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Tin Weekly Timss-Enterprise.
THOMASVILLR GA.,
totaTllsM, Editor and Manager.
Saturday, October 7, 1893.
Naval stores are advancing.
Frost may be expected Ihia month.
A welcome visitor in Brunswick—
Jack Frost.
Compromise is ia the air around
Washington. - -
The Savannah Presbytery will
meet in Uarlow on the 12th inst.
Two lives were Ids' and much props
erty destroyed by the storm in- Mo
bile.
Mills Resuming Work.
Haverhill,; Mass, Oct. a.—Tie
Stevens mills started np on lu'l time
this morning.
Lowell, Mass., Oct a.—The Tre-
mont, Suffolk and Lowell carpet mil s
htve started up on fn)i time.
Atnesbuty, Mass. Oct. a-—The
Hamilton Woolen. Company started
on full time to day. All of the har d 1
will now God steady work,, although
at a redaction in wages.
Clinton, Mass, Oct. 2.—The Lan
caster Gingham milts resumed faff
time tosdsy, with an average redaction
in wages of 14 per cent.
Lawrence, Mass., Oct. a,—'The
Everett and Pemberton mills started
upon toll .time today. A portion ol
the Arlington cotton- mills was also
started to day.
The Senate has been boring the
country for weeks and yet it has not
struck oil.
A labor riot is threatened in Deca
tur, Ala, The govirmr has called
out the militia.
Jesup has a population ol about
700. There are five su picious cases
of fever there.
itlf^
They won't let you stick ycur head
ootof the car window as you pass
through Jesup now.
Mr. Cleveland finds it a most diffi
cult matter to please the men who op
posed* his nomination.
After invesugiuon the surgeons say
there are no cases of fevtr at Way
cross or Waresboto.
It looks like there wou'd be
scramble for Senator Colquitt's toga.
May the best man gel ii.
Another railroad accident near
Cincinnati yesterday. Three
were killed and several injured.
SIXTEEN MORE.
YELLOW JACK ON THE
RAMPAGE.
The.Situation Growing Worse—
Dr. Burford Han the Fever—
Eighty-Three Cases Now Un
der Treatment.
Special to the Times-xsTEnraisJc.
Brunswick, Ga, Oct 4.—Sixteen
new cues were officially reported to
day. Whites: JThomas Hennipio,
Larentzxm, Dr. E. E, L. Burford,
Louis Walters, Jekyl Island; Mrs.
Olsen, Jekyi; h. B. Davis, Irene and
Alfred Wood." 8t Simona Island;
Diana Briggs. Colored: John Berry,
Jekyl Island; Willie Trimmona, Dick
Allen, Willie Johnson, Venae Wheel
er, Jane Jones, Willie Andrews end
Julia June*.
Discharged: Tom Larenlxson, Car
rie Larentzrsn, Mrs. H Olsen, S. B.
New Orleans, La, Oct. 4.—The
news received here this morning from
the islzods on the lower coast of
Louisiana ia most appalling.
The rumored disaster at Grand I»le- Davis, Mrs. Larent z»n, Abe Richard-
t:
Georgia democrats, as they always
do, will pu’l themselves together next
summer. It’s a way they have of
doing.
‘■Talk is cheap,’ so the tayirg goes
but this, ev d.-nily, will rot apply 10
the talk in the Senate. It is very
coS'Jy.
has been confirmed and the death list
haa swollen nntil it now reaches into
the thousands.
Grand L'e was all bnt swept oat oi
existence, and oat of 760 souls who
were on the island at the time of the
storm,
ONbY_ABOUT TWENTY ESCAPED J
The island of Chieniere Corrida,
about a mile and a half west of Grand
Isle, contained over two thousand
persons.
Of these only about one hundred
escaped.
There are five small islands in
Grand bay, and each was populated
by h large number oi fishermen, of
whom only a few escaped alive.
At Bayon Coke, eighty seven p. r-
sons lost their lives by actual count.
While the loss of life has been very
greatT it is likely that these first re
ports are largely iu excess of the
actuafluss of tile—Ed.
sun,- Johnnie Bailey, Lizzie Robituon,
BarsK B and. Died: Tiqi (Lpnepin,
Recapitu'ation: Under treatment, 83;
discharged, 51; died, 14; total, 148.
Ratio, mortality 9.A
Surgeon Murray left today for
Jesup.
C. W. DewBg.
U'>vvl
To stop, or not to stop, talking in
the Senate is the question. If left- to
the people it would be decided very
promptly.
Mr. Levi Sterne, a prominent He
brew of Albany, is d;ad. He married
Miss Herrington, a Gentile, many
years ago.
