Newspaper Page Text
VOL. 2.
ITEMS OF LOCAL NEWS.
GATHERED FOR THE CORRE¬
SPONDENTS READERS.
The Happenings of the Week
in Short , Pointed Paragraphs —
What Has Happened and Is Go¬
ing to Happen—Points Political,
Personal and Social—Men
Thinas.
Superior court next week.
Mark Carnes has several
boarders.
Can’t there be a little market
in town ?
Tramps continue to pay the
town calls.
Cotton picking will soon be
pver for this season,
j Hon. J. L. Saturday Hammett went busi¬ to
Fort Valley on
ness.
Johnie Sawyer shoves goods
across the counter for neighbor
Chapman. I
Col. R. D, Smith was in Atlan¬
ta Tuesday on professional busi¬
ness.
I Now is the time to get this pa¬
ter and the Constitution, both for
|1.50 a year.
I The cotton market keeps off.
Every article of food sells at a
lull grown price.
I Music on our corner this week.
Ifife, harp and banjo. This is a
Ively part of town.
I Messrs F. II. Wright, W. P. Al¬
lan and J. J. Williams spent last
lunday in atlanta,
1 The alert drummer is now on
lie R. R., in the town, on the
iirt road and elsewhere.
■ Mr. W. J. Burnett and his
Riughter ISves Miss Viola visited rela
in Knoxville this week.
Ifjohn Hanes is building an el
Kiar.t Church in Culloden. John
Kiows his business and this guar
ittees that the building will be
I ornament to the town.
I Judge A. F. Williams sent us
interesting communication
I is week, but owing to lack of
I ice when it reached ns, it does
I t appear in this issue. It will
I lie in right next week.
I Miss Beulah Wright, an enter
I ning and accomplished young
I Ly, left Tuesday for her home
I Macon. We know her visit
Isa pleasant one both to her
I f and friends and relatives.
I lile our Society Ed. doesn’t get
I hance to write this, he is so
I d to sanction it.
I )ur associate dreamed a night
I two ago that he was in Butler
I §euing to some most excellent
sic dispensed by a most beau
jfjleudid U young lady in that town at
new piano. A letter
pe to him next morning men
wng the new piano and invi
g him to Butler to a musical
ertainment.
Mayor Danielly, Mrs. W. J.
tit, Mrs. M. B. Walker, Misses
B. Gibson and Jennie Dent
, Roberta Wednesday 7 morning
a trip to the White ‘City for
special purpose of seeing the
rest thing yet and that is the
rld’s Fair. This paper sends
ng with them all it can, un¬
tied hopes that their enjoy
it and pleasure generally 7 from
>erta to Chicago, all through
city and amazing wonders at
Fair, may exceed anything
; has ever been reaped from
j visit to any place , on this line.
THE CORRESPONDENT
ROBERTA, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 13, 1393.
Joe Horn came out from Macon
on business this week.
Justice Long and Ras Hicks
went to Macon this week.
Read all of our advertisements
in this issue and consult your
own interests.
Patronage on the A. & F. must
be on the increase. Trains are
running all times of nights and
days.
Recently Mart Walker brought
in a well developed bunch of
grapes of the second crop for this
year.
Our Southern people delight in
being humbugged. This town is
included in the South and some¬
time suffers the same evil.
Jesse Dent has moved out to
the old . Dent homestead. He
aims to try the farm, the very
best place for young men.
It may be legal to thrust a par¬
ty into prison on a petty charge
and confine him or her there for
six or seven months without any
chance for a trial, but it is not
right law or no law.
Hiram McCrary has harvested
his crop of upland rice. It was
not planted until June but he
housed a good yfeld. Me. consid¬
ers it first-class forage, All
things needed for home use can
be produced right here in Craw¬
ford.
Miss Lillie Blasingame of
Yatesville came down Sunday
evening and returned Monday
morning. It was a visit on the
wing and shows Miss Lillie to be
wide awake, She reports her
millinery business at Yatesville
in a very prosperous condition.
Uncle Frank Perry has a piece
of genuine olive wood -which was
brought by Rev. Dr Talmage from
Jerusalem to this country. It
was sent to Mr. Perry by the pub¬
lisher of the Christian Herald at
the Rev. Dr’s request. He ap¬
preciates his present very muc h.
Bart’s shop hammers make mu¬
sic with a strain not unpleasant.
It is said that lumber and tur
pentine are rising in prices.
Come forward and settle your
accounts. We need it and must
have it. Jones & LeSueur
The mail agent on the A. & F.
wished to know of Will Wynne
whether or not John the Baptist
preached before the war. It
would have been more definite
had the interrogator given some
intimation as to which war he
had reference.
The prettiest line of Dry Goods
ever offered in Roberta. At the
New Y r ork Store.
We are requested to say that
the next quarterly meeting of
the county S. S. Association will
be at Benevolence Church on the
25th of this month.
