Newspaper Page Text
The Fall Season is Here!
«*
* '
SO IS BEN. FL BROWN, JJR *5
With a full and elegant line of Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes,
Hats, Caps, Furniture, Wagons, Buggies, Crockery, Glassware, Willow and Wooden ware, DRY GOODS,
CLOTHING, Notions, Groceries, Etc. profit, and
I sell my goods at a profit, s set. but that is a living
one that is consistent with good business principles. and the
I buy COTTON and COUN- TRY PRODUCE, pay
nighcst market price for same, Call and see me. I guar-
&
antee entire satisfaction.
SOUTHERN RECORD
PUBLISHED EVERY ERIDAY BY
SOUTHERN PUBLISHING ^ CO.
INCORPORATED.
.1. B. JONES, W. A. FOWLER,
PRESIDENT. GEN. MANAGER.
\V. A. FOWLER. EDITOR.
Entered at the Post-Office jis second class 1
mail matter.
Rates of subscription: $1.00 per year; 50
rents for six months anil ‘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 be ac¬
companied by writer’s name, not nec¬
essarily for publication, but for pro¬
tection to us.
Mr. Peary, the Arctic explorer,
is sure that the meteorite which he
brought back with him from the
far North is a “heaven-born” curio,
which will afford much interesting
study to scientists and metallurgists.
A peculiarity in the iron in the me¬
teorite, it is claimed, is that it will
not rust. Mr. Peary says the Es¬
quimaux depend upon meteorites
for iron for their spear heads. It 1
is not likely, however, that “hea-1
venly” iron will be found in suffi-
cient quantities to warrant the for -1
mation of a trust by Carnegie and
Rockefeller for the manipulation
of it.
Fitzhugh Lee lias not returned to
Havana, and will probably not do
so until the latter part of the pre¬
sent month. He is in Virginia,
taking things easy 7 and watching
the drift of local politics, lie say r s
he does not expect to remain in
Havana a great while, as the Pre¬
sident will probably select some
Republican for the place. Gen.
Lee still harbors the desire to go to
the Federal Senate, and is said to
be arranging matters for a campaign
to succeed Senator Martin.
There is a scheme on foot to
divide Alaska into several territo-
ries. One of them, according to
the plan, is to embrace the Yukon
valley, and be called Lincoln. It
is the understanding that Eli Gage,
son of the Secretary of the Treas¬
ury, is slated for the first governor¬
ship of the territory of Lincoln.
Mr. Eli Gage is the gentleman
who, it is said, was Hogged by
miners at Dawson City recently
for carrying into the Yukon conn-
try more whisky than provisions. •
" " L ~
rr The ., Pittsburg Post, alluding .. to .
‘
the , curiosities . . . of - the , market, . says
:
“It . remarkable , 1, that 1 while 1*1 there 1
is
are but two sides of the market peo¬
ple will persist in choosing the
wrong one. It is just as easy to
pick the right side, but ever since
speculative markets were establish¬
ed people will be bulls when they
should be bears, and vice versa.
The only way to beat the market is
to stay out of it."
It is believed in Washington that
in the cabinet reorganization, which
is scheduled bv the newspapers to
take place shortly, Theodore Roose-
velt, now assistant secretary of the
navy, will be promoted to the
secretaryship of that department.
The President could not make a
better selection. Mr. Roosevelt
would infuse new life into the ser-
vice and give us a naval establish-
ment the best in the world of its
s ; /e
Charles A. Dana, the g’-eat icon-
oclast and editor of the New York
Sun, died at his home at Glencove,
L. I., last Sunday. He was a pro-
lific and erudite writer, equaled by
few living men. He had no ideal,
save to crush in his cynical way all
that his fellows builded.
The Record always takes the
imtiatne ..... pertaining .
in matters to
county affairs, and will at all times
sound the gong of warning when-
ever it sees danger to the tax-pay-
ers of the countv lurking in the
* 0
doors , „ of r political^chicanery. .... . .
We notice that u gentleman from
up the coun tiy “is on the turf ’ in
an announcement for tax receiver,
He probably has in mind the old
adage, “the early bird catches the
worm,” and he is certainly out for
tiie worm.
Court is Good Thing.
Our friend, Gus King, of Carnes-
ville, who, by the way, is solicitor
of tlie county court of 1 * ranklin,
writes the editor of The Record
that we were mistaken about the
Franklin-county court being a “fiz¬
zle and farce," as we said in last
week’s Record.
