rev. J. Courtney Jones, an Episcopal
olerevinan pare a concordance of Virginia, intends to pre¬
01 tne episcopal pray¬
er book. There is no such work in exist-
ence.
Lord Salisbury is to be elevated to a
dukedom when her majesty celebrates
the completion of the record year of her
reign. If this occurs, he will become
Duke of Salisbury.
William A, Hennessey, who has just
died in Springfield, Mass., was the in¬
ventor of the Hennessey triple draft
tnbnlar boiler and several other useful
mechanical devices.
President McKinley’s clerks say that
from Feb. 17, 1896, to the time Major
McKinley left Canton he received and
answered 98,831 letters. The number
received since Major McKinley arrived
in Washington is much greater in pro¬
portion.
Comrade Owen Jones and about 70 of
his friends made a 91 pound ball of the
tin foil wrappers of chewing tobacco
and presented it to Pennsylvania Re¬
serve post, No. 191, of Philadelphia.
They began making the hall in Septem¬
ber. 1898.
The Amerioan Cotton Growers’ asso¬
ciation, after careful examination, finds
that the whole earth does not need in a
year as much cotton as can be produced
in the United States. It also lays down
the commercial law that, so far as agri¬
cultural wares are concerned, the cost
of production bears no relation to the
immediate market price of an article.
This is governed mostly by the specula¬
tive demand. The association finds the
price of cotton low, with no prospect for
a rise. There will be no larger consump¬
tion this year than there was last, prob¬
ably not so large as that. Under the
circumstances, therefore, the cotton
grower is recommended to go in largely
for forage, grain, small fruit and vege¬
table crops, besides raising at home all
his own meat, and to go moderately into
cott on raisi ng this year.
England and Australia are the on-
*7 island s which exceed Cuba in
natural resources. When not wasted
by war, Cuba produces, with a large
share of her soil untouched, $100 I*
000,000 worth of sugar and tobacco
annually besides the products of
orc bards »nd forests, rivers and
mountain mines.
Off the northeast coast of New
Guinea the island of Kitaba, sur-
funded high on the by a outside wall of and coral from 800 60 feet to
100 feet on the inside, maintains 13
villages of natives, to whom war,
cr ime and poverty have been un¬
known 8ince the beginning of their
traditions.
Free Pills.
Send your address to H. E. Buck¬
l en & Co., Chicago, and get a free
sam P le box of Dr. King’s New Life
P j n S ' A trial wiU con vince you of
. -
tive in the cure of Constipation and
Sick Headache. For Malaria and
Liver troubles they have been pro¬
ved invalua ble. They are guaran-
*
ly vegetable. They do not weaken
their action, but by giving tone
“ stomac wToU | 1 and bowels T'l greatly in-
vis & Co., by Da!
druggists.
STAR
LIVERY
STABLER,
HOQSED & GARLAND, Proprs.
Tugalo St. Toccoa, Georgia.
we
tine vehicles of any kind and polite, competent and reliable timers.
■
Horses, Mules and Buggies
as to prices we simply defy competition. Come and see i.s.
If You Don’t See it in the Record,
It Didn’t Happen. X *
The Brightest *
And Best Country I
Paper on Earth.
A utation paper must with this give rep- all ][ 2
the news of its locality, < I
ings from of the little personal happen- sort ^ jj
a
to the best report of a
big accident. Constant
effort to give all the
news and to give it
right has gained this
reputation for
The
Southern *
Record. %
The Record Costs $1 a Year.
Less Than 2 Cts. a Week, f
A paper that gives all 0
i the news and gives it right j
is a splendid paper to ad- i
v Cl llsc ill. x
msm .
ffpi
j m ; ; i Lillgmu ffl
¥fi MM\m§ mw
AH Wool.
_
The very latest idea in fabrics
and fashions are plaidsand stripes.
All wool, rich and elegant in de-
sign, jaunty, chic and knobby
effects, but made to wear. This
is what the local representative of
€Ik International
tailoring Co.
of CHICAGO is now showing over
five hundred styles of. Cal! and
see their sample line winch will
be gladly shown by their repre*
sentative.
Russell & Mulkey.
Paper, Pens and Ink for sale, at
The Record Stationery Store.
Milwaukee, Dec. 2, 1896.
I find Tichenor’s Antiseptic to be
and do just as represented. Would
not be without it in my household
under any consideration.
Respectfully yours,
Clement Zophy,
231 Seventh St.
Mr. James E. Ferrell, of Burnt
House W Va., has discarded all
other diarrhoea medicines and now
handles only Chamberlain’s Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
He has used it in his family and sold
it 11 to 10 his nis CiistomprQ customers far lor vp, J ears, rc and and
has no hesitation in sayiner that it is
the best remedy for colic and diar-
rhoia he has ever known. It not
only gives relief, but effects a per- W
manent cure, it is also pleasant
and safe to take, making it an ideal
remedy for bowel complaints. For
sale by Wright & Edge.