Health certitcates are about as
important in traveling on the railroads
now as tickets. You can’t get along
well without both.
Out ot 230 ban* s urGccrgia only
six have succumbed dur.ng the lite
. panic. That’s a giod record for
Georgia bankers.
Savannah has quarantined against
Jesup. All trains pas=iug through
Jesup will be locked ut> and rushed
through the town.
General Evans is receiving many
flattering n(Slices from the prefs of
the state iu. 'connection with the
governorship of Georgia.^
It now turns out.that Warren, who
died of yellow fever icf Jesup, had
been in Bruo&wick only a' few 'days
before he was taken sick.
An exchange notices tlfe fact that
most ot the CuuTtoercial failures dur*
ing the late panic wera firms which
did not advertise. See!
The ceaseless.'grind-wid go^on iu
■ the senate this week. Iu ibe lan-*
guage of one of Dickeu's Character*.
It is one ‘^demnition grind.”
Order will conic out of the co lfudoo
mw prevailing m , ihe Senate. Gor*.
4nao and VooTh.es will iriiangl? the
tangle. Sje it they don’t.
Twenty-five guards now surround
Jesup. No one tk sl owed to leave
uoless they-go uk Camp'^Driention.
Aceotui ofthe tovn will he takea.
The name of Grover Cleveland will
brighten apd adorn the bngtfest pages
ol American history ^when the names
of his defamers have loDg since been
forgotten.
There are- now one hundred and
nineteen refugees 'front Brunswick at
Camp Detection. Only one case of
•icknesa. amoDg them, and that not
'yellow fever,,
Macon, Oct. 3.—Next week a con
vention of representative colored citi
zens from every county iu the state
will be held in'tbiscity. They come
to discuss the ways and means where
by the suppression of outrages and
lynching throughout the South may
be effected.- The meeting wil be
largely attended, as already great en
thusiasm has been manifested in the
movement and, from every indication,
the convention will attractwidespread
attention. -
The delegates will be chosen from
the best class ot negroes, and it is safe
to say that they meet in no spirit of
defiance, nor have they any intention
of increasing race prejudice. The
object of the organization as given otft
by its originators seems to be to take
into consideration the bes^fossible
means of suppressing acts of violence
among their own race and a corres
ponding decrease ot lynchings.
Kissengen, Oct. 2.—Prince Bismarck
has had another- set-back. He will
no.v scarcely touch food. It is also
reported that his right baud is ap
parently completely useless. It
said he salutes with his lefthandf and
signs his name also with the left, and
also corop’ains of pain day and night
ile has certainly aged iu look* and
very decrepit.
New York, Oct. *3.—A private ca
ble received to-day from L radon by
.well known firms in this city who'
have connections in Brazil announce
that the revolution in that country is
at an end. Three firms have similar
news* apd they say they have reason
for placing confidence in iu ' s
Tom Watson is bidding high tor
the negro vote.
Under the head of "rub it in” he
published the following in his paper
last week:
Don’t forget how the democratic
bosses denounced us for saying that
the negroes should have -their rights
under the law.
Don’t forget how ibey tried to kill
the Rev. EL S. Doyle, colored, tor
making speeches on our ride.
Don't, forget bow Governor North*
eu’s friends shot at him and ran him
away from his home in Sparta.
Don’t forget that & hundred brave
white Populists from Lincoln county
came as fast *s horses could bring
them to defend Doyle, the colored
man, from an attack which had been
threatened by certains ruffians in the
dear old Democratic party.”
Remembering all these things ob
serve what is now going on.
Thomas, you are bound to slip np
on this programme. You can’t make
the landing on this line. Not much.
Prof. Edward S. Holden, director of
Lick Observa ory, has prepared for
the October Forum an absorbing
account ot the wonderful new star
discovered in 1892. This star, which
resembles our sun, blazed up to
astonishing brilliancy within a few
days of its discovery, then gradually
disappeared, and subsequently appear
ed as a neubla. rhe changes of light
and heat it developed, if repeated in
the case of our own sun, wou'd mean
a qtrek end of the human race and
jhe immediate extinction of all life
upon the earth. Thia is the most
uncomfortab e suggestion with which
astronomers have startled us since
the spring comet was expected to hit
'the eariti.
A Friend of SHvar.
It is very common for men who are
fighting Mr. Clevland to call him a
•‘gold bug ” And then they insist
that he is “sinking down silver” that
he would wipe it out, etc. And many
people are doub less ra:sl« d by die
baseless charges. * Mr. Cleveland
stands squarely by the'Chicago plat
form adopted by the* national demo*,
cratic convention. His le ter to
Governor Northen has been misinter
preted and warped in order to preju
dice the roasieS' against the president.
