Newspaper Page Text
IfaEiyTERPRISE.
CiirDL svill« x » G*to November 13, 1891.
PHILLIPS, - Local-Editor.
A. N. KING,
ATTORNEY at law,
real estate agent,
Carnes VILER, Georgia.
gy,"Office iii tho court house.
CHOKER'S mill property.
Here is a fine piece of property,
an d one of the most desirable in the
county. It is known as the Cromer’s
Mill place, and contains 400 acres, is
74 miles from Carnesville, 25 miles
from Athens, 10 miles from Royston,
16 miles from Harmony Grove, on
line contemplated S. D. and C. rail¬
road. on the waters of Nails creek.
The water power is fine and lasts the
year round. On tho place a fine
dwelling house of 8 rooms, 5 fire
places; good store house; good well
water and mineral and free stone wa¬
ter; large fish pond; large orchard of
fine fruits; fine grape vineyard; seyen
good tenant houses; fine pasturage.
About 200 acres cleared and in fine
state of cultivation; 150 acres well
timbered; fine bams and all neces¬
sary outbuildings; merchant’s mill
with two runners, one wheat and one
corn, house 40x00 feet, two stories
high; cotton gin 50 saw in same
building, with a fine custom; one-half
mile from post office, convenient to
churches of all denominations, and
splendid school. Haw mill not in op¬
eration, and set of wool cards; two
warehouses 21 stories high, 40x30.
On two public roads. Lands in high
state of cultivation. Plenty of fine
granite on it, quarry of unlimited
quantity. Two good blacksmith
shops. Titles perfect. Prices reason¬
able and terms made known on a»-
pheation.
a mi mm®.
A fine farm on Middle river, con¬
taining 478 acres, known as the
“Thomason Place,” six miles from
Carnesville. This splendid of planta¬
tion contains about 60 acres fine
bottom lands and 200 acres of good
up land in a Light state of cultiva¬
tion. Plenty of timber. A fine res¬
ilience with 6 rooms, and five tenant j 1
houses, with necessary outbuildings,
on the place. Place in high state of
cultivation, and one of the finest
farms in Northeast Georgia. for Good
gin house and fine stand cotton
gin. Titles good.
ft SPLB 0 S TOWH LOT.
A house and lot in the town of
Carnesville, known as the Blackwell
or Nelms lot, containing two acres
more or less, fronting on the two 1
most public streets. A good tene¬
ment house, a good kitchen, splendid
two-room house, good stables, good
well of water, all in fair repair, and
desirably situated for manufacturing
or resident * purposes.
:
fi FINE BUSINESS LOT.
A fine business lot in Carnesville,
on which there is a small store house.
The lot is §0x65, and fronts the pub-
lie square and north street. It is
one of the finest busine s lots in the
town.
For terms or information about the
above property, address,
KING & PHILLIPS,
Seal Estate Agents,
CAS3JE37ILLE, - - GEORGIA,
—-——
Sullivan Hardware Company.
Parties wanting to buy machinery
a»y kind should write to the Sullivan
Hardware Company, Anderson, S.C.
and get their prices before placing
their orders. This firm makes a spe-
cialty of selling steam engines, cotton
gins, presses, saw mills, wagon scales,
shafting, pulleys, etc., aud we un-
der stand that their prices ate very
low. They are general agents for
the Erie City Iron Works engines,
Smith cotton gins, and DeLcach
saw mills, several of which have been
sola in this and adjoining counties
and are giving perfect satisfaction.
They also report large sales of tho
Thomas Suction Cotton Elevator,
which unloads the cotton from wagon
to gin by suction and is now becoin-
ing to popular among all ginners.
They ask us to say if parties who are
needing machines of any kind will
write and state what is wanted they
will take pleasure in quoting rock
bottom prices.
ALARY, $25 PER WEEK.—
Wanted: Good Agents to sell
our general line of merchandise.
IS o pedaling. Above salary will
be paid to ‘-live” agents. For further
i> formation, address, Chicago Gen-
krai. Supply Co., 1<8 west \ an
Buren st, Chicago, Ill. 9 :
_
The Carpenter and Crown
Organs are the two leaders only
on the market. Hold
by A. W. McConnell.
