Newspaper Page Text
■mmarn
smm
(VS.
>.«#!<;»' I
CSJBtT«iHr* BEADLES, Editors
wup*
•m.
*
ltd (•iinitr
•m»
3h4i»wiar,B. L. Johnson
m:r. w&-Tk-. *• b
mis#
p*mt owcwu
• tert—A. R dtoka»,Fi»jr<?d*vflle, o» v
JrfUnaijr—U M, Franklin, Fayetteville.
Iheiiff—fl. RMartin. Brook. S' At ion .
)cpt> Sheriff—J IB . Hewell Fayeneviil#-
'a* Receiver—!' .,N» Parr, Fust Creek,
’ft* Collector—F. if. Davis, FiVelieville.
•1 'r%*ftttn*r—T. M. Murnhy, Fayetteville.
Nrone**—J. G Tpeigh's, PayetltvlUe.
lervoyor—W. H. Pritchard, Brooks Sta.
. Courtly School Commissioner—W. T.
Glower, V ftt Creek.
District Courts.
496G. M.—8. A. Burk. J. F. B. Li
McGonji* N. P. an<l ex-off J. P. Fourth
Frift.iy in each month.
T - j* G. ¥-C. B. Woclrey, J. p. J. E.
Hi4r* N, P. and ex-off J. P. Second
tnre.y in each month.
"O9 O. MN. G* Wallace J. P. J. T.
Broyjdon N, P and ex off J. P. Fourth
Batnrd.y in rack month.
■ 4450 M.- T. J. EdmeodsonJ. P. J.M.
Arnall N. P. rnd ex off J. P. Third
Wednesday in esch month.
VD93G. M.-Q. B. Carson J.P. T. M
Bridges S. P. nod e* off J. P.
Thursday in each month,
14146 M.—B. Adams J. P.
Saturday in each mr n h.
J49 G. M. — P. Landrum J. P. M. M.
C^llicr N p. audtx-offj. p. First Sat
srday in each month.
1248 0. tt.-J. 8 Thorrton J P, J. M
Frai klir, }f. P. and t'X-oft J. Pit Til'd
ftatutday in each month. *
'I262G M- S. B. Lawis J . P. F.D.
fjfewdl N, P. and ex- off J. P. Third - Sat-
Urdsy in each month.
Fourth
Second
*xT&nd
ITRHBOF INTEREST AND ITEMS
Dip DjrpiiE INTEREST- GATHEP jfiD
AND SrfANUFAOTlJRBD FOR THE
BENEFIT OF OUR CTTY AND
COUNTY SUBSCRIBESS.
Judge Grice of Inman spent Sat
urday in OUr town.
G. B Russell and Capt. Graham
Went to the. “Pride Gity” Tuesday
Op a business trip.
1 Prof, D. R. Keith was in town
tyf first of this week in the inter
est of our school. He is making
f very available effort to have a
large and excellent school, and we
expect success for him.
, (uol. W. M. Hatch spent Sun
day here, and left with Col. Hill
h^pnday. He will first learn Mr.
ffiU “the topes" in so far as his
jji$ of business is connected, and
tflen proceed to his own fields.
pur clever and substantial old
fr(jpd, Mr, T, S. Kerlin has at last
joined the ranks of subscrib rs to
tilt? News; he paid Isis respects to
f>Ur sanctum last week and handed
UFA dollar, passed -a few compli
mentary remarks on the paper and
tiff?
of our horns folks board-
tip train Tuesday en route
They were Mrs. M
»rtd children. Miss Mary
And Mrs. Jasper Jones.
Eftlow goes to her husband,
has been there some time.
Ts. [ones will remain there for a
year. .
Mr B. Fhrrer went to Atlanta
yesterday,
Thanks to those who have paid
us for Tiik News.
Mr. Ned Travis and lady visited
Fayetteville yesterday.
Uncle Rude Edwards of Senoia
wps In t«,wn thf< week.
P ■ X
f Call at Fife’s and take a chance
the breech-Ipadiug shot gun.