Mr. Cleveland stands to*d y just
where he has always stood—a friend
of the people and honest dollars,
whether gold, greenback or silver,
labia letter to the governor,'he presi
dent refers fo bis letter of acceptance
by taping:
My letter accepting the nomination
to the presidency, when read, in con
nection. with ipy message lately sect
to congress ln_ extraordinary sess*on,
appears to-me to be very expl : cit.”
This makes ; what - Mr. Cleveland
said in his letter ot acceptance a ras
ter of deep interest. Here is his
language
"Every dollar put into the bands
of the people should be of the ;ame
intrinsic value or purchasing power.
With this condition absolutely guaran
teed, BOTHGOLD AND SILVER
can be.safely utilized UPON EQUAL
TERMS in the adjustment^ our cur
rency.** -T’ -
He reiterates * this to Governor
Northen, and adds:
a Within the limits of what I have
already written, I am a friend of silver,
but I believe its proper place in-our
currency can only be fix^d by a read
justmebtof our currency legislation,
and the inauguration of a consist?
ent and comprehensive fi-iancul
scheme.” „ Li
In face of the fact that the prrs deot
has said that gold and silver c »n be
used upon equal terms, the charge is
reiterated from day to day, that n r
Cleveland is trying to “»trike down
silver.” We do not doubt for one
moment that the president is ready
to sign any bill that would tffec'.uaHy
put silver on a parity with gold, under
the conditions outlined in the Chicago
convention.
A TERRIBLE STORM.
New Orleans Great Loss of Life—
The French Market Destroyed.
'• This,country his, aud can carry a
large, amount ol stiver; then Why/tot
adopt the F.tilkner proposition to coin
eight hundred million and draw the
line at these.fignres? •- "
-. The government' will at oasa take
charge of every iul'ected ^ pbint.
That’s business, ' Between Jjnele
Sim and Jack Frost, Yellow^ jack
~i will soon be knocked out. ' -'
. Bad news comes from Virgiui*—the
. peanut crapes said to'he almost an
l absolute failure. ; And the Georgia
. legislators -rill soon lie in. Sessiyo.
■ The outlook is, indeed, a gloomy one.
It is fejtled at last, Lieut. Totten
• now says he has ~jfit£ered'~it out, and
that just six yeari'^jn .how the great
dash will coma an3 time will be no
more. That event will put a stop to
th: debate in the Senate.
New York, Oct. 3 —The Florida
Central and Fensular railroad compaoy
has purchased (he entire capital stock
oi ihe South B juod railroad, amount
ing to $2,033,000, from the Savannah
Co istfucuon Company and assume
contrdl of the property at once.
Jacksonville, Fla., Oeu 3.—The
Sure board of health tsru.da decree
to.day requiring all persons entering
the State to have , health' certificates.
Thi're were six new cases ot fever
reported at Jesup on Tuesday night.
Srrgeon Murray telegraphed tfce
Burgeon General as Allows:
Six cases declare I in four parts of
the town. Evidently the disease hra
been here for the" put Jhree week-,
Will send some parties to camp to
day. Will employ « j train to carry
them to Dock Junction., I-ni.it
Gay ii this morning. I think , there
are cases, but bad no time to prove
them.*
Walter H. Rhett, a leading young!
lawyer of Atlantal committed filicide
yesterday. He belonged to the four
hundred,' and ia said to have been
mixed up m the Harry Hill scandal.'
‘ Il ia not within - the reason of ’hu-
min kindneia to devise a eehemejor
keeping money in*m section where
people make it their miseioirin-litelo
spend all they cal) make on the pro-,
ducts of otbsr-aedDamL'j f •* 1 ■+
- It is said that Governor Flower
will do ffll in his poster Jo prevent the
fight between Mitchell--and Corbett
at Coney Lland. , If the governor
starts, out to ato}> lhe fight it is likely
tfiat he will succeed. •
The roads have just done what
should have been two months ago,
inaugurated a bait fare to Chicago.
Had this been done months ago it
would have pot many -thousands into
the coffers of the corporations, and
given thousands a chance to tee the
fair who will not see it. - It is too
late now to accommodate a great
many. However.numbers wilt doubt-
lets take advantage of the belated
rate and take in the big fair daring
this month.
'Latest reports from South Carolina
say that only half d i cotton crop
will, bo made in that state. The
-■Dispensary,” however, is doing well.
