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SOUTHERN RECORD
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY fcY
SOUTHERN PUBLISHING CO.
INCORPORATED.
J. B. JONES, W. A. FOWLER,
PRESIDENT. GEN. MANAGER.
W. A. FOWLER. EDITOR.
Entered at t)'-** '* ' cotul ciass
mail mat
=—
Kates <>f Rubaeription: ^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»orsentimentH correspondents. Articles
expressed by
intended for publication must be
coiupsnii ?, not nec-
essanly .w |mum.uuuu, out 101
tection to us.
FOR GOVERNOR:
ALLEN D. CANDLER, of Hall.
FOR CONGRESS, mb District ,
HOWARD THOMPSON, of Hall.
Millions for the contractors, but
not a sou for the people.
Knowledge and power have
rights, but ignorance and weakness
have rights too.—The American.
A soda water trust is the latest.
The trust will sizzle the pennies
out of the spooney and buy 7 royal
titles for its daughters. Combina¬
tion is the proper thing. Only the
unwise believe in competition.
J. L. Brown of Cornelia, is mak¬
ing a fine fight for sheriff. He is
meeting with enthusiastic encour¬
agement in this section, and it now
looks as if he was making a win¬
ning fight. He has a good record
and if he is elected he will make a
good sheriff. Vote for your friends,
and those who are friends to Toc-
coa.
Mr. Warner, representative from
Illinois, says war is healthful! Yes,
if someboby else does the fighting
while he is getting $6,200 a y r ear
and perquisites in Washington. I
have failed to read about any war
that was healthful to the partici¬
pants. But then I am not so wise
as the men the voters elect to rep¬
resent them in Congress.—Appeal
to Reason.
When the government takes the
men to fight, it should take the
property of the nation to pay the
men and the expense. But it won’t
do it. It will require the working
class to do the fighting and will
borrow the means to pay them.
Then when the fuss is over the
fighters will be taxed on what they
eat and wear to pay back to
the rich patriots all they advanced
and an interest on it. The rich
will make money out of the
while the poor will do the blood¬
letting and pay for their own arms
and ammunition. Whose country
is this, anyway?—Appeal to Rea¬
son.
An exchange truthfully says that
“every civilized country is clamor¬
ing for new market for its produc¬
tion. Home markets will no lon¬
ger afford, sufficient outlet for the
activities of the different races. If
they cannot be found it seems pret¬
ty certain that the situation will be
one of great success, Either the
scale of wages will have to be per¬
manently reduced, or the output
greatly curtailed, neither contin¬
gency being pleasant to contem¬
plate. It is doubtful if the
opening up of China, Africa
and other remote quarters of the
earth will afford more than a tem¬
porary relief to the situation. Such
is the problem today. It is a prob¬
lem before which even the wisest
head my well stand dazed.
Elsewhere will be found quite a
lengthy article from the Walhalla
[S. C.J Courier, regarding the
requisition of R. J. W. Hitt, et al,
and attacking our officers from the
highest to the lowest in a perule
way, unworthy the editor of
Courier. We attribute the bad hu-
mor of our worthy contemporary
to the war-like spirit of the times,
and no doubt that by the time we
go to press he will have unsheathed
his sword and charged single hand¬
ed the bloody Spaniards!
Seriously, what are you raising
this rumpus about ? Is it a crime
to sue out a writ of habeas corpus
and have a legal investigation of
arrestor detention ot a citizen:
We were under the impression that
the right to sue out the writ of ha
beas corpus could not be suspended
except in time of war.