All right; we herewith and here-
by correct said aspersion and apol-
ogize to you,Gus. If we had thought
for a moment we would have known
the court could not be anything
else than a success in every detail,
since you are the general manager
and prosecutor.
This is no joke.
Seriously, though, it does seem
there is something not given to the
public about the bill to abolish the
court. The last grand jury of
Franklin county said that the court
was saving a great deal of money
for Franklin and court business was
greatly facilitated, the dockets were
almost entirely’ clear, there were no
misdemeanor culprits in jail, and,
altogether, the court was a great
benefit to the people.
But, at the same time, we notice
that a very large petition has been
gotten,up to do away with the court,
signed by a large number of the
best men in Franklin. If there is
a “nigger in the woodpile,” Gus,
you ought to show him up—let the
people see him!
The City Court.
The committee appointed by 7 the
grand jury to report a bill for a city 7
court for Habersham county 7 , has
not as y 7 et been able to do anything
on account of the sickness of two
of its members—Messrs. J. A. Rey¬
nolds and B. E. Edge. A part of
the committee want the court held
exclusively at Clarkesville, but we
understand that Representative J.
J. Bowden has said he would in¬
troduce the bill giving Toccoa halt
of the sessions anyway, in confor¬
mity’’ with the plan outlined by the
grand jury, unless the committee
were able to agree on a bill.
Mr. Bowden is right; unless Toc¬
coa is fairly represented the bill and
the court would be of no benefit to
our people, and the citizens of the
county would at once disapprove
of any more expense being taxed
upon them and sign a petition to
kill it. Toccoa and the distiicts
below the mountains pay a large
proportion of the taxes, and our
people will not sit idly by and see
all their rights swapped 1 and traded
for „ political preferment and aspira-
r
tions. . loccoa . able to take , cart
is
of her interests, and will at all times
be found fighting for them, without
fear or favor.
We have no favors to ask from
those who would knife our interests
at the turn of the wrist; therefore,
we put them on notice in
thing which affects the pocket books
or political liberties of our people
to beware of the sword of Damo-
c les.
The Advertiser Agitinst It.
Alt hough it nas been generally
supposed that the Clarkesville Ad-
vertisei was in the scheme to do
awav with the county commission-
ers, we are glad to print an
from the editorial columns of that
paper this week in favor of the pre-
sent law and against its repeal un-
we h llV e given it plentv of time
to see wluU \- an and wil { be done
by i.i the next * commissioners • • elected.
1 be Advertiser again follows the
lead of The Record, and, like the
proverbial cow s tail, The Ad-
vertiser is always behind the
procession, but it usually comes up
all right when it sees the trend of
public sentiment. “Better late than
never.
Below is the extract :
A notice has been published “of
intention to introduce a bill in
next General Assembly abolishing
r h e Board of Commissioners of
Boads^ ham and Revenues " We for Haber-
f col " lt - v don't know
how our Representative stands on
„,e quests have not bad an
i vve’knorv lie bad nothing to’do with
; publishing the notice, but whether
he favors or opposes it we do not
; ^\ e are opposed to the
Un ' vis e and ho P e
will die where h it is. . Habershan
county is a county of such size
the business of the county so large
that the commissioners are a neces-
sity, the demands are too great to j
| be properly met by one,man, he he
ever so diiligent, efficient or abie.
j But barring out the question of the
j necessity of the Board or the wis-
j Gom ot establishing it, we are
unalterably opposed to abolishing
it this early after its establishment.
We have not given the measure
sufficient trial to prove its merits
or demerits ; let us try it sufficiently
to be thoroughly satisfied before we
take anv steps regarding it.
We are opposed to a system of
eternal changes in public affairs to
suit the whims and humors of all;
some will never he satisfied. A
county with no stability in the
transaction of its affairs will not
prosper any more than the individ¬
ual who is always changing. Let
the matter rest.
A Democratic Pointer.
The Indianapolis election, says
the Augusta Chronicle, while
based largely on local affairs, had
national issues also. The Demo¬
crats placed themselves squarely
for free coinage, while the Repub¬
licans were equally pronounced for
a gold standard. The election of a
Democratic mayor by 5,000majori¬
ty reversed a McKinley majority of
6,000 last year. Indianapolis is
the home of ex-President Harrison
It is also the citadel of the Hanna
monetary commission and Buckner
and Palmer politics.