An editor out West who sends his
paper on time to subscribers sends a
bill each year. When it second
is sent and there is co response be
(akes it for granted that the subscriber
is dead aqd publishes an --obituary
notice” iiwhis columns. '
Should this rule be adopted in
Georgia, the papers would be filled
.with obituary notices. There would
be no room for any other matter.
The Floridian, Tallahatsee, mingles
and jjngles prose-poetry and finance
together in this win:
“Nothing can be more magnificent
than the harvest moots of September
which Jibs filled onr nights with a
silvery glory -valued at 128 per ounce
and on a parity with the golden
shine 04. any day duriog the tayt
thousand years.'
Tjte-bane of absenteeism aliU-crope
out among the democratic members
of congress., It is, very often, inexa
disable. A member, bag no right to
pot in peril a party measure by his
absence; Stay in yonr seats, gentle-
.men—unless providentially prevented..
The country and yonr constituents ex
pect this of.yoh. .
There should be ho -administration''
or -anti-administration* democrats in
Georgia. 'We’re all straight
erats down this way, But- JES^Ss
South Georgia’,) way, though ahe does
not get many, .official plants, either
state or-federal. Bat they are trne
blue democrats all the same.*.
It looks odd, to say the leatt ol it,
to see daily stabs at Cleveland, and
the harshest kind of criticisms' bn a
democratic, president, by/ papers
claiming to be Working lor ,tjie good
offite democratic parly. :
The Augusta Chronicle has inter
viewed two of the Richmond Repre
sentatives as to the important meas
ores which the approaching session
of the Legislature will deal with.
Hon. W. H. Fleming includes the
following: The Dill for the quarterly
payment ot school teachere; a tax
board of equalization; a State Board
of Health.
All three are important measures,
and it isUobe hoped" that onr law
makers will, enact each one tutu a
law. The equalisation law should
have been perfected, instead of re
pealed, at the last session.
Between the ownera of dogs who
have not procured badges ior their
canines, and the saloon keepers who
persist in selling the fluid on Sunday,
Mayor McDonough of Savkunph is
having a picnic. Scores and scores
of hath classes of offenders are on
the docket, and the city’s finances
grow correspondingly. “Two do'lars
or three days; ’ the mayor says to the
defaulting dog owners, while a round
hundred is plaoed opposite the name
of every saloon keeper who has vio
lated the law. Johnnie McDonough
is on the right line. He isn’t p’aying
Mayor for fool -
The correspondent of the Savannah
Press referring to the situation in
Brunswick says:
The city is divided into districts,
which are canvassed by committee
men who isrne food tickets. Only
about one third of the whites ask for
rationi Two quarts of meal, two
'quarta of flour, twelve soda erackers,
and a pound and-a halt of pickled
beet are the rations for a family ot six
for three and a half days. The
missaty supplies not only Bruns’
bnt St. Simon’s island and the adja
cent conntry.
Atlanta, Oct 3 —The etotjnj^
from New Orleans has just began to
come in, h, telegraphic communica
tion -with' that city baa been cot off
since Monday morning. . .- --tt
The storm was even worse at New
Orleans than at Mobile, though re
ports from both these- point) are yet
meager on account of the wires being
down.
The storm struck New Orleans
Sunday night, and it was the worst
ever known iu that locality^
Twenty,five^ir thirty people were
killed arouu.l the city and ten in the
city, and nearly one hundred wounds
ed #
The French Market was blown
down. „ '
The tracks of the L. & N. Railroad
are washed away for a distance of
over fifteen miles,
The levee which protected New Or
leans from Lake Ponchartrain broke,
and the water is aweeptog through it.
St Point a Lahoche, a town of
2,000 people, seems to have sufiered
the wont, not a home escaping in
jury,- The Catholic church, court
bouse and other public buildings.were
demolished.
The otange crop was threshed ont
by the wjed, and the sugar, districts
have sustained great damage.
One feature of these bard times is
the immunity of the South seems
enjoy ‘rom desp-.rtte d-stress. The
newspapers have been cheerful, evtn
jovial, the back) have held their owr;
business house, have kept out of the
hands of the shir,ft, and but little
sutler.ng rue to industrial causes
has been rep riff
The South,ip of, ov, r, is not closely
related to torc-gn tride save through
co-toot Her financial system is s<mp>,
t rides ol , xchange are not many,
arc there is no t.Ut: j-rtde among
southern whites which withholds them
from economics winch many northern,
ers refuse to make for appearance’s
sake. In the South since the war—
the conditions are chanumg somewhat
generally understood that it is
useless to .fi.-ct wealth, and white and
black-ahke^ei down to hog u eat and
bemtny when advisable.