Great stress is put on the fidelty,
quickness and dispatch with which
Sheriff Moss arrested and delivered
to Sheriff Gribble citizens of Oco-
nee county wanted in Habersham.
gVe are informed that the proper
P a P ersfor the arrest of the Lees
were for months in the hands of
Mr. Moss, who failed to make te-
turns on any of them. Becoming
disgusted at the tardiness of Oconee
officers, Sheriff Gribble offered a
reward from his own pocket for the
arrest of the Lees; Burgess Lee was
soon after caught by Trift and Grib¬
ble paid Thrift the reward. Moss
had nothing to do with it. Koonev
Lee was not captured until a depu-
ty sheriff from this county went
to Carolina and located him, and
then went after Moss and had him
ar rested. Another error: Clint
Powell was captured for violating
•
Carolina ,, laws, . and , after c . settling ....
that matter was turned over to our
You say “every warrant coming
from Georgia ,o'sheriff Moss for
tie , .ures o f , le .011 , 1 r aroma ...
desperadoes has been executed, and
parties surrendered to the Geor-
gia authorities.” That being the
how do you account for the
fact that George amT Lee is at home in
South Carolina Sheriff Moss
has had a requisition for him for
more than a vearr This may be
for on the idea that Mr.
,* has not as vet offered a re-
ward for George s delivery r
The Courier says that Hitt, Had-
and Owens are outlaws and
We do not think so;
amt wp dr» nni lrnnwnf anvonp ‘ ^ that
does; the people interested, . , who .
live on both sides ot the river, disa-
gree with you; they vvere the suf-
ferers from the Lee gang of ruffians
it seemed to them that the Oco-
nee officersi „ could , not or would not
the gang, and they ap-
proved the attempt made ge, the
leader. The Courier editor lives
distance ... from r ^11 the haunts , of r
this gangand cannot appreciate the
nf ot tbp the good crnnd n^nnlpof people ot tlvit that
unless he talks to them and
hMr hears - frmn from them the mflnv mans acts art^ of ot
violence and lawlessness done by
Lees. You are not familiar
with • , cl the • for r which , - , I Lee
crimes was
or you would not com-
plain ot the severity of the sentence
Much of your article is devoted
the legal aspect 1 of the case; giv-
mg direction as to its . management
orders to our courts as to their
. ,
genien in ie premises, a o
fo^Geor^ onHn'.v, nr'oiir Don’t'^t uneas
’ ;
. both . capable ,, and will handle this
suit * in an honest and ranable man- ”
. ,
• r nrffi w h nPOnlp
. , intelliJmt __ P . irp
l
law ahidinp to - ’ 1 .nd natri-
. .
her own affairs ‘ without die-
Keen B mol ’ Brother 1 L and dont 1 al-
lico. .
° U } our c e ^pirit to
temperature beyond ngiwa
tei mar you might exp oc e, or
worse still, you might go o , an
\Yl^ "^l ^ a lrre | ?arb C in i ur -'-
^ *
. t
in t is case 1 ley s 1011
reman ed to Soul 1 Carolina we
lope an ^triist that you \u 1 bt
’ ^
le citizens, . . and
peacea arc 1101
et tt tae many iart
< \ e g \ en em - 1
in spite of t e many lart t nn s
.ay we e ie\e t ie> wout ^et
in out aro ina, a ^
Caro mians don ^ t w ant to eat to
•
up like J you do,—vour liver is out ot
’
% how.
any
A Blaze.
The Big A farm house belonging
T. W. Scott was burned to tin
ground Sunday night about 9 :20.
Terry Sparks and family were
occupants, and they escaped
with only a few quilts, and one
When the family were
the whole top of the
was in a blaze, and too far
gone to save anything. A buggy
near was also burned,
Loss about $500; no insurance.
Miss Victor Nardin, who has
been the charming guest of her sis¬
ter, Mrs. Ceph Simpson for a week
two, returned to her home in
Anderson, S. C., last Monday.
The largest and finest assortment
Box Writing Papers in North-
Georgia at The Record Sta-
tionery Store.
Arrest
disease by the timely use of
Tutt’s Liver Pills, an old and
favorite remedy of increasing
popularity. Always cures
SICK HEADACHE,
SOUr Stomach, maiaria, indigo-
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and all blllOUS diseases.
TUTT^S 1 i VCf PH^I^S
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%
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ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK.