A banker of New Mexico, out of
patience with the Indianapolis
commission, calls attention to some
facts worth recording at this time.
He says :
“Look at the vast amount of
silver that is daily being shipped to
London. The mass of readers do
not keep track of it, but nearly
every day hundreds of thousands of
ounces of the white metal are ex¬
ported from New York, The
shame of it is that London gets it for
50 cents an ounce and in return re¬
ceives $1 for the same quantity in
the eastern countries, where it is
still the money of the people.
Why should England ever consent
to ‘doing something for silver,’
when it is to her interest to bear
the market in which she is a buyer?
The British are not built that way,
and as long as we stand for it they
will continue to enrich themselves
at our expense. 1 ?
This is a practical view of the
question, and we are getting
pointers from Indiana and elsewhere
that many thousands of voters who
deserted the party banner, last year,
will, in 1898 and 1900, range them¬
selves again under its victorious
folds.
North and South.
The Age, a New York paper
published specially in the interest
of Afro-Americans, publishes the
following statement from Mr.. W.
C. Richardson, of Braddock, Pa.,
who recently returned from a
southern trip :
“Iu the south there are schools
for colored children as well as
schools lor white children, and the
colored schools are taught by colored
“In the north colored children
may get an education, may fit
themselves for teaching, but there
J are teach. no tT°°‘ . S JT are tew - situations '!' em *° m
the north for educated negroes.
j “My advice to the northern ne-
gro is to go south, where negro
character is understood, and where
n t ^ OC!S °* i nte S r ‘;>b education and
I ed^^the^tte^clas^ , of^vhitef.^ 1 ’
“I have been asked whether
intended to go south, and have
! answered that I do. The sober.
industrious and enterprising negro
ba s more opportunities tor advance-
ment in the south than in the
north."
We understand that the promo-
J ters of the new citv court bill are in
favor (a part of them) of h-ivino- ‘ a
"
monih ^, 1 _. . ,„H“ rKe8V , ..,
eVer V
‘
months ana adjourning same to be
taken up at Toccoa immediately
, after—thus giving ^ Toccoa aoccoa rour four and and
! »
r . , eSVUle ... tOUr Clt ^ COUrts We
-
, lre ln of this. It is fair;
1 and
j | * wishes. a ' rne ss is all that Toccoa asks or
]t . possible 3 - that
1S newspapers
i niav soon be used in Kansas boot. Citv
Mo., as reading text
' su P er ‘ ntendent °t the school board
I Says he ls P re P arin g f° r an exper -
j ment in th at line. The idea is a
good one, providing that the r;
I bind of newspapers P are einoi,-? P
Visiting Cards of all kind at t
1 Southern Record Sta. Store.
Some Gain.
Augusta Chronicle,
While the bimetalic commission
has not succeeded in accomplishing
its purpose, in a practical sense, it
has been serviceable in an impor
tant way ethically. It has shown
that the British government, as at
present constituted, is not disposed
to open the Indian mints or give
any satisfaction to France or the
United States, no matter what those
countries agree to do for silver, At
the next campaign there need be
no more masquerading about inter¬
national bimetalisrn as a condition
precedent of American action. The
Republican party will throw off
that mask and the Democratic party
will make the square issue with it
for free coinage. We must open
o^ir mints by independent action
and take the chances, which are
good, for France following suit.
The British government has strong
bimetalic tendencies, but it is con¬
fessedly overawed by the creditor
classes and their allies. The New
York Tribune, a gold paper, but
liberal in correspondence, presents
the case thus :
“Manchester has held this week
the most influential meeting in favor
of Senator Wolcott’s mission and
rational bimetalisrn by international
action, but Manchester lies outside
the range of that innermost square
mile of London which Professor
Walker described as controlling the
monetary policy of a worldwide
empire. The ministers are divided,
and the chancellor of exchequer
will be left to find convenient ex¬
cuses for inaction.
“One thing at least the ministers
will unite upon, and that is the in¬
convenience of having the present
discussion prolonged, when there is
no prospect of their being able to
agree upon the vital issue. The
discussion .has become bitter as well
as animated. Nearly every issue of
the Times contains a sheaf of letters
from Lord Farrer, Sir Robert Gif-
fen, Sir William Houldsworth and
other controversialists. The Man¬
chester Guardian presents the bi¬
metalist side with lucidity and pow¬
er, and Lancashire, with a depressed
cotton trade, is in sympathy with
it. Financial London is aroused to
the necessity of defending its credi¬
tor interests, and is either blind or
indifferefit to the fate of impoverish-
ed'India , with its hoards of depre¬
ciated silver. ? ?