-
1
LOCAL BREVITIES.
A BOM MKT EPIGRAM.
Mary bought a little hat
At Cross McConnell’s store;
It was so cute and pretty that
He had to order more.
Miss Annie is a queen of tasto
In dressing up a bonnet,
And thus to her in haste
Wo dedicate oar sonnet.
APPEAL to delinquents.
If you haven’t got the money,
J net bring us a load of wood;
We’d take a little honey,
Or anything that is good.
One could bring us some meat,
Another a bushel of corn;
Just anything we can eat
Will help ns, sure as you’re born.
Justice’s court fi. fas. for sale at
this office.
Apply to Charley D. McEntire for
seed wheat.
Omar L. Little took in the Gaines¬
ville fair this week.
Edgar Adair entered the Carncs-
ville High School this week.
The collecting horse now has a
weary look, as well the rider.
There will he a general changing
of homes among the tenants and
renters this fall.
J. C. Blackwell, our confectionery
man, went to Atlanta this week to
lay in a stock of sweets.
The merchants arc now busy “pass¬
ing in their checks,” and happy must
be the man who has the checks to
pass in.
Lon J. McConnell is in Athens this
week on business. He will explain
working of the dispensary when
he returns.
A. N. King is having chimneys
built to his new residence. He says
he in a hurry to finish up a couple of
rooms. Nnff sed.
J. B. McEntire was in town this
and last week. Belle lost his valu-
able sample case in the burning of
car shed at Macon recently.
The ’possum season is now upon
us, and the crop is large. At the end
of the season we will interview our
sports and report the result.
The Hartwell Sun now has a new
head, and the paper shines with a
lustre than ever. Editor
head is not so new r , but it
is the source of the Sun’s light.
Mr. Charley Carson will open his
school at Midway next Monday, the
10 th. Let everyone who intend go-
j n „ bc there on the opening dav, and
the patrons . specially ... requested . ,
are
to he present.
D. W. Brooks came over from La-
vonia Monday afternoon and spent
, , ht . . , TT He and , Squire .
™S
Parks scoured Fhntsville Tuesday
hunting fer boodle, with an eye bin-
gle for large potatoes.
Married, at the residence of the
bride’s father, on Sunday last, Mr.
M. C- Addison to Miss Ida Miller.
The harder the times the more they
marry, and this goes to prove that
misery loves company.
The rain last Tuesday was general,
extending over nearly all the states.
From many sections, and especially
in the Mississippi valley, some severe
storms are reported. In this state
the rainfall was exactly one inch.
g a y ( j want 200 dozen eggs, and I
p a y 14 CC nts per dozen for them,
j lv?nt ^em right now. Shako up
y 0) , r an d make ’em lay while
esr ^.. are pjg]j # Remember, 14 cents
a f ozcu _ L. J. Gkeene.
Remember the Avalon and Martin
high school begins next Monday, the
16th instant. Now is the time to
start your children, for those that do
not start the first clay will miss much
that will beneficial to them. Let all
the patrons come out the first morn-
* n g-
The Carnesville High School is ad¬
vancing at a rate it never did before.
New students are coming in every
wce j. ( anc ) everybody seems to be en-
thuaed. Don’t wait till after the hol-
ays to start your children, but send
them now. The new desks will ar-
rive next week, and everthing will
be comfortable .
s ome 0 f our roa <i e rs have been un-
{ 0 m ako sport of some
thc cle , "... httle roomlets , , which ,. have
S ant
these columns. Gentlemen,
you will have to grin and endure it.
Benny AderLoId has Bold his “poem
exterminator,” or to put it more
euphoniously, his William Goat, but
we will try and give you “something
better” in future, for the poet editor
is in it and “here to stay.”
To the Churches of the Tugalo Bap¬
tist Association.
