Newspaper Page Text
IN THE LUND
OF THE 11
Kingston Citizen Visits Ashville
and His Old Home-
GRAND VIEWS OF MOUNTAINS.
Experience? of a Trip by Rail ano
Overland—Biltmore and
I is ..Beauties.
At Kingston, September 14th. I
buaidcu tUe \V. & A. train at 6:30
p in , uound for Asatvibe, N v..,
via Chattanooga. At 11 I leu
Chattai ooga over the Southern
railway via Knoxviile, Morristown
and Hot Springs Pas-ing up the
rugged French Broad river with
the towering mountains on bom
■sides, I passed th.ough Marshall
in Madison county, a flouri-hin.
little mountain city. There is only
one street. T e railroad nad to oc
made in the river. Here tile late
Col. C. H. Smith, ‘‘Bill Arp,” said
111 his report that the art of pegging
shoes was discovered, as the shoe
maker did not have room to use
his arms in sewing. I arrived at
Asheville at 7 a m. 1 boarded a
trolley car to the residence of my
only brother, Col A. T Davidson,
now nr his 85th year. I was cor
dially met and welcomed by my
dear brother and his good wife and
daughter, Mrs, Bettie Child, and
their son, Mr. W, S. Davidson, ol
Beaumont, Texas.
After dinner I walked around,
calling on some dear old friends
and relatives. Many changes were
visible. Nearly all the citizens
had died since I left in 1854 Ashe
ville was then a pretty little city of
about 1200 inhabitants. No rail
road reached it. All mails were
brought 111 United States coaches.
Now I find a beautiful, up-to date
modern city of iS.ooo, the largest
city in the United States, according
to it size.
The water is brought in pipes
over Black mountain,aoout twenty
mi ; e<, and received in a large res
trvjir on Beaucatcher mountain, or
Beaumont, 011 a beautiful gap in
the mountain, several hundred feel
above the city.
On the 17th I was driven from
Battery Park uotel, through the
courtesy of Mr. W. S. Davidson
and Mr. Averill, of Beaumont,
Texas, to Biltmore. I procured a
pass through the gate, and enjoyed
the great pleasure of being driven
over miles of Vanderbilt’s magnif
icent grounds. We passed by the
palace, and feasted our eyes on its
grandeur and b< auty. We stood
in front of the mansion and had a
good view. We were delighted
with the drives, fine 1 uildings an l
orchards, fine shrubbery and beau
tiful flowers along the roads. I
saw’ a hundred fine Jersey cows,
the finest herd in the United States.
I walked through the dairy, with
all modern appointments. There
is a stall for each cow, with her
name and pedigree above the man
ger. All the buildings are w-armed
by heaters for the comfort of man
and beast.
I saw fine crops of corn, fruits
and vegetables growing on the rich
and fertile bottom lands on the
P'rench Broad and Swanuano_ riv
ers.
After driving seve.al hours, we
returnee to Batteiy Pane hotel,
where we bid our pleasant acquain
tance, Mr. Averill, adieu, and were
then driven, with his kind nephew,
to the home of his father.
On the morning of the ißth I
boarded the train to visit the scenes
of my nativity, Waynesville, Hay
wood county, a distance of thirty
miles west of Asheville. Arriving
at noon, after a pleasant look at
my old native town and a good
dinner, I hired, a horse and buggy
and drove ten miles north of town
to Jonathan’s creek, and spent the
night with Mr. Boyd, who owns
and lives where I was born Octo
ber 2i, 1829, I have not been at
my native place in fifty-nine years
Mrs. P'rauk Boyd and her son
treated me kindly. The old place
was greatly changed- A portion
of the old house was still standing
in the rear of a fine brick building
that was built a few years since.
A portion of the old barn is still
standing, built by my father ninety
years ago. I visited the old spring
and took a good drink on a seat
near the spring. I gathered some
nuts from a white walnut tree, and
also some chinquepin bushes with
burs on them; also some twigs of
rhododendron from an island where
I used to catch fish when a little
boy. I sp;nt the night with the
kind family. Next morning I
started back to Waynesville; passed
many places that I remember, the
old log school-house among them.