~
»<>“• Th ° m P son ’
d “ te for tor 5®* con-
gress of the United States, address-
lartre audience at Hiawassee
. , , ...
c urM1 S ie t inner icuron a.-, ue.^
lll ly, and at lllairsville during the
same time Tuesday before. He had
lhe undivided attention of every
o* present, and made a “vote win-
ning” speech and strange as it may
-em to the few people who have
charged him with reading them it
was delivered off hand, and every
word went to the right spot; he
discussed the issues involved in the
am P a B” v ) ‘
ness * He showed Mr. late , s
tem Q f electioneering up in its true
light; " called the attention of the
p o 1 , tQ Tale , g personal and confi .
cha r ^ in him T homp-
s °n, with being an Independent,
because he voted against H. P. Bell,
CTate’s ‘ father-in law) eighteen
> when Habersham,
^wns and V lute . .
coun .es gave
Speer a majority over 1 ate »father-
ill-law, believing h him to be a bet-
democrat than Bell, and because
Bell was nominated by a tew peo-
P le throughout , the . circuit .. who ,
would meet secretly > at the court
™‘i ^veral of their . number , to the ,
s ,
convention ’ Not ‘ only J Thompson
,. St Chamber’’
nominntion8 but # majorit \ ^ of the
Oemocratsot f me , circuit ; ere m with
lim * lompson vvi L.urj i
counties of Towns and Union with-
ou t any rou j e, as we as a
sham, Rabun, White, Banks, Hall
^ Dawson Jackson and
«;,nds us good if not better than
Tate in several of the other coun-
ties «es of 01 the tne district district, it If me the speecnes speeches
with which Col. Tate is “loaded”
for this camoaifrn are in keeping
with those on former occasions,
is hoped for the benefit of his
sufferincr friends that he will “first
write them and then read them,’’
as we are compelled to sympathize
with the poor unfortunates who
have to listen to one of his off hand
efforts
Invitations to Canidates.
\\ e the Democrats of Habersham
county in meeting assembled here-
b y extend to the candidates tor
governor of Georgia, and for con-
^r r ess from the 9th congressional
d j s j. r invitations to address the
voters G f Habersham at the follow-
ing named places on such dates as
can be agreed upon, Ciarkesville,
Toccoa, and Cornelia, Ga.
Be it resolved by authority afore-
said that the secretary of the Ex-
ecu ^.j ve Committcg fiirnish a copy
0 f this invitation to each of the
f odovvdn g gentlemen and request
in immediate ^ reply . : Hon. A. D.
Candle 7 -, Gainesville, Ga. ; Hon.
Spencer R. Atkinson, Atlanta.Ga. ;
U011. Robert L. Berner, Forsyth,
Ga. ; Hon, F. C. Tate, ■ Washing-
ton, D. C. ; and Hon, Howard
Thompson, Gainesville, Ga.
Be it further resolved that invi-
tations be also extended to Hon.
Phil Cook, Leesburg, Ga.; and
Hon. Mark Hardin, Atlanta, Ga.,
candidates for secretary of the state,
and Hon. O. B. Stevens and Hon.
R. T. Nisbit, candidates for com-
missioner of agriculture to visit our
'
. , .
count} on t ie ay or a\s t la t ie
candidates for governor address the
voters of the county.
And that a copy of these resolu¬
tions be furnished each of the above
named gentlemen and to the Clark-
esville Advertiser and the Southern
Record. J. C. Edwards.
Char. Dem. Mass Meeting.
Robt. McMillan,
April 5th, 1898. Secretary.
Very nearly everything i^ the
Stationery business kept at The
Record Stationery Store.
The Record has a fine lot of
New Stationery, Miniature Box
Paper, Envelopes and Cards, etc.
\Ye carry only the best and our
P r '“* are low. The Record Sta-
o Store
'JL'he Southern Record is sent
f° r only $1 a year.
AN ENTHUSIASTIC GOLD MAN.
He would Not Buy From anybody
Who Believed in Bryen
and Silver.
From Dry Goods Chronicle, New York.