Pursuant to a resolution offered m
the Hebron Association accepting the
proposition from the brethren of the
Tugalo Association to conjointly
build and own a Baptist high school
at Lavonia, or somo more convenient
place, aud therefore a committee to
be appointed from the churches of
the Tugalo Association to meet with
the church at Lavonia on Saturday
before tho fifth Sunday in November,
at 10 o’clock, a. m.
We therefore ask that each church
in tho Association send at least one
of its best men of executive ability to
meet with us, and then we can se¬
lect a committee of eight or more of
these brethren, into whose hands
shall be put the management of the
Baptist high school, which is to op¬
erated upon the lliawassee system.
W. O. Tribiile, Secretary.
Don’t Depend On It.
Don’t depend on buying your flour
on a credit next year. Tho mer¬
chants arc neither able or willing to
feed the whole country on a credit,
unless they are promptly paid. The
rain lias come and the ground is soft,
and now is your time to plow. Di¬
vide your wheat so that all may have
a small lot. Don’t sow poor land
without cotton seed or manure, and
don’t sow less than one bushel per
acre. It pays a profit to sow as
much as seven pecks per acre accord¬
ing to the fertility of tne land. It is
better to sow one acre right than to
scatter five acres wrong.
Hon. T. G. Lawson,
lion. G. T. Lawson was in town
last week and we were pleased to
meet him in our office. Judge
Lawson is one of the Alliance Rep¬
resentatives to Congress and wo
predict that the friends of monopoly
and unjust laws will find a foe worthy
of their steel.
Take Warning!
Peter Brownlee, colored, is under
contract with me for this year, but
lias left owing me a large sum of
money. 1 forbid any one from hiring
or harboiug him in any manner, and
any one so doing will ho prosecuted
to the extent of the law.
W. R. Moore.
Short Cotton Crop.
Thero will only he about half a
crop of cotton gathered in this
county. Mr. Will McConnell informs
us that he has ten acres in cotton on
which he put one ton of guano and
from which he will gather about twe
400 pound bales.
To Sent.
A good two-horse farm, four miles
from Carnesville. Convenient to
good school. Fine her mud,a pasture,
well watered. For further inform¬
ation apply to J. M. Carson, at J. C.
McConnell’s store.
B. B. Hawks, of Harmony Grove,
Ga., spent two months in New l r ork
and other best markets in the United
States, and bought great bargains,
and is giving hia customers the ad¬
vantage of them. Shoes from 25
cents to $5.00 a pair; jeans from 10
cents to 50 cents a yard; clothing
from $1.00 to $13,00 a suit; hats
from 20 cents to $3.00 a piece; dress
goods from 2 cents to 75 cents a
yard; a full stock of brogan shoes
for 75 cents; fine shoes accordingly;
notions cheaper than the cheapest.
He bought goods from under the
sheriff’s hammer. Call and see his
nice stock before buying elsewhere.
Both air and water abound in
microbes, or germs of disease, ready
to infect the dihilitated system. To
impart that strength and vigor nec¬
essary to resist the effect of these
pernicious atoms, no tonic blood-
punfier equals Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
Judging by the signs of the times,
we believe that the merchants of this
country will be in favor of the sub¬
treasury plan before the election of
’92. They won’t always be blind to
their own interests.
You will find the best goods for
the least money at B. B. Hawks’,
Harmony Grove, Ga. See and
price. Everybody welcome.
Happy and content is abomtwith “ The Ro¬
chester;" a lamp v:ith the light of the morning.
For catalogue, write Rochester Lamp Co. New York.
The combination of ingredients
found in Ayer’s Pills renders them
tonic and curative as well as cathartic.
For this reason they are the best
medicine for people of costive habits,
as they restore the natural action of
the bowells, without debilitating.
AVALON AND MARTIN
High
Will begin November 10th and continue Eight Scholastic Months.
o
This School trill he Second to None in the State.
■O'
If you want your Hoys ami Girls to got a thorough .ami Practical
Education, send thorn here.
■o
Tuition and Board Cheap.
ASA N. PAYNE, Principal.