A Carload of Tomatoes.
It is not often the case that canned
tomatoes are bought in carload lots,
but this is just what an enterprising
grocery bouse in this city did recently;
In MarahaUrille, thirty miles above
Americas, it) located just such a little
canuiug factory.as Amerieui ahou’d
have bad five years ago. But the
didn’t have it, nor has she one yet,
and consequently buys her canned
tomatoes in'Marshallville.
A few dayh ago, JJr. E. D. Ansley,
the grocer, received samples ot goods
canned at Marshallvil:e, and so well
pleased was he that he purchased, the
entire stock ot goods on hand at that
time, consisting of something over
500 d. sen cans.
Mr. Ansley compared these goods
with choice products from'a Balti
more establishment and 'found the
Georgia article tar superior m quality,
besides being cheaper than the Haiti
more goods. There is a moral iu this
for those who contend that a canning
factory won'd not pay in America;.—
Times-Recorder, Americas.
Other JLdnes of* Goods'.
LARGE STOCK Off-
Stats' Health Officer Porter writes
Surgeon Murray that until otherwise
ordered, identification cards aid
hea'lh certificates will be required
all persona crossing the Florida line.
Such certificates must definitely ull
where the holders have beeu within
the past ten days. No’one wLl be
pa*8»i through unless their certificates
are signed by Surgeons Murray cr
Geddings, or Dr. Porter or his agents.
AJ1 certificates, however, bearing the
signature and official seal 'oi any
mayor, city official, or city health of
ficer will be respected and honored.
There is a dangerous pond of water
near Savannah, aud the rai’ruad, city
#nd county are quarreling over who
shall drain it. Linger, and perhaps
death, iurks-iu the stagnant water.
The citizens should hold officials to a
strict accountability, il the fever ia
fed by that pond. It is nothing short
of Suicide to daily for weeks v.nli
such a dangerous place. The News
says that the attention of the authori
ties haa been cttl'ed to tbe pond for
threo weeks.
.Furniture, Mattings, Window Shades and Wall Paper
is offered for cash, at lowost prices ever known in the city
a rare chaitce.
. S MASURY BUILDING.
Agents for Ludden & Bates' Southern Music House.
Piano and Organs on exhibition at 175 Broad St., Sold on
easy payments.
' fxEO. W. FORBES.
It is not generally kuown, perhaps
that Georgia has tweuty thiee pupils
at the Vanderbilt University whoee
expenscs^are paid out qf the Peabody
fund, and that^mong them is a boy
from Thomas county. His name is 1
W. G. Adams. The youug man is
to be congratulated. He will no
doubt make a good record at the
great university. Each pupil receives
from the Peabody fund 8100 a year,
traveling expenses to and from Nash
ville and some bjok®. Georgia re
ceives from the fund for this purpose
about $4,000 Iu return each recipi
ent bind* himself or berae'l -4o teach
two years iu.Georgia, or refund tbe
money.
The “swallows”coutinue to "home*
5 ward fly” io South Carolina, notwith
standing the dispensaryJaw.
L.F.TH0MPS0N&C0
UNDERTAKERS
Wo have the handsomest Hearse iu the
city, which we tender to our palron-
FREE. Full stock of al! kinds of
Coffins and Caskets
on hand at Lowest Prices. Also Dealers
Whitlock, the murderer, *ticm
Goyernor Northen recently pardoned
upon the grouBd.that he was a physical
wreck and would soon die, turns i p
on the streets oi Alian'a “a splendid
specimen of physical manhood,” to
quote an exchange, and bullies a
reaprctaffik.citizen. Did .hegovernor Polish Your Furniture With Cedarine.
make a mistake?
FURNITURE,
SASH.
blinds,
doors,
TAINTS,
OILS, ETC.
This has been a, year of storms,
financial disasters, political quacks
and epidemics. And still the country
survives. But its a wonder that it
does. Is there no way of attaching a
padlock to Mrs. Lease’s month ?
She’s done gone aud broke loose
again.
Mr. Cleveland is a friend ot tilver,
truly says tho Montgomery Adver
tised, and always haa been. He sent
more than one commissioner to Eu
reps while- he wax president to secure
European co-operation for a standard
that would put ailver where it would
not b» discriminated against. Neither
hertibr Hr. Garble nor the 'advocates
of repeal of the 'Sherman law are
actuated by hostility to silver.
To-day the first race between the
yachti, Vigilant and the Valkyrie,, for
the Qneen’a cop, will take place, ihe
Vigilant will fly the American colors
while her advertaiy will throw the em
blem^ Great Britain to tbe bretze.