I located the spot and the spring!
but the o’d log house is gone, and
It is a great affliction for a woman to
have her face disfigured by pimples or
any form of eruptive disease. It makes
her morbid and sensitive, and robs her
of social enjoyment. Disfiguring erup
tions are caused by impure blood, and
are entirely cured by the great blood
purifving medicine —I>r. Iherce’s Golden
Medical Discovery. It removes from the
blood the poisonous impurities which
cause disease. It perfectly and perman
ently cures scrofulous sores, eczema,
tetter, boils, pimples and other eruptive
diseases which are caused by the blood’s
impurity. It increases the action of
the blood-making glands and thus in
creases the supply of pure rich blood.
"For about one year and a half my face was
.-crv t.-nlly broken or.* " writes Miss Carrie
A him.*. of it 6 West Main Street, Battlecrrek,
Mich. "I spent a great deal of money with :!oc
ters ltd for different kindsof medicine, but re
ceived no benefit. At last I read one of yonr
advertisements in a paper, and obtained a bottle
of lir Piero s Golden Medical Discovery Be
fore I bad taken one bottle of this medicine I
ao.-ced a change, and after taking three bottles
1 was entirely cured. I can well recommend
Dr. Pierce s Golden Medical Discovery to any
one similarly afflicted.”
The sole motive for substitution is to
permit the dealer to make the little
more profit paid by the sale of less mer
itorious medicines. He gains ; you lose.
Therefore accept no substitute for
"Golden Medical Discovery.”
The People’s Common' Sense Medical
Adviser, a book containig 1008 pages,
is given away. Send 21 one-cent stamps
for expense of mailing only , for the book
in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the vol
ume bound in cloth. Address Dr. R. V.
Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
now a beautiful schoolhotise stands
near the ruins of the old one, and
also a neat church.
I drove a mile or two, and stopped
at the beautiful home of Dr. How
ell, an old friend 62 years old. It
was a great pleasure to me to meet
him and ta'k of old times. Two of
his oiis were with him, Dr. Win,
Howell and wife, of Dallas, Texas,
and his son, Erastu, and wife, who
live with the father.
After a good dinner I bade the
kind friends adieu, and started for
Waynesville, and in passing
through alone, in full view of the
grand old mountains, at the base
the old schoolhouse place, and fine
farms and cottages from base to
top —the land of the sky. I was
delighted at the scene- I stopped
the horse, dropped the lines and
elevated my eves and hands and
thanked God for the privilege of
once more seeing my native moun
tains.
The entire trip was one of con
tinuous grandeur, and as I stood
on the streets of Waynesville, by
the side of one of my old school
mates, Mr, A. L- Horner, now of
Seattle, Wash., and as we parted. I
noticed Balkan mount and Hornet-
nest peak, up in the clouds.
I arrived at Asheville at 7 p m.,
and spent the night pleasantly
with my dear old brother. Next
morning a hack and groomsman
were contracted for, and a very
interesting party, consisting of my
brother and his son, Hon. Theo. F.
Davidson, and accomplished wife,
and Mr. W. S. Davidson, of Texas,
and myself, started over Beaumont
mount, and had a fine view of the
city. We passed by the res rvoir
from which the water from Black
mount is received to quench the
thirst of eighteen thousand people,
several hundred feet below. Pass
ing over the mountain, we soon
came to the beautiful Swaunanoa
river, our destination, being ten
miles east of Asheville, at the Da
vidson homestead, to visit the rest
ing place of my grandfather, where
a monument was erected by the
Daughters of the American Revo
lution. The inscription on the
monument reads:
WILLIAM DAVIDSON,
1744-ISIO.
Soldier of the Revolution.
House of Commons, 1790.
Senate, 1792.
One of the Earliest Settlers of the
French Broad Valley. He
was prominent in the or
ganization of Bun
combe County.
On the reverse side is:
PJrected by the D. A. R.
Erected 26th July, 1902.
The last day was spent in the
‘‘land of the sky.’’ Bidding my
dear relatives and friends adieu,
after a week’s visit in Asheville,
where some of my happiest young
manhood days were spent, on Sep
tember 22d I left for home, via the
Southern railway, arriving at my
| ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND 1
rPain-KiUer
c There is no kind of pain l
r or ache, internal or exter- 1
Jnal, that Pain-Killer .will 1
rnot relievo. 1
y LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS AND SUB- 1
XSTITUTES. THE GENUINE BOTTLE 1
X BEARS THE NAME,
i PERRY DAVIC A. SON.
humble abode at Kingston with
many happy recollections of the
visit to iny dative land.
J. M D.
OCTOBER McCLURt’S
Covers a Wide Field of Interest
from Fiction. Art to Engineering.