MAGGIE M. PAYNE, Associate •
EXHIBIT OF NEW GOODS I
-DISPLAYED BY-
L. J. & L. E. GREENE
■o
Our lino of Dress Goods is complete, embracing all the latest and
most effective designs. Our dress patterns are the most elegant ever
brought to this market. Our calicoes arc just beautiful. None lint
the best and heaviest Athens checks are in our stock.
SHOES! SHOES! SHOES!
Our stock of Shoes is simply immense. They are the best on the
market, and the prices arc making them popular. Ladies, .Misses,
Boys and Men are invited to examine our stock befme buying. Our
stock is varied and we can please you.
NOTIONS! NOTIONS! NOTIONS!
Nothing like it ever seen here before. Everything you want in that
line. It is impossible to itemize our stock, so just call for what you
Want. SHIRTS! SHIRTS! See our nobbv line of dress shirts, and
large variety of collars and cuffs. Suspenders from 5 cents up. Hose
to fit any any foot, and any kind you want.
Groceries in stock all the time. Meat, flour, sugar, coffe, and in fact
anything yov want to cat. Fancy groceries and confectioneries in
large variety, and we sell them cheai*.
Our line of crock cry and tinware is complete. Anything you want
for the kitchen or dining room. Linen table cloths in any style you
want. Lamps of all kinds and prices.
Our tobaccoes and cigars arc of the best grades. Give us a call, for
we have anything you want. L. J. & L. E. GREENE.
MIDWAY HIGH SCHOOL.
This School is located Four miles Northeast of Carriesvillo. Opens
the IGth day of November.
Boys and Girls desiring a Thorough, Practical Education would do
well to attend this School.
-m ITS * ADVANTAGES. •;€-
Among the many other advantages it offers is the cheapness of
Board and Tuition.
We have also one of the most comfortable and best seated houses in
the county.
For further information, address,
C. C. CARSON, Principal
Salubrity, Georgia.
ily understand why his father had
objected to his visiting his brother
and sister. lie could readily under¬
stand what those bandits were his
father told him beset the road. Sam
determined to lose no time, ro he set
about to make preparation for the
reception of his brother and sister,
but lie must put his father on notice,
which he did, carefully concealing
the much coveted information, but
told his father when they come he
would like very much for them to
find they were in peace, against
which his father offered a demurrer,
claiming that if there was any differ¬
ence it was on the part of Sam, and
he felt confident if his sons and
daughter could hear it they would
decide against Ham and exhonorate
him, as their father, from anything
Sam might bring against him. Ho
lie proposed to Ham if there was any¬
thing to be settled he preferred wait¬
ing till all were together, to which
Sam consented, with the distinct un-
derstanding t !, at his brothers and
sister ho allowed a voice in the mat¬
ter, their testimony also be allowed
upon any point touching the ques¬
tion involved in the matter of de¬
fense.
(To be Continued.)
Oil and lead for sale at A. W. Mc¬
Connell's.
Our lands are fairly fertile. Our
streams arc abundant and never go
dry. Our seasons are nearly always
propitious. With practical agricul¬
tural education and diversified farm¬
ing, we ought to make this section of
Georgia a rural paradise.
Large kitchen safes for sale at A.
W. McConnell’s.
This has been as lovely fall weath¬
er as we ever saw in the sunny
south. While other sections may be
richer, there arc none in the United
States that have more natural ad¬
vantages than ours.
Buy your carpets and window
shades from A. W. J/cConnell’s.
A EASILY FUSS.
BY UXCLK TOM.
(Continued from last wecls.)