On the 8th day of October more
than 10,000 students were on the
rolls as members of the first Fresh-
man class of the Cosmopolitan Uni¬
versity. The confusion into which
the plans regaading the Cosmopol¬
itan’s educational work were
thrown by the retirement of Presi¬
dent Andrews, in order to meet
the urgent wishes of his friends at
Brown University, has been met
by the acceptance of the Presidency
by Dr. Elipnalet N. Potter. Pres¬
ident Potter has been at the head
of two great colleges for nearly
twenty-five years, and brings to
the work exceptional talents as an
organizer and man of broad culture
and common-sense ideas, He is al¬
j ready at Irvington engaged in or-
I * work anizin S - his stafT professors. The
, ot the University has beert
j grouped under fifteen heads , cover-
j * n S tne various branches of knowl-
J edge. Each of these will be in
j charge of a professor. As soon as
1 th ® task of selection is complete
the students will be assigned their
j ' v °rk and the largest Freshman class
I in the history of the universities of
the world will begin its studies
j &
j e extraordinary dimensions of
the , thus formed has
Ciass opened
j the eyes of the public to the imnor- fL
ie , ucatlona .
I 'y ^ 6 ci *
C ’ r . • Wmch , - , tne Gosmopohtan has
undertaken to fill. Knowing that
tlle «PP">pri«io n mode bv the Cos-
| ’ „ • Q ,■ U lte *. , OUe and , that .
'
i *** ^ bey ° nd the most
I sanguine expectations, embarrass-
ing the work by their proportions, r
*
raan ' proiessor& „ ( . and , other . promi-
nent men have already made the
offer of advice and assistance
out pav.
tt A \ Apt' ~ in it suicide Austria by has cutting just
| her tongue The
'
x ort W 1S 11 tailure. The tongue is
I not a 7 Ural Oreran *f l “ iJ tn 18 •
‘
working order.
——-—
me beautiful Bibles at The
Record Stationery Store, very
cheap. * -
Ex=Senator Freeman Dead.
Monday’s Atlanta Journal.
Hon. John M. Freeman, formerly
of Toccoa and lor nine years a State
Senator, died at Columbia, S. C.,
last Thursday, and was buried at
Toccoa on Friday. lie was web
known throughout the State and
had friends all over Georgia. He
was 72 years old at the time of his
death, and had lived an active and
useful life, At Toccoa he was a
merchant and once editor of a week-
ly paper, the News. Like most
Southern men of his age. he was in
the Confederate army and made a
gallant soldier, serving through the
tour years of the war. He was the
father of Mr. W. B. Freeman, of
West End, who received a telegram
announcing the sad news while he
was at the Tennessee centennial.
Owing to delay in the delivery of
the message, Mr. \\ . B. Freeman
was deprived of the privilege of
attending his father’s funeral. The
remains were accompanied to Toc-
co a from Blacksburg by members
of the family residing in South Car-
olina.
The press of the county’ and the
people also are solidly against the
abolition of the law giving Haber¬
sham county 7 commissioners of roads
and revenues. Now, what is Jack
Bowden going to do about it?
No Special Term of Our Court.
Cleveland, Ga., Oct. 14.
The call for a special term ol Hab¬
ersham Superior Court for second
Monday in November, 1897, is here¬
by revoked and cancelled and no
such Court will be held, for the rea¬
son that it is expected that a City
Court will be established in said
county 7 , to which a great portion of
the bnsiness will be transferred,
especially 7 misdemeanor cases. The
Clerk Superior Court Habersham
county 7 will enter this order on his
minutes.
J. J. Kimsey, J. S. C.
Georgia, Habersham County.
I, J. A. Erwin, Clerk Superior
Court in and for said county, do
certify that the above is a true tran¬
script from the minutes of the Su¬
perior Court of said county. Given
under my hand and official signa¬
ture, this 20th October, 1897.
J. A. Erwin, C. S. C.
Most Christian readers will be sur¬
prised to learn that the archangel Ga¬
briel is provided with a steed named
Haizum. To Mohammed, in the Koran,
is due the credit of mounting Gabriel
in good style.
The standard of the Saxons w 7 as a
white horse. It is worthy of note that
the hair of the Saxon w 7 onmn was not
red, but yellow; therefore the joke
about the redheaded girl and the white
horse, though ancient, is of later date
than the eighth century.—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
STAGE GLINTS.