McClure’s October number, in
its gorgeous crimson cover can be
seen twice across the street, and
it’s worth crossing the street to
buy. First and foremost, there is
Lincoln Steffens’s long looked for
Chicago article. “Chicago: Half
Free and Fighting On,” a fine, in
spiring story of what the author
regards as the most signal and sig
nificant achievement in real muni
cipal reform that any of our great
cities have to show. Extremely
interesting is Walter Wellman’s
account of what is without doubt,
next to our own Isthmian Canal,
the biggest and most important
engineering project of the age, the
drainage of the Zuyder Zee, where
by the Dutch are planning to in
crease the tillable land of their
little kingdom by almost one-tenth.
For fiction, the most crochety taste
will find something to its liking.
Henry Wallace Phillips has a Red
Saunders story, ‘‘By Proxy,” war
ranted to dispel the heaviest
“grouch.” Lloyd Osborne con
tributes a dashing love story with
a Montana heroine, (who has
evidently been “finished” in the
East). Then there is a beautiful
little story of the Ghetto, “The End
of the Task” by Bruno Lessing,
and a delicious one act comedy
“The Committee on Matrimony”
by Margaret Cameron, And finally
a stunning sea tale —perhaps the
best of all —‘‘The Mate from
Maine,” by Colin McKay, a name
one wishes to see more of. Henry
Harland’s “My Friena Prospero”
reaches its penultimate installment;
and it’s a pity that it’s so nearly
over
Everybody’s Magazine for Uctobei’
Everybody’s Magazine begins to
be something more than an enter
taining ten cents’ worth of fiction
and artic’es. An identity has been
developed—a sturdy and aggressive
identity ail its own and full of in
terest and promise. Thus far, the
magazine has prided itself on the
timeliness of its features and the
heal ill v virility of its fiction. Now,
it has found itself, entered 011 its
own mission, headed out on its
particular crusade. The key-note
of this individuality is the article
by Alfred Henry Lewis, iu the
October number, “The Madness of
Much Money.” This is a scathing
attack on the vulgar displays of
great wealth to which the new
generation of millionaires has
treated the country. With a brutal
directness Mr. Lewis diagnoses the
madness which often goes with
much and sudden wealth, and
ridicules unsparingly the gilded
idlers who make up the so called
American aristocracy. It is a
rough, even a pitiless arraignment
of certain prominent persons and
it is safe to be generally read and
appreciated all over the country.
Throughout this number the mag
azine shows a purpose to depart
from the baleful worship of Mam
mon and its possessors which
characterizes so much of the writ
ings in current periodicals.
Only Did His Duty as He
Saw It.
"1 deem it my duty to add a word
of prae e for Chamberlain’s Colic.
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,”
says J. Wiley Park, the well-known
merchant and postmaster at Wiley,
Ky. "I have been selling it for three
or four years, and it gives complete
satisfaction. Several of my custom
ers tell inn they would not be with
out it for anything. Very often, to
my knowledge, one single dose has
cured a severe attack of d'arrhoea,
and 1 positively know that it will
cure the ilux (dysentery). You are
at liberty to use this testimonial as
you please.” Sold by J. 11. Gilreath
& Son. sept
Money to loan.
1 am authorized to make
application for the loan of
money on real estate
through the Georgia Loan
& I rust Cos., of Macon, Ga.
Terms reasonable.
T. C. MILNER,
Attorney at Law.
111 Praise of Chamberlain's
Colic, Cholera and Di
arrhoea Remedy.
"Allow me to give you a few’ words
in praise of Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diairhoea Remedy,’’
says Mr. John Hamlett, of Eagle
Pass, Texas. “I suffered one week
with bowel trouble, and took all
kinds of medicine without getting
any relief, when my friend, Mr. C.
Johnson, a merchant here, advised
me to take this remedy. Aftef tak
ing one dose I felt greatly relieved,
and w’hen I had taken the third dose
was entirely cured. I thank you
from the bottom oi my heart for put
ting this great remedy in the hands
of mankind.” For sale by J. H.
Gilreath & Son. ' sept.
An Offering of Love-
After more than a year’s suffer
ing the purified soul of Albert
Upshaw left its frail tenement of
clay, winged its flight to the glory
land and is now basking in the sun
light of God s love. Words fail to
tell ot the crucible of pain or the
heartaches and longings of these
weary mouths of watching and
waiting, sometimes hoping and
then again despairing of evermore
tasting the sweets of health end
strong young manhood.
But, through “suffering are we
perfected” and so was Albert made
ready and ripe for the Kingdom.