In the interim Sam addressed a let¬
ter to his brother and sister, and re¬
ceived a letter in turn containing val¬
uable information, together with a
promise that they would soon visit
him, and that they would aid in ad¬
justing the troubles they had gotten
into, stating also that Tom was not a
brother, but that he was a descend¬
ant of a family that had caused a
great deal of trouble in their father’s
family, and upon more than one oc¬
casion they had in times of the great¬
est trials in contending for the family
rights proved treacherous to the true
interests, having sold their birthright
in the great struggle for the family
independence, when the British Lion
laid claim to all the family province,
in vindication of her lionslup sought
to lay tribute on the teas our grand¬
fathers used, when it culminated in
a war between the British lion and
the family eagle, when Uncle George
and his boys whipped the lion. The
father of the family from which Tom
descended deserted his trust and sold
himself to a British colonel for a cer¬
tain sum. Since that time his de-
scendents have been allowed to roam
over the fields, and on an occasion
upwards of sixty years ago they were
used by a company of British pirates
to get up a conflict among the fam¬
ily, which caused a division that cul¬
minated in two factions, one lead by
our own beloved Uncle Jefferson, the
other by Uncle Abraham, both good
men. One was the brother of our
father, the other of our mother.
Uncle Abe, by his superior forces
and the aid received from the Brit¬
ish lion, overpowered Uncle Jef, the
aid given through the British lion
was by stratagem. Ham learned
through the letter from his brother
and sister there had been a sectional
line drawn in tbe family, and this
fine had been well guarded by some
of Tom’s kin folks, and that they
were being well paid from tbo inter¬
est accumulated from the money paid
by the British colonel to the father
of Tom’s family, hence he could read-
HARDWARE * v
* * STG
We Have Jus! Itecelved a Full Line of
STOVES, TINWARE,
sports:;
Of every kind, and GENERAL HARDYVAi.
OUR RUBBER AND LEATHER BE! I ill
— IS THE LEST ON THE MARKET.
Sash, Do r* l£ 9 Q
-AND-
iBLINDE
-A SPECIALTY.-
Everything at the lowest cash price, at
HARDMAN HARDWARE COMPANY.
Harmony Grove, Co;:, .
ARfiESVI 1 > I EUfe-SS % (OrrraOjr * l T»V ' 1
HOWELL B. PARKER, A. B.
MINNIE L. PARKER, A. B. A
Other First-Glass Teachers will bo Employed :• •
This first-class school will begin on Monday, October 3 'At
continue Nine school months. We will give one wee!.'
during Christmas.
JJq Nocd to Sfind YOUP BOyS find
Girls Gut o!' v U
You have in your midst one of the very best sclioi in ‘
Many cf Our Former Students are MtVcin
to $150 a Month Teaching School
Other Pursuits.
We always give perfect satisfaction to all who do’ id
If yon mean to study hard and act right, come, i'll:':
iiig school, not a pleasure resort.
Write for a splendid catalogue.
Rates of Hoard and Tuition very reasonable, i
ination, address, HOWELL B. !
Caknksvh it ! ■
Or see any of the leading citizens of Garnisvi.
HI (ill UP 1YIA N ^
IN THE RIGHT PLA< %!
AT THE RIGF
Is what you will find at G. A. GREENE’S -
jLflVERY. 5 FEED AMO SALE
—(East Hide of the Public Square.)-
I will keep on hand Good Stock, Good Vehicle-), ami 1
Good Feed. My prices arc reasonable. Giro me ;;
you want a good turnout. GE<V A.
LEND ME-: \ <. *■
YOUR E -
oooooo oooooo
I have the Largest and Finest Sloe
over brought to Carnesville, and at Lov
w yj Astonish you. Seeing is Believing.
TIIIli GOODS A HE IIEKE,
AND WE WANT TO Hus
Our .Line of Ladies’ Dress Goods is
Prints are of the Latest, Designs, m ' r
Yon. Laces and, Embroideries of the Fir--
and Handkerehies that a re “Just Lore!;;'’
thd, ladies to see oar Elegant Stock whet/, r
not. Iie have the Finest Ladies’ Shoes on ‘
MISS ANNIE HUG U a\ /?, A )
OF BALTIMORE, MD.,
Has Charge’■ of the Millinery Departt
Trimmed in the Latest Styles, and. at Vr.
not he Duplicated. The Ladies of Fran,
are invited to Examine oar Stock.
dot i:n.§g gy
Grocer'
-AND-
NOTION
-IN ENDLESS VARIETY_______
Anything the trade wants in the above line can
ing at our stock and getting prices. Respectfully,
j, c. Mccorn i
CARNES VILLE, GE