Thomas Leigh, jr., of Maine,
and C. H. Treat, of this city,spoke
at yesterday's noon meeting of the
\\ holesale Drygoods Republican
Club. Considerable amusement
was caused by the reading of the
following letter, which was address¬
ed to the senior member of a New
\ ork house, who has been on the
stump for McKinley since the cam¬
paign opened:
Milwaukee, Wis. , October 3,
1896.—Dear Sirs : I received of
sol ” e biotters. i here is print-
ed on them 16 to i. Herewith 1
-k you what you are. You are a
Bryan Stiver man. Is that so? 1
am sorry that I bought of you. If
^ known before, you are a
man for Silver man Bryan, I would
not have bought of you. Nobody
should buy a red cent’s worth of a
silver Bryan man. If you want to
have better times in selling goods,
McKt^y H
Lme, and lay you to bed and sieep .£
-better for you and better for
whole country
Well, my dear sirs, I would
shame me myself to walk on the
streets ’ li 1 were such a big foolish
person, to go and vote Tor such bil-
^ er man as Br >’ {in ,s - No, m y
dear sir, I am over forty-four years
in this country. I know Bryanites
humbugs. Bryanites don’t be
ht to handle such big country like
bIe S ot soll ^ * ie "T" brains Re P. in ubl,can Ins head. ma "'
Bryanites have heads filled with
sand ; got no sense enough to handle
suc h big country. Bryanites ruin
° kept ur ®°°f out ot Washington. They "If* Hooray ^
f McKinley! Give ns answer,
and vote for McKinley. 1 hat is
the /Stuff.
This is the kind of intelligent,
unpurchasable voter that express-
ed , “the .... will ... of c the , people , at the .
last election. -------------* Will he do it again?”
AMERICAN " ECHOES.
„ ** . „ Pr0SpeCtS a N ° ,ncrea4e . “
-
Business Since the Election
of McKinley—Failures Every-
where .
By Max Jargerhuber, New York.
The following ouaht to be inter-
.
estmg reading to the cotton-mill
operatives of New England about
this time. We have been saving
it to see how it would work out ;
The vaunted increase in business,
ot which newspapers prate as a
sequel of the election of McKinley
is showing itself to be more and
more a gigantic swindle, and a ter-
r ‘hle disenchantment has already
seised on a,Uhe branches of busi-
ness -
When I pointed out last October
[ lS 9 6 ] in Der Confectionair that
manufacturers must expect'to meet
disappointments, my view
was assailed violently by T many,
and my prophecy considered to be
too pressimistic. How often have
I not, in former large economic
revolutions, been of service to man-
ufacturers when I stated the truth
and called the child by its right
name! But it appears that even
in Germany there are numberless
circles tiiat much sooner love to
hear .and read highly 7 overdrawn
views than the prognostics of a man,
has invariably represented the
honest state of affairs. And to-
day I warn all parties interested
not to expect anything favorable
from the American market. Let
us examine the condition of things.
Generally 7 speaking it is an Amer-
ican national disease to have busi-
ness and its success more or less
dependent upon politics. If it goes
bad, the blame is laid on the Presi-
dent, the Government, or the gov-
erning party. And how false are
all these conclusions.
Immediately after election, the
resumption of work was announced
from everywhere, and it was not
P "fleeted r0i? P e!,t y to to ascribe McKinlej this pretended Ihepub-
.
hcation ot these announcements
come apparently from all sections,
and parties could actua lly not do
ALL WOMEN
Should know that the
“Old Time” Remedy,
%
l 111
Is the best for Female TmoMes. Corrects all
Irregularities in Female Organs. Should be
taken for Cfeuige of Life and before Child-ifeth.
| test Plurters for twenty “Old Time” ReistJies have stood the
years.
I Hade only ty New Spence r Medicine Co., Chat-
tanooga, Te nnessee.