By nature he possessed those rare
heart qualities that give such
beauty and fragrance to life, and
by these endeared himself to us all.
But not until disease ha 1 laid his
relentless hand upon him did these
noble Christian virtues unfold and
bloom in all their loneliness or
give out all the sweetness treasured
111 his great loving heart.
Many were 'he kindly words of
admonition and of earnest entreaty
for a holier, happier life did he
leave, not only with his owui loved
home circle, but friends and com
rades as well. May his beautiful
life and triumphant death prove a
beckoning hand to those he loved
and who loved him, drawing them
ever onward and upward to “man
sions in the skies.”
Tonight his body sleeps peace
fully in the quiet churchyard be
side the dear little sister whom he
so fondly loyed, and just tw’o short
vears ago so sadly mourned, as
dear ones now sorrow for the gcod
brother who will come not again.
As their angelic voices join the
heavenly choir, may some sweet
strain from that cnoir invisible
reach earth to soothe the crushed
and bleeding hearts of those left
upon the shores of time and make
them to feel, “there is no soirow
that heaven cannot heal.” Rest in
peace dear heart and wait for us
on the other shore.
Gladly would I pluck and place
in memory’s casket some little
flower, if it might be a heart-ease
from the heart garden of
A Friend.
A Purgative Pleasure.
Tt you ever took DeWitt’s Litt'e
Early Risers for biliousness orconsti
pation, you know* what a purgative
pleasure is. These famous little pills
cleanse the livex and rid the system
of ail bile without producing uu
pleasant effects. They do not gripe,
sicken or weaken, but give tone ami
strength to the tissues and organs
involved. W. H. Howell, of Hous
ton, Tex., says: “No better pill can
be used than Little Early Risers for
constipation, sick headache, etc.”
Sold by M. F. Word. sept
THE REPUBLIC'S GREAT OFFEK.
4n Exceptional Opportunity for Oiil
and New Subscribers.
Special arrangement has been made
by The St. Louis Republic to furnish
old or new subscribers with the only
official and authorized life of Pope
Leo XIII. This is one great volume,
bound in elegant cardinal cloth, gilt
ink stamping, with Papal coat of
arms, containing nearly 800 pages of
text and illustrations. The work was
prepared and written by Monsignor
O'Reilly, I). IX, L. D., D. Lit., official
biographer of the Pope.
The regular cash price of this book
is $2.50. Any one remitting .$2.50
will be entitled to eighteen months'
subscription to The Twice a-Week
Republic and a copy of the book,
postage prepaid. This offer is open
to old and new subscribers, The
book is printed in English, French
and German, and is now ready for
delivery. Address all orders to The
Republic, St. Louis. Mo.
Johnson’s louu; uoes in a, uay whai
slow Quinine cannot do in ten days.
Its splendid cures are in striking con
trast with the feeble cures made liv qui
nine.
If you are utterly wretched, take a
thorough dose of Johnson’s Tonic and
and 1 I've out every trace of malarial poi
soning. The wise insure their lives and
1 the wiser insure their health by using
! Johnson’s Chill and Fever Tonic. It
1 costs 50 cents if it cures; not one cent if
it does not.
Relief 111 Hours
Distressing Kidney and Bladdei
Disease relieved in six hours by "New
.Great South American Kidney Cure.”
,Itisag r eat surprise on account of
its exceeding promptness in relieving
pain in bladder, kidneys and back, in
male or female. Relieves retention
of water almost in me liatily. If you
want quick relief and cure this is the
remedy. Sold ov Young Bros’ drug
gists, Cartersville, Cta. 1 yr.
CASTOHIA.
Bears the in(i 0U Hav6 Al * a l l ' S BOUgtO
Has Sold a Pile of Cham
berlain’s Cough Rem
edy.
I have sold Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy for more than twenty years,
and it has given entire satisfaction.
1 have sold a pile ot it and can rec
ommend it highly.— Joskfh McElhi
-1 xey, Linton, lowa. You will find
this remedy a good friend when
troubled with a cough or cold. It
always affords quick relief and is
pleasant to take. For sale by J. H.
Gilreath & Son. sept.
Bed-Wetting and all Bladder and
Urinary Troubles
Quickly relieved and permanently cur
nd by Dr. Kesner’s •‘tn-ook-ti-nink.”
eamlpe free. Address Dr. Kesner
Remedy Cos., Lock Box 466, Atlanta, G 1
5628 t
CROP SHORT IN TEXAS.