The prospects are flittering for
• goodschool here another year.
Salt T5cts and B. B, B. Flour at
$fi,c6 pet barrel at S. T. & A. O.
Blalock's.
The debating club extends an
invitation to the ladies to be pres*,
ent to night.
The Fayetteville musical and
literary club will re-organize
Monday l ight.
Mr. J. W* Kitchens is on the
sick list this week. He is suffering
with rheumatism. V
Mr. W. R. Thompson formerly
of Culloden, ha? moved his famiiy
hire, We welcome them in our
midst.
ShoSe who have not paid Jfor
Iheir paper, will please come up
and settle at once* We need the
ttioney very much.
Sheriff Martin of Brooks Sta
tiori; was in town today.
' Ur. Russell took in the gate cit
y this week.
It is now thought that bur com
mon American swallows will be
trained for carriers, and used in
stead of pigeons* One of these
fleet birds was known to fly 90
miles in one hour
, MtvVHarrlson, the well-to-do
Tttan of tt*c White-house, was bur
ned in effigy in his native State
last week, by the irate republicans'
if this had been done in Georgia,
the Indiana people would have
had a dozen convulsions,
A young man named ; Poling-,
who has'been confined in Fulton
county jail several months and is
now released tells some alarming
stories about the borrows of that
place. It is a deplorable thing
that all young men do not know
the horrors of such homes*
A corps of hands went down
the A. & F. last Sunday evening
to Yaiesville, thereto begin to lo j
cate the road bed for the Macon &
Birmingham railrc ad. This road
has been chartered some time.
This corps of surv-yo*s work to
wards Birmingham from Yates
vilie.
Col. Hill left these parts Mon
day, and will proceed to travel as
salesman and collecting agent for
the West Publishing Co. Mr.
Hill will travel Alabama, Missis
sippi, and Georgia, It is with
pleasure that we announce to our
readers that he v ill ccmsp.ord for
The New-s, and hi- Inters will br
an enterestii.g feature rt our paper.
The man wbe went «nt to n-i'k
and sat down on a 1 odder in the
middle of the pasture and waited
for the cow to back up to him,
w as the eidest brother cf the man
who kept store and did not adver
se, because he reasoned that the
■***>«»
=55!
The Lkbor Systeml
Southern farms have been great
ly demoralized for the last fifteen
years on account of the unregulat
ed sys em pf labor * and progress in
agricultural pursuits is stinted to
some extent, by the irregularity
and uncertainty ot labor. The
genuine southern husbandman has
relied only upon the force within
his own household, and he only, is
the man who has reaped ary re
ward Irom agriculture. This sta
tus of a(Tdrs has brought farming
to a very contracted basis; and
some reliable writers and experi
menters say that small farms are
more profitable But if lobor was
regulated, both in price and time,
our southern farms would thrive as
of old. If labor was based on ten
hours 0 day and the price seventy-
five cents, it is our opinion that
the labor question would be solv
ed. Pay cash to the laborers, at
the iates of seven and a half cents
per. hour, and there would be no
trouble in obtaining it. Every oc
cupation and ever industry must
have syst m in order to thrive*
Large factories, railroads, and oth
er enter pi ises where labor must be
obtained have adopted these rules;
they begin their day’s work at a
certain hour, close at a fixed hour,
and pay their employees on a reg
ular day: they do not ask a hand to
come sooner or stay Inter than that
hour, nor do they ask him to wait
loneerthan payday for his salary.
These businesses never have any
trouble in securing labor.
Upon this plan large plantations
can be made profitable in the
South; and we hope to see this
system in opeiation e’er long.
We can prosper in the South;
because we have the climate and
the soil; we hav^ the horJe-ffesh
and the human muscle and braiii;
a ^rell regulated, systematic labor
plan- is all that is necessary to
place us in a self-sustaining posi
tion. Let oui people consider
this question. Labor is a necessis
fy on a farm; it must be ob.taihed;
there is no way to cultivate the soil
without labor; and the only way to
control 1. bor is by a regulated
system.