Savannah has mCde • most deter
mined effort to keep t£e yellow- fever
at bay. And she, will succeed.' Dr.
Branntr is.a whole •■'team when it
cranes 4o quarantining against yellow
fever.-'-. ./■ ' t ... Y,'\
; — \
Here are -the names of the six
cases of ferer at Jesup: ^ >3
Lj Ogden. and wife, Mrs. v ’Frank
Rowland, Miss B Grd?, Mua Taylor
and an infant Of Mr. Warren; who
died.last week. .
■ At last accounts JJr- Cleveland
was still in the democraffp party,
notwithstanding the fact that he is
duly read oat of i(—and by papers
claiming to be exponents of democra-
The great diamood recen'lv found
ia the Afircan." fields is no win the
hands of a .cutter. It has been named
the Excelsior. It ji in-such good
shape that it is believed it.will weigh
500 carats when eu\ v.h'ch is several
times larger than any -Vher stone.
There appears, however, tj be a little
btack speck near the center, which
may make it nt ceesaiy to cut it in
two.la Even then the two stones would
be'largcrjhaa any others; and ol per
fect color. The Imperial, the next
largest while, diamond, sold for $1,-
000,000. It is said-that the owners
would accept ?i,s5 qoao for ihe
ExceLioi. ", ■ •
~Adiipa’ch to the Near, rel.rring.
to the fever at Jesup, say: T :
Yellow fever must "have reached
here through ’tie inefficient quarantine
regul-tions. Train crews from Bruns
wick were allowed to spend the day
and"night here and the passenger
Coaches wtre'fijaced on the track di
rectly in front cf .he passenger station,
where they wire allowed to remain all
night. During the first quarantine
all persons were allowed to board the
cars and converse with the Brunswick
refugees. »
. The bicycle' rideri, and tha horse are'
inclose competition for the fastest
record. Directum, the swift Califor
nia stallion, trotjeff a hrif in ItOlJ.
the fastest pn record. The tame’day
Tyler, ari. ffartford, rode his bicycle
half a mile ia 1:01 2-5, breaking, the
record for lost riding on the machine.
In going long distances the bicycle
rider easily defeats th^ horso..
■ The Colombian-souvenir coin, which
it was anticipated'would be hoarded
by peopWcf puilotic tom, are' rapidly
drilling hack to the Treasury. - Sonti-
medf fs a beautiful • b'ossom, bnt it
faults and fades beneathjhe hoar-frost
touch of financial-stringency.
•Mayor McDonough slapped a fine
of 850 on a man the other day'for
Starting a. fa'aa rumor shout, yellow
fever. 'And the'fine stuck like Unto
a porous pli-tir.
Mrs, Lease broke out tn ^jit. Louis
again yesterday. She adiressed-k
Ift metalic convention. The country
will have to'quarantine aginst her
f ct - ' ■ ..
Public Sale of Valuable Land
GEORGIA—Thomas County.
Whereas Eugene H. Rairortl did, on Feb. l8t,
1830. execute and deliver to the Georgia Loan
k Trust Co., his certain deed to the lands
hereinafter described fur the purpose oi secur
ing the debt relorrod to In said deed, which
deed Is recorded In the Clerk's office In Thom
as Superior court book V page G33. And where
as the sold tho Georgia Loan & Trust Co., on
May 1st, 189i' or directly alter transfer aud
assign to the undersigned, for a valuable con
sideration, tbe notes evidencing tho indebted-
ayment of which said ’
t the same time assl
til Its rights under
, ...... tho aald, the Georgia
k Trust Co., on Sept.*2ud, 1S93, executed and
delivered to thfe undersigned a deed conveying
the f ltie to Said underslgnft. together with all
the rights, power*'and title of the Georgia
Loan Sr Trust Co. under deed of Eugeno U.
Baiford, aforshatd. Including the power to sell
said lauds th case ot dclairit In (.ayment of
Interest or principal that might bo due, or
become due, on sald-aetes or either ot them.
Now therefore by ylrtuo of the ‘po*
▼ested In the undersigned, and which is
accurately shown by -the reference ‘
lWlr
deed, X wilt sell at public outcry, t
bidder, on the 1st Tuesday In Nov. 1893. befc. _
Thomas county court house door, the lands
described In dee 1 of Eugene H, Baiford afore
said, viz:
One farm lying in theTSth district of Thoin
as county i» corgi a conslstlneof one hundrci
and forty (14 0 acres, more or less iu the uortl
ast portion ot lot number 339.