“Captain Impudeuce” will not go out
again this season.
Ben T. Ringgold has rejoined the
company of Robert Mantell.
“The Heart of Maryland” will have
a London production next season.
j May Irwin has decided to spend the
I Rammer at Carlsbad in Germany.
Harry Blitz and Katherine Brown
were married at Jersey City recently.
Mrs. Maurice Gran, Lloyd d’Au-
bigne and Mme. Theo have gone to Eu¬
rope.
Maude Adams will make her stellal
debut in September at the Empire thea¬
ter, New York city.
Willis Granger is rapidly recovering
from his recent illness, a violent attack
of laryngitis, producing a slight paral¬
ysis of the vocal cords.
Anton Seidl has an arrangement with
Mme. Cosima Wagner by which he will
conduct the Baireuth performances ol
i “Parsifal” next summer.
| An aspirant for honors in the field cl
1 and its contingent features
necromancy
h g offered the American public
“ **
: Mary Hampton will resign from E.
H. Sothern’s company, and Virginia
! Harned d “An Enemy P^t which she
ori g^at e in to the King. ”
, leaning ^bel lady Irving for has John been Drew’s engaged as
She company
next season. will temporarily re-
! P lace Agnes Miller in “Never Again.”
■ FIGS AND THISTLES.
j There is no safe side in any kind of
sin.
JSotmng XT ,, . can make . people go blind
1 ,b2n flning ,heir 63 ' eB Wi * h
vru \Nhen the right ■ kind . of is
,----- “6““ ux a a man man is
taken ont of the miry clay, he knows
enough to stay out.
The fact that there is so much stuff
d l ^ i at ste shines * . of ke the gold makes the story of
s J °ne saddest chapters ever
ccri written.—Ram’s Hon _D r> iv. »___ Horn.
J. H. VICKERY & SONS.
THE GIN DUKE.
Ee Is Expected to Succeed the Preieat
Governor General of Canada.
The state of mind which the Canadian
prohibitionists are in can better be im¬
agined than described since it has been ;
announced that Lord Aberdeen, the j
present governor general, is to be suc¬
ceeded in June by the Earl of Leeds, the
great “gin duke” of England. There is
really little cause for alarm however.
The Earl of Leeds is by no means a dis¬
sipated young man, as his nickname
might imply. It is only because 'he
owns great distilleries which earn for
him an enormous income that he is
famous throughout the United Kingdom
as the “gin duke. ” .
duke is popular # and ’
The a most man
has already had quite a brilliant career, j
though only 34 . He once sat in com¬
mons as member for Brixton. The queen
is very fond of him, and for several
years he acted as treasurer of the royal
household. He owns Hornby castle, a
fine estate in Yorkshire, where he enter¬
tains lavishly. The Duchess of Leeds is
a handsome and clever woman, tall and
stately, like her husband. She is the
mother of four little girls.
Osborne is the family name of the
new viceroy, and he is the ninth Duke
of Leeds, so, you see, his family is an
ancient one. The history of the founder
of the house reads like a story in a Suu-
« o-l 4 (
■9 «■
4 4 4 •e
A r
>
V S \4
-1 |f§f^ 1
Ikh jh if
H m-M ■
„ip» >\ r%> i:
38 PC!
7 *\ w-
v; 1
■St <t> <p
•w <*» 3 =
•£> <£> <S>
DUKE-OF LEEDS.
day school book. The original duke be¬
gan life as a merchant’s apprentice and
won his master’s favor by diving into
the Thames to rescue his daughter from
a watery grave. Of course the girl was
an only child. She grew up and mar- |
ried the apprentice, who succeeded his
father-in-law in business and in time j
became lord mayor of London. The j
present duke’s name is George Godol- j
phin Osborne, and about a year ago he j
succeeded to the title on the death of his i
father.
IN BEHALF OF GOOD FOOD. !
Miss Sickles Wants the Government to '
Teach Domestic Science.
Miss Emma C. Sickles is what might
be called au aggressively industrious
young woman. It was not so very long
ago that she w 7 as out on the Dakota plains
trying to civilize Indian children and
instill in their untrained minds a respect
and liking for honest labor. Now Miss
Sickles has changed the scene of her en-
deavor. She has dropped the hopelessly
lazy young Indians and has set about
the task of reforming the habits of the
American housekeeper.