Bear „ in . mind that Rice’s Goose
Urease Liniment, cures lal aches
andpamsin man or beast. We
guarantee it to do all that is claim-
ed for it, or refund your money. 3
You- s truly,
Wright & Edge.
We sell and guarantee Rice’s
Goose Grease Liniment.
WrIQHT & Edge,
Your
Faults,
And when we make your picture
We Will Cover Them!
as much as possible.
We endeavor to please, and our
pleased patrons will tell you of our
success.
Call and see samples and then
get your work done wherever you
please.
0130. L. A1A TTESON,
Photographer.
Fire
Insurance
Liverpool & London & Globe,
Hartford, Home of New \ oik,
Phoenix of Brooklyn, America,Lan¬ Insurance
Company of North
caster Fire Insurance Co. of Eng¬
land, and Greenwich of New
York. See us before placing your
insurance.
LIFE COMPANIES—New York
Life and Atlanta Mutual Life
and Accident Co.
Machinery j
And Machine^ Supplies, Agents
for Geiser Mf’g Co.
WHOLESALE SHINGLES
¥1 m
gimpsoi?
e. TOGGOA,
GA.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
fiedmont air lino.
D.iKlmjeil S.Uartule of Famonjj.r Train*.
In KfTeot M* r V>,91.
V ea* No. 18 F.t.Ml
NortLbouuS. No.13 No. 38 Ei. No. 30
t’ailj Baily. Sum Dally.
f.Y. At'.f.nt*. C. T. SSgS£S5S8aSS8M8S888S8 88 nu 8S£ PTJ
" Atlanta, K. T. 1
“ Noreroas..... *
i ;
*55 -
“ :
“ \ 3 9
c^'meVul * S P
TtxxMx*"'”! :
u \Ywt°minit«»r *co B: 0»-
i * «****.*»
...... 1 55 v •
~ Central **o<r> S&
P Ic*
* ?
** G-affner*..... 5 i»
~ “ Blacksburg.. King’s Mt. p 7 08 p
“* Oa.fonia..... .. P....... h+'CCO-i
l*v. Ar Charlotte Dan rill* ... p pjli j 0J $6 p
.. . n 9
Ar. BiehmwaT. 6 00 a 6 00 a s 40 p
.7^5^ “ Baitm apRR. 5 42 a S2S8S ?
Kyirt!*; H 00 a p
j - . 10 15 a
, 13 43 in • ...»■ 1
So Fst.Ml Ve». Xo .11
utli bo nod. No 33 No. 37
I»all r. Dally. Daily
Ly. N. i..P. K. h. 14 la a i S3 p
...
„ Raiti • 50 a 0 55 p . .
“ Wjuhlnsftoa.. 0 24 a 9 80 p...
11 15 a 10 43 pi...
Lt. Riohmoad ... 12 85 p 2 00 a 200
| ^charlotte'* Lr'.Gastoui*.;;.; ' 10 « 2U 00 p p 6 9 60 25 » a 1115 0 05 a a
j • • a • v. ••
10 50 p ........ 110 p
" - Oaffneya...” ii’8i' p io 4&‘a
11 47 p,....... it 8 20 p
“ Greenville!.*.' 12 26 a ll a B 16 p
20 a 12 23 p 429p
» 05 a 1 15 p 515 p
2 20 a 1 85 p EXl
« To^^ in,ter ’ Tiip C f W M n p sna.
Mt. Airy 3Wa c38 p TSTi
- ComaUa.... 730 P I
1 fe ToTi ir f 35 p •
« 3Tin9 ; 9 P 8 08 p • »
i " Buford..... 435 » 3 SI p 8 85 p 7 •
9 07 p, 7 •
Ar. £. r Atfant^E Atlanta, U T; t. Tift 5J0 'Lis’ 8 65 p ' 10 9 so 30 \ 9 8 » »
- a p p
A ” *• *“■ “M” “X" night.
p* noon.
N 03 .87 and 88—Dally. Washington and South*
western Vestibuia Limited. Through Pullman
f‘t 8p5n J 8 ^ b * tweeilNewYt>rlt aa <* New Or*
•T^nd^aieo^nveen’XAw^ork^ndMe^alwt E^*.S'S,.V^^^'a h lF.'£. r *r
Dining oaraaerve aU«e*I*
ra route.
Nc*. 35 and 88— United sti Fast Mali
S i New Or-
a w P. R.R.
IgKtf
pXMOEMre o' BU (UiMH. PuU*M» 4r>w<*a
L'^« 0 r, o*r« between Netr York
R ^i,i. win 1 S 4 *i£S‘«Si^f?SSS WmJ*
TK! <»r Si run tMSU’fe.SS® through
I - ,me d M, train, Nos. 17 anils,ke*
“ ”*‘ •*■•<*“'*'
'
Y^i**®**®*. D- cl WaAiaften, D. (k
W * ahnf ' A-lanta
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