Cut A/lore Than Half by Insects and
Drought.
Houston, Tex., Sept. 27. —The
Post tomorrow v/ill publish a-report
showing that great damage has
been done to cotton over the state
by the boll weevil, the boll worm,
the sharpshooter and dry weather.
The estimate of the probable
crop, based on the reports from
country correspondents, is placed
at 2,500,000, provided that there is
a late frost.
The popular estimate six weeks
ago was 6.000,000 bales.
The reports of insect damage
come from eighty-nine counties.
About a dozen counties report a
good crop prospect, but these are
mostly from producers.
It is stated that there is abso
lutely no chance for a “top” or
second crop.
Advice to the Aged.
Age brings infirmities, such as slug
gish bowels, weak kidneys and blad
der and TORPID LIVER.
Tutt’s Pills
have a specific effect on these organs,
stimulating the bowels, causing them
to perform their natural functions as
in youth and
IMPARTING VIGOR
to the kidneys, bladder and LIVER.
They are adapted to old and young.
FOP. CHEAP PATES
—TO—
Texas, Arkansas,
Louisiana,
Oklahoma,
Indian Territory,
California, Utah,
Colorado,
Wyoming,
Oregon,
Montana,
Washington,
AND OTHER POINTS
West,Northwest and Southwest
Write or call on
J. C. HOLLENBECK,
lhst PasM-ngcr Agent
Louisville nml Nashville Railroad,
No. I Brown B'lu’g, Upp. Union Depot,
A I’LANTA. GEORUiA.
Cheap Tickets
TO THE
West. Northwest
AND
CALIFORNIA
Washington, Oregon, Nebraska,
Nevada, Idaho, Wyoming, Colo
rado, Utah, New Nexieo and
Arizona
Tickets on sale from Sept. 15 to Xov. 2(h
The Illinois Central R. R.
offers choice of routes. Free Reelinimr
Chair Cars. No transfers. Fast time.
Double Track.
For lull information, Circulars, Rates
and Tickets applv to
FREI) I>. MILLER,
Trav. Pass. Agt. 111. Central R. R.
Atlanta, Ga.
CHEAP LANDS
For Homeseekers* and
Colonies.
The country along the Cotton Belt
Route in Southeast Missouri. Arkansas,
Northwest Louisiana and Texas offers
the greatest opportunities for Home
deckers. Mild climate, good water,
cheap building material, abundance ot
fuel, and soil that will often in a single
season yield enough to pay tor the
ground Land can he bought as cheap
as $2.50 an acre, prairie land at $4 and $5
per acre up. bottom land at $5 and $6
per acre up. improved or partly cleared
laird at slo and sls per acre up. Some
tine propositions for colonies—tracts of
2,000 to 8,000 acres at $4 to $lO per acre—
big money in this for a good organizer.
Fruit and truck lands in the famous
peach and tomato belt of East Texas at
$lO to S2O per acre up. Write us for m
fo-mation about cheap rates, excursion
dates, also literature descriptive of tins
great country anu let us help you find a
home that will cost you no more than
the rent von pav everv year.
E. W LaBEAITM E, G. P. A- T. a .
Cotton Belt Route,
. St. Louis, Mo.
Special Occasion.
Southern Interstate Fair. A'lan'a
Ga.. October 7-24.1903
The Atlanta A Birmingham Air Lin
Railway will sell tickets for above occa
sion daily from October lith to 23a, in
clusive, for all trains scheduled to ar
rive at Atlanta prior to noon of the 24th,
1903, from all stations, at the rate of one
first-class fare, plus 25 cents, plus 50
cenis admission for adults and 25cents
for children. Special rates given mili
tary companies and brass bands in uni
form. 3t
W. L. WOODROW,
Division Passenger Agent.
Money to Loan
On improve.! tanning lands. On over
one thousand dollars 7 per cent; on
lesser sums s percent. No com missions.
Borrower to pav abstract and recording
ees. Apply to
JGEM. MOON
Illinois Centra
Railroad
Ofers ray low rates on a,
Polonist tickets to Califm-ni.