Sometime ago Miss Sickles establish-
ed herself in Washington and started
classes in what she calls domestic sci-
ence. She thinks that housework is of
sufficient importance to human happi-
ness to be done in a scientific manner.
Perhaps her progress in this direction
has beeu slower than she expected. At
any rate Miss Sickles has determined
that she must have help to spread the
new evangel of the kitchen. Being a
young woman of resource and courage,
she has applied for aid to the United
States congress. She wants a bureau of
domestic science established in connec-
tion with the department of .
in Washington.
Miss Sickles has organized in Illinois
a domestic science association, and re-
cently the executive committee of this
organization sent to the National Farm-
ers’ Alliance and the National Farmers’
Council resolutions setting forth the
aims cf the domestic scientists and de-
daring that, as the ultimate object of
•gricnltnre^M Reproduction of proper
food for mankind and that “food raised
with skill is often ruined through igno-
lIPA : i * «cs > » 4 * 7^ it ‘
j 1
! mg*- m
!
] , m . T? .ya?
;
g -i
7
—
-itl
8
MISS EMMA C. SICKLES.
ranee in preparation; therefore, be it re-
solved that departments of domestic
science should be established at the vari-
ons state agricultural fairs and colleges
throughout the country where the best
methods and appliances -WbiteL' for the DreDara- lS,
ti0n ° f shaU
organizations have replied favorably,
and the ixiw cooking cuumug school scnooi may E become an
institution at state fairs,
Miss Sickles is a Massachusetts girl
and was educated at Mount Holyoke
®°Bege. She went west and taught
school mong the Indians. She became
the hero of the Pine Ridge uprising and
was given a medal of honor by La Sava*
teur society of France.
^
p|S@ B W>
s Life ■K s
li •; S
HOQSED & GARLAND, Proprs *
Tugalo St. Toccoa, Georgia.
We beg to announce to our friends and tiie public generally that we
are now better than ever prepared to furnish them good, safe teams
tine vehicles of any kind and polite, competent and reliable drivers.
Turnouts or Saddle Horses may lie lia.l of us at all hours, day or night,
as there is always some one at our Stable. Prices moderate.
Horses, Mules and Buggies
Kept constantly on hand for sale or exchange, “cheaper than the
cheapest.” We can sell von either new or second-hand Buggies, and
as to prices we simply defy competition. Come and see us.
“
i ? t< v .4
I
■ ..L _________ . *;->- . - —
THE CHEAPEST IS NOT ALWAYS TIIE BEST
We Sell the Best Goods at the Cheapest Price.
MATTE SON’S STUDIO.
Artistic I’liotograplis
Of every 7
GALLERY CLOSES SOON FOR WINTER SEASON.
"SSkG. L. MATTESON. TOCCOA, GEORGIA.
CRYSTAL LENSES
X . I TRADE MARK.
Quality Pint and Always.
j-V..
Mil mm
m.. :
J. 11. Vickery & Sons,
Genera! Merchants,
Have the sale of these celebrated Glasses in
TOCCOA, GEORGIA. |
F ci roin the 1 factory «• . of . KELL T AM . ,, & MOORE,
the only complete optical plant in the South, ' j
Atlanta, Ga. ;
I
D.M.SNELS0N, j I
JDei/ils!
Office at residence near Presbyterian j
church. Toccoa, Ga. |
i
I
SOUTHERN RAILWAY. I
j
I ;
L | I
!
w
MERUOsr AIK LIN in. j
Ooi, * 7, * u ®* s*h.aui« i* a ,sender rrama. j i
In JiOreat Msy «, 1397. ;
121 T Ves. No.lgjFst.Ml
Northbound. No. 38 Ex. No. 39
Daily! Daily. Sun. Daily.
Atlanta! o."t! k! t! 7 8 50 50 a!lU 00 m ib 4 35 p 50
Z j^ford” 31 a 1 oo p ns a j !
‘. 9 a .. . . .7 a |
GainaavtrieJ! 1003 a....... 7 U3p
" 10 85 a 8 29 7 430 a I
Z 11 00 4 p 3 08 i
Corupfiil’ *' a 48 p 8 85 p a j
Airy..... il 22 a . .... p .... |
Ar. Mt. 112S a....... 8 40 p ....
.. v ' Wastml'nitir 11 1200m M a 8 85 p ii 3 » • j
.....