L. P. COOK, Toccoa, os.
1
P> Both tho method and results ^
£ tt l lt ' S V l
Liver gently yet Bowels,”
and cleanses the °' T,S
tem aches effectually, dispels colds,
and fevers and cures
constipation. only Syrup of Figs is
remedy of its kind ever
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac-
ceptable to the stomach, prompt
its action and truly beneficial in
effects, prepared only from the
healthyand agreeablesubstanceB,
many excellent qualities commend
to all and have made it the
popuHr remedy known
ceJ bottles reliable by all leading drugglk drug wfo
gist, Any
may not have it on hand will pro-
cure wishes it promptly for any one who
to try it. Do not accept any
^strtnte. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO,
^UMIUE. u)uiwiLil A xf KY. RANC,SC 0 A'Ew AEWYORK.N.Y. L voriK n y
^ ------
otherwise than accept these state-
ments as truth. But they were
manoevres in .arge part.
The soao bubbles of this minted
c\et> where, and serious men men ask aTk
fin “" y but from whence is ;t io
CO me?
Bankr „ ptcies cf fin „ ncial institl ,
to manuta manufacturers cturers, merchant., merchantss
And when is it to cease?
^ b pro]njsed 1
ten thousand times have, alter . the
. materialized
° y ’
only , decreases, and the
purchasing capacity of the people
weaker than ever 1 '
luiagir.e, simply, the one
pie ot the largest carpet mill here,
Alex. Smith & Sons; doors
closed immediately after the elect-
i on and na about aoout 4000 4.000 workmen woikinen were were
thrown out of work. And this is
the commencement ommencement ot 01 the tne “McKin- Atcixin
* e y er:1 ■' ’ Is this the beginning of
the realisation of the golden future
promised the workmen? The rene-
gades and hypocrites in Washing-
ton trn it nourish at present than
more
ever; we have no longer any states-
men, but only hucksters—misera-
hie chaffers. To-day, they flirt
'vith the silver swindle; to-mor-
row, with the tariff tinkerer, the
next day with the workman, and
soon, while the “golden lamb is
slaughtered.
Lawgivers play an unspeakably
pitiable role, and from report every-
thing points to the intention that
ml endeavors are made to paralyze
importation completely.
lam myself a Republican, and
for practical reasons believe in a
protective tariff—but not in the
spoils politicians that ruin this
country 7 .
To-day, more so than two months
ago, I incline to the conviction that
the L nited States are about to en-
counter bad times.
While the balance-sheet -of com-
merce shows an incredibly enor-
mous total in bur favor, times in all
the branches of business are worse
than ever heretofore. Every hope
ofEuropeanmanufacturersisutter-
ly futile, and bitter undeception
will follow in its wake. I stand in
intimate touch of Washington, and
may tell the readers of the Confec-
tionair, that the disenchantment
since November will increase in in-
tensity the farther we advance into
this year. The economic life of
America must crystalize and change
before we can approach a sound
basis.
The jce of cotton u off again
‘fi* 01116 Stl > this is due to the war
scare, and some to the big crop and
some to high t 'riff. One thing is
certain : McKinley’s election and
the Dingley bill had nothing in
them for the cotton farmer. That’s
the one certain thing to tie to.
Novels, Prose and Poems, at The
Record Stationery Store, from 5
cents up.
Copy Prsses
Copying Ink, Copying Books
and all kinds of stationery at The
Record Stationery Store.
Some beautiful Bibles at The
Record Stationery Store, very
cheap.
You can get the Record to read
3 months for 25 cents.
When in need of W riting Fiuid,
try ours; it is the best in the world.
Record Stationery Store.
Bill Arp in the Raleigh News-
Observer.
I wonder who were those sons of
God who saw that the daughters of
men were fair and took wives from
among them and raised up giants
and mighty men of renown. I
wonder if the women of that day
were so beautiful that the angels
came down to mate with them.
There is no telling what men or
angels will do for a beautiful woin-
an. I have never ceased to be sor-
ry for Jacob who worked seven
j on g years for Rachel and then had
to take her homely sister, and had
to work seven vears more to get
-
girl of his choice. But the
sacred historian says these seven
u , .
~
£>» <'.e <°ve lie had to her.