We call special atU n i'in *o 1 he 1 purchasing public would back up
new “ads 'in this is-u.-: heie is
BjT&nnan Bros, who sell the popns
Ilfr B. B* R. Flour; then J. H.
franklin, the who crale and retail
grocer, who is always at his post,
No. 18 west Mitchel St, with a
good stock of the best goods; j,nd
^G, B. Stewart the Liquor dealor,
to hi? pi«c.* when it wanted some
thing.
All that you spend on the educa
tion of y our children is an invest
ment for the elevation of your fam
ily soda 1 rank, for the itnprov
merit ol your community, and,
not very remotely, for the good of
your country. "When ignorance
whose goods are inferior to none. 1 '*1 ^' ss ic is to he * " ’ |
,1k. Remtmbe, tkk men wi,o j**, lo - w enoug , uoflnou , vthc „ •
WWooi* W homo P^sr• 1 ignorance la bl%
MILNERS STORE.
Every thing muddy this week.
Winter has come at last.
The young people of Milners
Store enjoyed a sociable at the
residence of Mr. McGarity last
Tuesddy night, which was carried
on very nicely. Everybody in
attendance seemed to enjoy the
occasion.
Messrs, Seaborn McGarity and
Joseph Culpepper, o McDonough
spent a few day, with relatives
litre tliis week
What has gotten the matter
wth Fidus' singings at Hopeful;
h ve they frozen up?
What w s the matter with the
correspondents last week? We
did not see nor hear a word from
them
"W O. Cob man passed tl rough
Fayetteville - aturday enroute to
the Travis settlement*' eh ! That
is all right so he d.dn’t go to
‘Pike/'
Mr. G, D. Godard, who taught
a singing school at Hopeful some
time ago, taught a cla«s at Mor
rows Sta. last we»*k. He is a spen-
did music teacher. Tike.
i\E DISCOVERED x thorough t*.
liable remedy for Catarrh, Bronchitis, CdWs,
iche, See.; applied by smoking; wbicBda
i« only direct, thorough and PLEASANT
tuh^hod. -Art having* wonderful success. Sonh
siinWe MAILED FREE. Mention this onwr.
AdcWWDr. J. W. BtASSWt, Greensbor^C.
RctolntlM of Thanks.
Whereas, Messrs. S. T. & A. O.
Blalock are draying their own cot
ton (irom the Alliance Ware
house free of charge to the Ware
house Co.
Be it Resolved, by the Directors
of said Company that we tender
our thanks to said gentlemen for
the courtesy shown us.
The above resolutions be re
quested to be published In the
News.
MraCURI IL RHEUMATISM.
Mr. J. C. Jones, city marshall
of Fulton Arkansas, writes: “Ab
out ten years ago I contracted 5 «
severe case of blood poison. The
leading physicians of the city were
called in, and they presciibed med
icine after medicine, whiih I took
without rtflfording me any relief.
I also tried mercurial and potash
remedies, with the same unsuc
cessful! rasult, but which brought
on an attack of mercurial rheuma
tism that made my life one’of un
told agony. After suffering for
four years, I gave up all former
remedies and commenced taking
Swift's Specific, (S. S. S.) After
taking several battles, I was en.
tirely cured and able to' resume
work. I consider Swift’s Specific
(S S. S )> the greatest medicine
for blood poisoning to dtoy on the
market.”
A Prompt Care.
Twq bottles ot S*ift ? s* Sdeofic
(S. S. S.) cured me of a breaking
out all over my body, caused 5 by
blood poisoning.
Victor StewARt*;
24 S. Royal St., Mobile^Ala.
For thirty years I was afflicted 1
with blood poison, from which I
suffered untold agonies. I com
menced takingS. S. S., and after
using five bottles, I was entirely
cured. Wm. Schenk.
Flushing. L. I.
I suffered for twenty years from
blood poisoning. Three bottles
of Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) cured
me entirely.
Catherine Mosier
Mineola, L. I.
Treatise on bloodand skirt dis
eases mailed free.