“ 12 48 p 4 18 a
. I
Z \\' 1 SO p 4 45 pi 55 a |
281 p 5 30 o £5 a
“ Spart«o"ourg. B 47 p 6 18 p 37 h |
Z gu!^ 5 ur*'.I 4 29 p........ 15 a ;
Its? ,09 p S5 a j
“ King’s Mt .. * j
ChaGott*"!! 8 85 p " |
uv. 30
Ar Dauviii* ., . iso p
L. A—— 8 00 v 6 00 a 3 40 p
8 43 ~“r j
r ' a !
» 8 00 a 11 85 d
" ** piffiadeiphial New York 10 12 43 15 a 8 23 68 a
... • 1 ia 5 % 1
1
South Bound. !r»t.Mij v«>». No. 11
>* Daily.!Daily, 0 . 33 No. 37 Dally
Lv. “ Philadelphia. N. Y..P. it. it. 12 S 50 la a -rsT-p:
Baltimore. a
“ 0 24 a l
.. ^
* 10 43 p “ ; _“
__
Lt. Richmond ... 12 56 p 2 00 a~2 00 », "2
^ T ‘ ••• • ® 20 l P 5 50 a “ 605 | a......
hv.»«tonu10 50 ffi!"..::
'• M Bi^kabnrg" Oaffuoys ...'7 ii'&' B io'ifl'a sin....... Sp"*“).
Z £P li 47 p....... li ?t 8 2 ....!"
artai »»u.rg. 12 26 a e- 815 p
; .. v/Sin t'er' | * 1* 1 § ? p if?*** l Ex. j
Tooc.,*......; B is* - iia'p
“ 3
n ,
Z ..................... 7 j|S 5u p 5 | rag ;
; Buford^^’" 4 35 8 31 « »» I
M a ! p P. j
Ar. " Noreross .7*"......1........ io 'a' 9 43 pi 8
Ar. Atlanta, Atlanta, E. T. 6 U5 p 10 50 p
C. T.i 5 10 a ! 3 55 pi 2 30 n
’A” a. m. p. m «M” nooo. “N” night*
.
Nos. 87 and 38—■Dally. Washlnifton and South*
western Vestibule vestibule Limited. Limited. Through Through Pullman
.Imr*. ria-VVari»ffigton, ..j^.. .---- > --------- k N»wOr
PA’J’ 7 ]'* Washington, AUanta Atlanta York and and M-.mrgoin- Montgora-
VwvTashingt h New and Memphis,
,Atl,mt* and Birmingham. First
ton and tnorsugnfare Atlanta. coaches between Washing¬
•n route. Dining cars serve all meals
pins LL’*- solid 3* »ad betwMa &S —United Wajjhmgtoa Stato* Fast New MaU
vi» SouthfTB Railway, apd W. Or*
A Ss P. R. H.,
ana u. & N. R. a,., bemj composed of baggage
ear ai *d 'loaches, through without change fur
passengers o all oiasaes. Pullman drawfisg
room rLL° sioeptn oars between New York
ri fx- rls 7 A 1A »ad Montgwrsery,
Ijeaving V, ashiagton each Saturday, a tourist
Sleeping oar will ran through between Wash*
X°s. 11, n n 3, a- ^ and ,f 12—Pullman r ^E cis00 without sleeping ohange. oars
tween Richmond and (harlotto, ds*
hb ? No via Danville,
<ra The ? an - «- 11 »nd 37, northbound No It
Air Line Beiie tram, Nos. 17 and 18, be-
tween Atlanta and Mount Airy, Cta., daily ex*
»ep? .Sunday,
W. H. GRE'EN, J. M. CULP,
W«hSfe», D . a SS’d. a
8. H. Hardwick,
Yd’ - n AM>t G * n ' 1
---- - — A
T Invoice Books of i8o
pages at
The Record Stationery Store, also
Time Books, Blank Books,—in
both cloth and leather binding,
Bills Payable and Bills Receivable,
Single and Double Entry Ledgers
and Journals. We are headquar
ters in North Georgia for goods in
our line.
STAR
LIVERY
STABLES,
General
Merchandise] Groceries,
Clothing,
BoMs, Shoes'
Hats and Caps.
Toccoa, Ga.
Platino Wort
Is unexcelled.
SHERIFF’S SALES
For November.