VN as love ever like that? Not in
these days, Men must have beer
scarce in that country or Rachel
11*1 ‘ n ° '“'' e , that ,° ng
for Jacob Old Laban was a sheep
raiser, and 1 reckon his nearest na-
bor was another about fifty miles
away, and those poor girls
saw a young man once a year
chel .et Jacob kiss her on sight be-
tore she knew h.s name or where
he came from, and that historic kiss
has come down to us through all
the corridors of time for f 1 ’ o»o ? vears ‘,
’
1 I remember i that away back , in the
40s when I was young and fairly
handsome my father sent me on
business to Mississippi and as there
were no railroads I bought a horse
• Mobile vr 1 n and 1 rode 1 the ^
m across coun-
^ T " n,g1
found comfortable lodgings with a
big cotton grower on the Chicasaha
- J tt h tA
r ™ ' .
W ith , Ins wife ! and little L children V ® and
^ . . 200 TT H,s -
n J r ° es '
Lalhoun, and he was a cousin ot
r n u n n 'V Gilhrmn ° Th^r^ Iip Hv^r) 1
outside , ot civilization; not a school
nor a churc h within miles of him
dnd and he he ke kept „, putt n ,, ttln ng „ oft off moving h.s i.; s
family to where there were some,
His oldest daughter, a lass of eight-
een , was as shy ot me as a fawn,
but she brushed her hair and wash-
e d her face and changed ^ her dress
and a shoes s and a gazed and lingered
on the slv lon , r and SWPPl]v J* 1
ma de 1 advances a to her . that , night . in .
the parlor and pleased her father
and mother and bewildered her. for
I soon found out, that she was a
dower born to blush unseen. When
£ left the . next morning the , old gen-
tleman followed me to the gate and
begged me to come back that way.
-Maybe you and Sally might fix up
things to vour notion.” said he.
“and if you do I can spare yon eoo
or 300 acres of the finest land in
Mississippi and as many negroes as
you want to tend it,” and he laugh-
ed in a half serious and half joking
way. There were no fourteen years
about that, but I never saw
Sally any 7 more. Poor girl, 1 have
often wondered what became of
her. She was of good old Carolina
stock, but was smothered in the
woods. No companions, no books
or newspapers, no nothing but nig-
gers and cotton—much like Rachel,
I reckon, who saw nothing but
sheep and longed for a nice young
man. I remember that two negro
boys held torches for us to eat our
supper by and everything else was
of the same primitive sty r le.
Paper, Pens and Ink for sale, at
The Record Stationery Store.
FOR ALL WOMEN
J\JlNE-TENTHS of
all the pain '■2 lYJ
andsicknessfrom
which women Mr
suffer Is caused ’JM
by weakness or
derangement in m
the organs of
menstruation.
Nearly always
when a woman te not well these
organs are affected. But when
they are strong and healthy a
woman is very seldom sick.
Wm»i
Is nature’s provision for the regu¬
lation of the menstrual function.
It cures all “ female troubles.” It
is equally effective for the gfri in
her teens, the young wife with do¬
mestic and maternal cares, arid
the woman approaching the period j
known as the “Change of Life.”
They all need it. They are all
benefitted by it. 1 j
For advice fn cases requiring special I
directions, address, giving symptoms,
the “ Ladies' Advisor/ Department,”
The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chatta¬
nooga, Tena.
THOS. J. COOPER, Tupelo, Mist., says:
“ My sister suffered from very Irregular
and ecuid painful not relieve menstruation her. and doctors
Wine of Cardul
mother entirely through cured her the and Change also helped my
of Ufe.”
- m uuD
Ig
V I
It is impossible for the system
to withstand the demands made
upon it just at this season, with¬
out the assistance of a good puri-
The changes wMcifNlture decrees
shall take place each spring are
bo severe that a breakdown is
thST^^ \ ance ** 10
•
this purifying T^ process deoends^the 1
.