The said deed of Kogene H, Halford above
nferred to was executed ana delivered to
SOfiredfie payment of one certain promissory
note of and 6 Interest notes annexed to
the same of #88 each. The principal note
* Ing interest from date at the rate of "
per annum aud Obligating the
_-_jne H. Baiford to pay 10 per centu
principal and interest for attorney fees, should
said notM be placed In the hands of an nr
ney for collection. 8aid note Is now past
by the terms thereof and is so declared to
in default In payment of interest coupon
annexed 828, due Feb. |st,-J99a. The total
•mount of principal, interest and attorney fees
*»a|willbegueodsaidr ~* c -
ay in Not. ltoa is SMO.
Bald sale wiil be made ... ... r _. r
paying off said imlebtednos-' together with the
*-k| th- remainder of the
if-any, mill be paid to said
_ or hi ie^al representative,
of Rale cwh- Jueu L, C- Gates.
UrrciiZLL A Paitkn, .Vdyei."
ff-ha whole country will heave a big
sigh oT relief when the Senate gets
through talking.
Sheriff Sale for Nevember.
VU1 he sdM before the court house door in
the city of Thomasville, Ga-, between the legal
hours of sale, on tbe first Tuesday An Novem
ber, 1833, the following property, to. wit:
The south half (L3) or lotof land, No. 337 in
the 17th district ot Thomas county, Ga-, con
taining 125 acres levied on as tho property < *
def jndant. Bliss Barget, to satisfy a Gwinn<
superior court fi fa Usaod March tenr, :189..
The American Freehold Land Mortgage Co., of
" ondon Limited vs Ellas Baggett.
Also at the same ttsae and biace
Inc property tcwwlti Lot No. 279, oontainiog
8 O sores, south half of lot No. 880. oontalnlag
125 acres, and tha north half of lot No. 28i.
—‘ Tnlng 2» acres, oontalnlag in all am
Sil of said land being in the 18th district
of Thomas county. Gt. Larled on as the prop*
erty of 8. Gs Powell# to satisfy a Thomas supe
rior courtd fa lsaae& April. tem.vj£93, The
Bristol Bariogs Bank ys 8. a) PowelL *■- ^ '
Also at the same time and place the follow-
to-wit: One lot of lmd Xo.WJIn
J ‘of Thomss county, Gs., eon-
■» More #r leas, ieried on as the
of a. V. Uekter. to satisfy a Thomas
Court’ll fa issued April term, 18K.
__ndon. Cashier Thomasrllle National
ts A. F. Rich tax principal and 8 B.
"Singletary endorser,
AK at tho same time sndBlace,'part ot lot
ot land No. ssranty-three i73|ln block « column
tinihacttyof TfcomasnUe described as fol-
Iqws; Commencing gt a point 15 test from C *
street and 100 rswt from Clay street and ri
thence due west on a perpendicular line —
right angles from Clay andpzrallel with Oak
attest lot feet, thence at right angles nortt.crl;
In a straight Une tovrards Olay street 103 feet
this llns and first named Una being
with Oak attest, thence at right augles
521,2 feet on a Uns parallel with Claj
and second chore described lines. Lt
as the property of Bob Coleman to satisfy a
Justice court fi fa issued from the «37thdistrict
O. M„ April term, 1*33. Theo. Titos ts Bob
Coleman and fransfsfted to UnodgraB8.A -Haw
kins, noticedren to tenant In.possession In
v Also at the same tints and place, lots of land
Noe. 45 and AS In the 17th district of Thomas
county. Ga. -. Levied on as the pjtoperty ol Mis.
W. X- Baker to satisfy a Thomas county court
ft fa. J. A. Irandon cashier Thooiaarllle
National Brnk rs.' Mrs. F, £. Baker, defendant
ILP.'bqSB.Elifrlg.
G. Kl. Bullock, administrator of the cat
Benjamin Elwelfi deceased, has^Pplied t
El well. „ T „
to-sell tbo land beronglng^ to
and I will pa?a upon said appUcatic
my office on the ”
next, 1893,
tho* first-Monday in November
J. 8. Kkokill, Ordinary,
CASH! CASH!!
n A m
Bring your Cotton to our warehouse and get the cash
for it, we will see that you get good cash prices every day in
ihe week.
Owing to-a Proposed
Change in Oor Cosiness
We will sell Wagons. Buggies and Harness lower than they
have ever been sold before in Thomasville. They
ZfcvtETTST BE SOX_7D,
So iio-v is your time to get bargains for CASH.