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
Dwar 3. Atlanta, Gi.
ass
M. M. & W J. fivtar,
photographers^
Old Picture Coptetf *Qct
Enlarged.
Picture Frame* Mate to (Mar
13 Marietta St., Atlanta, Gm.
MONEY Jo LOW*.
I will loan money at a v -rf low
rate of interest, to be secured w
impoved farm Itndi In Clayton.
Payette and Campbell Counties.
Apply to
Jl E. BLALOCK.
JoneabOro Ga.
HANNAN BROS.
1.1. MINK
THE LEADER OF ALL PAS
TRIES.
This flour is made from the fin
est winter wheat/ Every sack is
guarantaed to give perfect satis
faction. To save Doctor*! bills,-
use B: B., and no other.
FOR SALE B*
S. T. Sr A. O. Blalock, Fay
etteville.
D. McLucas & Son, Inman.
W. G. Bishop, Brooks Sta;
M. K. Couch. Senoia.
I. C. Gay, Parkers Mill.
J.H. FRANKIIN,
THE OLD RELIABLE GRO
CER.
18 W Mitchell Street.
Atlanta, - ■ - Georgia,
GOOD GOODS LOW PRICES.
Seed Oats, all grades of flour
Bran, -yrup by the bar.-
fell. Sugar,| Rice,
Coffee, arid all kinds of
Groce rier.
Clever JAMES H. WILKINS
will be glad to sec his Fayette
friends and sell you goods at this
house.
Plenty of Cotton Bagging' fbt r
sale here.
J. H. FRANKLIN.
YOU CANNOT AFFORD
At this serson of the year to be with
out a good reliable diarrhoea balsam
in the house, a* cramps, colic, dinr
ihoce and all inflammation of the
stomach and bowels are exceedingly
dangerous if not attended to at once.
One bottle of BEGGS’ DIARltHCEA
BALSAm will do more good in cases
of this kind than any other medicine
on earth. iVo gnarrantee it. Ed
wards * Gilueut, ayettcvillo Ga.
I). mcLuca's s Sox, Druggist, Inman
JEWEL'S
—LADIES and GENTS’
Dining
Parlor.
No. 8 W. Hunter Street
ATLANTA, - - GEORGIA.
Meals at All Hours, Regular
Dinner from ll;30to 2 o'clock.
Oysters in every style. Gan e
aod Fish in seas*?*:
A. &F. R. R»
TIME TABLE NO. 2.
SOUTH BOUND,
L’ve Atlanta am
E. T. Juii
Fayetteville, .
Williamson,.
Zebulon
Cullodeu,.. .
Knoxville.
. . .,7:15
. ... 9:26
.. . 11:40
p m 12:15‘5 :&»
. . ., 2:22:6:39
,,,3:277:11
3:05 pm
3:16
4:25
5:21
Fort Valiev,4:40 7:52
north Bound
L’ve Fort Valle
*‘ Knoxville
“ rullodcn,,
“ Zebulon,,
“ Williamsn
“ ravettevill
“ E.T.Junc
ArVo Atlanta,
7.15 train le
Juiiet, Passengers for this train take
Pryor St. Dummv.
a m 8:25
7 K>5 a n>
,, 10:10
7:45
..11:15
8:17
]) tn 1:20
9:21
,,,,2KK)
9:35
,.,4:25
10:31
. ,6:15
11:37
>•**>»>
il:50
E. T. V
, & Ga.
Cecil Gabbett,
V. P. & G. M.
Sam H. Hill,
M. T.
THE PRIDE of WOMAN.
A clear pearly and transparent skin
is always a sign of pure blood, and all
persons troubled with dark, greasy,
yellow or blotched skin can rest assur
ed that their blood is out of order.
A few doses of BEGGS* BLOOD PU-
MFIEft* BLOOD MAKER will re
move the cause and thosBfin rt^iRl be
come clear and transparent, Try it,
and if satisfaction is not given it will
cost yon nothing. It is fully warran
ted. Edwahds a Gilbert, ay*tt*-
v V44*» D/itoLpi'A? a S(K>*. Tiihian.