Will be sold before the Court house door
in Clarkesville, Habersham county, 011 the
first Tuesday in November, for cash, and
within the legal hours of sale on said day,
the following described property, to-wit:
Part of iot No 171! in the Hd district of
Habersham county, commencing at the
southwest corner of saiil lot, running south
half way through the lotto a post oak, thence
east to a red oak, thence north to a pine on
the old road, thence along said road to the
beginning corner,containing 100acres, more
or less. Levied on and to be sola as the
property of li Y Pryce, under and by virtue
>1 an attachment fi fa, issued from the jus-
iico court of the 40!>th district, G M, of said
county, i n favor of Elizabeth Martin against
said It 5 Prvce and against this particular
j property. Notice of levy served as required
law. *
JV k:; on
Also, at same tune and glace, a certo 7 ' 1 I
house and lot in the town of Mt Airy, GJ,
being part of lot No 9 in block C, fronting
on Railroad Avenue twenty-seven (z7) feet
and running back one hundred (100) feet
and being seventy-eight (78) feet wide at
back, and running on the northeast side
with a strip 22 feet wide sold off of said lot,
next to 5th street, to J T Peyton, running
a distance of 04 feet along said strip toward
Railroad avenue, thence with another strip
off of said lot sold to J T Peyjon, <4 feet wide
by 35 feet long, to Railroad avenue. Said
last mentioned strip of said lot of 6 by 36
feet being fully described in a deed from
The Mount Airy 7 Tobacco Co to J T I’eyton,
recorded in the office of the clerk of tne su-
penor court of Habersham county, in book
J J, page 421, and in the plat thereto at-
tached. Also, the first mentioned strip of
22 feet is fully described in said deed. Also,
all machinery, fixtures, &c, in said build-
ing, including a modern tobacco barn in
said building located. This levy is intend-
ed to cover the lol and house and ail ma-
chinery,* fixtures, &c, of every description
located in said bunding. Levied on and to
be soitl as the property of The Mount Airy
Tobacco Company, to satisfy a fi fa issued
from the superior court of Habersham coun-
ty, in favor of The Modern Tobacco Barn
Company, for the use of R W Leniter, Ke-
' ceiver Airy Tobacco o£ I Ik the Oxford Co. Written ~ Rank, against notice given The Mt in
terms of the law. $9.35
Also, at same time and place, part of lot
No 20 in the 13th district of said county of
Habersham, beginning at Thus Wilson’s
barn and running northwest to the grove,
whence with the tup of the lidge to the ori-
ginai line of lot No 20 in the 11th district of
said county, thence a conditional line be-
tween Tlios Wilson and H J Canup, thence
cast with said conditional line to the <>Tigi-
Dal line of said lot, thence north with the
original line to the corner of lot No 21 in
the 13th district, thence north with the con-
ditional line of Thus Wilson, thence with
said line to the barn the place of beginning,
containing fourtl1 150 acres, more or less. Also,
° ,le ' interest in iot No 21 in 13th dis-
trict of said county, containing thirty-five
acres, more or less. Levied on and to be
sold as the property of John C Wilson, un¬
der and by virtue of two certain fi fas from
tiie justice’s court ol the 501st district, G M,
of said county, in favor of Raleigh Stonecy-
pher against said John G Wilson. Notice
of levy mailed defendant, as required by
law. §0.00
Also, at same time and place, one certain
house and lot, tying and being about two or
three hundred yards west of the town of
Toccoa, Ga, ou the north side of the Soutli-
about 400 feet anSmnmng to TC Vickery’s ll^utVouThweTt
corner, thence
east 100 feet to F Haywood’s line, thence
along said line about northeast, to the rail-
he sold as the property of Geo M Maxwell,
t* Dnci^r justice’s and by virtue of of a fi fa issued from
ie court the 44bth district, G M,
uga£"t iSgLm Mtawdl T
and returned to me bv Henry Tavior, L C.
4 -“ !) A. M. GRIBBLE,'Sheriff.
y ^ •
i ire
Insurance
Hartford, Liverpool & London & Globe,
Home of New York,
Plioeuix of Brooklyn, Insurance
Company of North America,Lan¬
caster Fire Insurance Co. of Eng¬
land, and Greenwich of New
York. See us before placing your
insurance.
LIFE COMPANIES—New York
Life ami Atlanta Mutual Life
and Accident Co.
Machinery
Anti Machinery Supplies, Agents
for Geiser Mf’g Co.
WHOLESALE SHINGLES
g. p.
®iH)pSOT>
©O. TOGGOA, GA.