B ft 7 ftj^ ia t ^ w Zn.H shouldUake£ summer. take a
01 u »“ twurse or 111 s ©pecino
for The Blood
’a
which thoroughly ^ ^cumulated cle-nses the
blood of a)J th
parities, L tones up and strengthens
entire system, and aids Nature
^ so asto^entett lender »% healfty
blood with g. g. P
g. at this season
are well forti fi ed against the many
ing formsofdiseasesoprevalentdur- dreaded
the heated term, for
it has been demonstrated that the
system £ that is thoroughly purified
the gpriu . ig we ll prepared to
resist disease all summer.
No other remedy on the market
is equal to Swift’s Specific as a
8 P^ m S medicine,'because it is the
only purely vegetable blood rem-
e dy and is guaranteed absolutely
from potash mercury and all
other minerals. It cleanses, pun-
flee, builds np and strength ens.
Insist on S. S. S., for there is noth-
ing half as good.
jjiMBn
IS
Announcements.
FOR SENATOR.
At the request of many of my friends and
to self satisfy a personal desire,I announce my¬
a candidate for the democratic nomina¬
tion for senator for the 31 st senatorial dis¬
trict. Earnestly soliciting the vote of ev¬
ery citizan of the county, and assuring yon
that in the future as in the past, I shall use
every honorable effort in farthering tin*
of tlie democratic party, and sin¬
cerely thanking you for past favors, and
trusting that, my candidacy will meet with
your approval, I am, respectfully.
M. T. PERKINS.
11 E PRESEN T ATI VE.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for Representative for Habersham county,
aibje -t to tlie action of the democratic pri¬
mary. 1 respectfully solicit the support, of
rhe voters of the county I pledge myself,
if elected, to serve the people faithfully.
PORT. E. L. FRANKUM.
Prompted by an ambition I think worthy
at my own desire aud the solicitation
friends, I announce myself a candidate
Representative for Habersham county,
to the democratic primary, and
request the support of the vot¬
of tlie county. CIIAS. L. BASS.
CLERK.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for the office of Clerk of Superior Court
of Habersham county and if elected prom¬
ise to strive to faithfully discharge the du¬
of that office to the satisfaction of the
people I am subject to the action of the
Democratic primary if one is held. Solici¬
ting the suppoii of all voters.
I am Respectfully,
Wm. M. Jordan.
To tlie voters of Habersham county:
Thanking you for past favors, I beg to
announce election Clerk myself as a candidate for re-
as of Superior Court, sub¬
to action of Democratic party. Pledg¬
ing you if elected to do all in my power, in
future as in tlie past, to make an effi¬
cient ami acceptable officer
I am yours, etc., J. A. Erwin.
SHERIFF.
re-election I hereby announce myself candidate for
for Sheriff of Habersham Coun¬
ty, subject to the Democratic primary, if
one is held. Thanking my friends for their
past support, I assure them of my appre¬
of their kindness and promise if
will again elect me, I w r ill do all in
power to serve them efficiently.
A. M. GRIBBLE.
I hereby announce myself a candidate for
of Habersham county subject to the
primary, if one is held. I enter
race at the solicitation of my friends
respectfully of the solicit tlie support of the
county. Brown.
J. L.
FOR TREASURER.
We are authorized to annouuce the name
\V. H. Sumpter as a candidate for tlie
nomination for Treasurer of
county and solicits the sup¬
of his friends.
RECEIVER.
To the voters of Habersham County: I*
Receiver, announce subject myself a candidate for
to the democratic
if one is held.
H. E. Hopkins.
Fellow-Citizens: I am a candidate for
office of Tax Receiver of Habersham
and I respectfully ask the support|of
voter in the county. My candidacy
snbject if to the action of the democratic
one is held.
L. C. EDWARDS.
Livery j Stables,
McCLURE & ROTHELL,
Currahee PROPRIETORS.
and Sage stieets, across
Railroad from Bank.
We keep on hand at all hours, day or
first-class Horses and Iligs, for hire
responsible parties.
Horses boarded by the day, week or
Portrait Co.
Photographs
And all kinds of Enlarged Portraits.
- - = Georgia.