Neverta, New Mexico, Arizona - 1 ’
St. Louis and Ret®
One Fare Plus it cents. On sal*, ,
lb-D, good to return until June 25 *
San Francisco, Los
Angeles and Retur
National Encampment G. A k Ti i
on sale .Tim 31 to Aim. W U, "
return until October 15. J ud
Denver, Col. and Retur
On sale June 30 to July 9
return until August 31. " 1
Through Pullman Sleeping Car n
between Jacksonville, Macon Atlan
Chattanooga, Nashville and St 1 ~
Free reclining chair car beiweeii N a ,
vHlu and St. Iv>uis. and through Pn
man sleeping cardailv between Xa
ville and Chicago. This is the 01
double track line betw*een Chicago a
the Ohio river. y ai
For full pa/tieulars, rates, tickets and pamphlets addrei
FRED D. MILLER,
TRAVELING PASSENGER AGENT
No. 1 Brown Bld’g. Atlanta/!*
THE NEW
Interchangeable Mileage Tick*
OVER THE .
SEABOABi
flii Line Railway *
are on sale now by anfy agent ot 1
system at
s*> F-sr 1,000 Milt
and are good over
15,000 Miles, i
covering the following roans:
Atlanta, Knoxville and Northern K
way ; Atlanta and West Point Railro
Western Railway of Alabama: Altai
Coast Line; Louisville and Xasln
Railroad; Louisville Henderson
St. Louis Railroad; Nashville, Chat
nouga and St. Louis Railroad; No
western Railway of South Carolina; i
tiinore Steam Packet Company; Pi
System; Brunswick and Binning!
Railroad; Richmond, FredericksL
and Potomac Railroad; Charleston
Western Carolina Railway; Washing
Southern Railway; Chesapeake Stei
ship Company; Seaboard Air Bine R
way; Columbia, Newberry and Laiir
Railroad; Georgia Railroad; We*
and Atlantic Railroad.
For further information relative
scheau-fc, reservation of sleeper aeeo
moaaL.> i' tc., apply to
iAKRY E K ROUSE,
C. P. am. A., 12 Kimball Houf
Atlanta,!
WM. B. CLEMENTS,
Trav, Pass. Agt., 12 Kimball Hous
Atlanta,
C. B. WALKER,
Depot Ticket Agt., Union Statiq
Atlaiita.m
W. H. FULTON,■
TANARUS, P. A., Equitable Build I
Atlant ■
W. E. CHKISTI 9
ss’t. Geti’L Pass. Agt., Atlanta GB
East & West R. R. Col
West Bound Last tioM
Read down Effect Aug 30.1P03 KeaW
DaM.y ventral Time SuaTlvJ
No. 23 No. 21 No. 22 >
I’M AM I ' M I
430 822 Lv Atlanta. (WiAry). ' 3°J9
62010 20 Cartersville... • }ls 9
631 10 28 Ladds o'® 9
6 43 10 42 Stilesboro. 9
652 10 52 ... TavlorsyiUe... • 4 * 9
701 11 01 Darius 9
7 06 11 05 Aragon •j f. 9
716 11 14 Rock mart. - H
735 11 31 .... Fish Creek. .■; ' K
741 11 38 Grady ■ •>:* 9
804 11 57 Ar.Cedartown .Lv ;>•>- ■
.... 12 43 Lv..Esom Hilh.Ar■
.... 12 57 Palestine r* 9
... 116 . Wilson Ridge... I
.... 147 Prices {*' ■
.... 204 Ar. .Tredegar. IA j
220 Ar.Tacksonville Lv 1 10 -B
.... 258 Lv .Tampa... Lv 12|j I
315 Ar.. Dukes .. —-I
... 350 ArGadsUen (lAA ) I
410 “ Attalla "
'... 319 Lv. Dukes TAr E
, . 329 Hebron • - 1 ' I
?... 342 Ohatchie .... * |
.... 354 ...Lock Three ■
.... 442 Ethel ■
.... 436 Inman * I
.... 452 Coal City-..-|
.... 514 Ar Pell City.
955 Ar... Birmingham (So. K.y) jU
Close connections as toll<>* j
Cartersville, Ga., with *\ . > • ;
at Rockmart, Ga., with • :
Cedartown, Ga„ with t. °* L pot’
Piedmont, Ala., with So. pj
Ala., with L. AN. K. K-: Pe, ‘ ,
Ala., with So. Kv. Atlant*
Valuable Property lor Sale.
I will sell at private sale J,
estate- belonging to the e t gIJ
Jones, bank* upt, consisting K _ j 0
the residence property oi ■ . l( , y ui
tenant houses, vacant * ’ m i
acres of laud in the city (y r4 i
lands, etc. Lis tot this* P“>p ? *
seen at my office. This , lV et<'rs.
be soid. Bargains lor ‘
further information Tr afj
August 1, 1904. _ I