And all those owing us are notified that we arc obliged
to have a settlement this fall. Please save us and yourself
trouble by coming to time promptly.
- We will buy cotton at a good advance over tho cash
price in settlement of all indebtedness.
J. F. EVANS & SON.
GEB
Is Sure! Safe! 'Sensible! It Always Cures!
Inflammation, ~ Lacaratlon of tho Cervix,
Ulceratl
tlon and
oftheWc
u Difficult,
Ulceration and
Tumors,
Profuse, Difficult, Anteverslon,
Irregular Menstruation, - Retroversion; s
r . And Leuchorrhcea. Dropsy of the Womb.
SOLD BY ALL DRUCCI8T8. •SriSJjraVir
Or. a. O. McGill a Go., 3 A 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, III.
GEORGIA—Thomas coumty. # #
- ohdixAST's onrzcx, Oct. % 1893.
To all whom it may concern. M. a.Fleetwood
public administrator, has in due form applied
to tbo undersigned for permanent letters of.
'administration on the estate of I. B. Lasse ter,
late ot sail county, deceased. This is there
fore to cite all person* concerned to show
mrase, lt any they have, befote me at the No
vember terio„i»UJ, of thl* court, Mid M.
A. Fleetwood should not Wappointed adulttis-
urator on thb^ estate of said I, B. Lasse ter.
Given under'my'haod and official'sfi»aatnre.
. - Joe. B. MxnBiUsyPyUnary.
JfeJlSSSfS J „
connty.for a discharge from bit guardianship
of said 8. L. Hayes, Jr., this Is therefore to
cite all perooas concerned to show cease, 12
any they have, bofore me at the November
* , IMS, of this court, why ther said, 8, L.
Akhould not bo dismissed from his
„ JHanshlp of said 8 L. Hayes, Jr, and re
ceive the usual letters ot dumiseion. Given
under my hand and official ,s gnatne;
Jos. 8. MKaarau Ordinary.
GfilRGU- Thomas Ccuxn. >
OLPESAUT'S OrtKZ Oct. 3,1803. •
John Stark and Julia F. Stark, executors ot
tbo lost will and testament of John Stark, de-
ceased, and Julia F. fitark,i Administratrix of
the estate otOharles G.jBtark, deceased, have
applied to me lor lottery 6L dismission from
said executorship and ndmlnlatratlon, and I
11 pass upon said applications at my office
tho first Monday lu January next, 1891.
JOka. NEBBILL. ordinary.
GE3rGIA-THOMAs Coumtz.
Notice It hereby given that ]
guardian for John G. Flttnu
vtlle. at chambers at 10 o’clock a. m. for leave
frent and two hundrod and
BgbCJrt to and adjoining tho
Kttice «f Admistntw to Rtribtte When PiblisM.
OEOBQl 4 —THOMAS CooxTT.
'To Mrs. L. D. b. Moore,* Mrs. D, A. Walker
and Mrs. L. D. 8. Moore, guardian of J. w. ■
JJmlth, Charlie X. Smith, Geo- B. Smith. Wal-
dCnseS.Smlth and Remington M. Smith, dis
tributes of Geo,- K. Smith, late ot Waukulla
•ounty, Florida. You are notified that as ad
ministrator of George B. Smith, I shall apply
four months after the commencement or the
publication of this notice, the same being pub
lished twice a month for four, said months, .
to tha court ot Ordinary of Tnomas conn tv,
GSh to appoint three .freeholder*, agreeably to
~tatum Jn such cuss provided, todutri-
amoeg the lawful distributee* of Gcorgo
his loaded estate 1b my hands as so.
itrator nt George B. Smith. • ■ >.
E, M. MALLETTE,
■ Admr. of Geo,. R. Smith, t
July 87^ lfBL
- - tor 1 m, w.
Tb Edward McQueen you afe hereby notified
- *"> and appear at thenext superior court ta
eld Ifi for Thomas county Georgia on the
1 Monday In October, next, then and there
this notice la p«b-
1888. ^
a £0-0*.
. 'Nofiftd to DkbtoreindCredllora.
• ' I'homasvillt, Ga.. Aug. Dill, 1803.
; f State of Georgia, >
• *).' * \ County of Thomas; j
•; All parties indebted to John N. IlcKronon,
late of said'county, are notified that tie
notes and aco nuts are in my. lunda ftj
collection and must be paid a; opce, and a 1
parties having claims against the said Joha
N. McKinnon, deceased.are noiilicd to file
their claims with me at once.'
- _ ^ ' 8. L. Hates, Ezecoto-,
John N.McKjsios,
d3tAvAwfiod . : \ir