New gopds coming in every
day. Call at The New York
Store. B. Chapman.
What about a County Court?
One in this county would pay its
own way and with proper man¬
agement bring money into the
treasury.
Bond and Blasingame s gin¬
nery 7 is the biggest thing that
turns wheels in this section.
They gin cotton cheap as anybody
can—have all modern appliances
and fixtures. They will give you
more for Cotton Seed than any
buyer, no matter what his offer
* s - ^ r -V them,
Bond & Blasingame.
We need enterprise and a
double supply of push. CroHi
pays but little on the1nv<
Chapman must have been on a
big run Saturday. Two extra
clerks were employed.
For $1.50 cash you can get the
Correspondent and the Atlanta
Constitution twelve months.
Our neighbor Chapman is one
of your “git there Eli” sorb He
went out ahead of one of the liv¬
ery horses this week.
Will Smith comes in with a
bunch of grapes about ripe and
claims that they are from the
third crop of this season.
The way of the transgressor is
hard. Much indebtedness also
puts a fellow in flinty paths.
Wilson Allen needs two more
eyes. One more for looking at
horses and still another to spy a
pretty buggy. We raise no ob¬
jection. but delight in the same.
In this issue appears Mrs, M.
R. Carnes’ advertisement of her
millinery business. She keeps on
hand a beautiful line of goods
and is constantly adding new
goods to stock on hand. When
you wish anything call and get
her prices and y 7 ou will be more
than pleased with them and also
the goods.
Dan Rosser advises a sale of
cotton seed provided they bring
thirty cents per bushel. He
thinks shavings could be bought
for use as a fertilizer. Good
price for seed,poor fertilizer.
Come in and pay your dues to
the paper. If your subscription
has expired, give us $1.50 and get
the Weekly Constitution and the
Correspondent one year.
These rattle-brained fellows
that continually bawl against
everything and everybody might
confer a favor by informing some
clothes dummy what they expect
to accomplish by such a course.
v One of our exchanges puts it
down that some of the henpecked
husbands of the country would
fare much worse were it not for
the hen that inflicts the peeking.
Yes, it is bitter to undergo some
little inconveniences now and
then than it would be to furnish
material fora star ve-to-death ex¬
hibition.
Mr. John Parker who now lives
in Texas and who was once tax
collector of this county twenty
years or more ago, is now out on
a visit to Mr. II. C. Bowers and
family. He is a brother of Mrs.
Bowers and is a cripple. Mr.
Parker looks sprightly and wears
an appearance indicating that he
resides in a good country.
Bond & Blasingame make a
new offer this week. They offer
the best bagging and ties suffici¬
ent for packing a bale of cotton
for fifty five cents. Guaranteed.
Uncle Frank Perry went from
Knoxville Baptist Church on
Wednesday to Perry, as a dele¬
gate to the Rehoboth Association.
Dry times under foot,overhead,
all through, on all sides and ev¬
erywhere.
Bond and Blasingame put in a
new ad. This issue carries it.
Consult your interests. Try them.
Roberta has an appellate court.
Uncle Jack Martin is Chief Jus¬
tice ; Messrs B. F. Walker and
M. F. Jordan associates. Cases
are carried from Justices court
Defore this court for review in
case of alleged errors.
; Miss Mattie Miller and her sis¬
ter, Mrs. Ivey, left for Macon
W dnasday.
Capt. Williams Rutherford of
Culloden was in town this week
making a general round among
his friends.
Judge Joel N, Mathews went
on a business and recreation trip
to North Georgia this week.
The sun varies somewhat; the
moon is credited with constant
changes. The times, financially,
continue after the same old
sort—hard, as we poor mortals
term it.
There are multitudes of these
five for a nickel kind of fellows.
They are dead weight but such is
sometimes necessary as waste for
balance purposes.
Some men bank on their
means; some on judgment and
intelligence. Oftentimes capital
is very scare in £“ther case;
First class board and lodging
will be furnished by me court
week at reasonable rates. Try
me. F. DANIELLY.
A young lady of exquisite judg¬
ment said thus: “The party who
told Mr. Trammell he looked well
with his present supply of beard
made an awful mistake.’
Frank Danielly with liis force
of hands is in Culloden engaged
in building a fine residence for
Rev. Wilde Cleveland. Merit
will win aneh&ar Crawford work¬
men are clothed in it.
Don’t be so much woolgathered
or blinded as to try to order your
paper discontinued when you
have failed to pay for it. Such
steps do not relieve or release
von. Stand to the rack. It is
not in the hands of children.
It takes about two pounds of
cotton to buy one of meat.
While this is true it is at the
same time true that the meat and
other provision supplies needed
might be raised here at home.
In that event the proceeds of cot
ton sales would be put in the
pocket.
Dolphus Grace’s mule, a few
evenings since, without much cer¬
emony gave him an emphatic in¬
troduction to the ground right
under the gaze of a host of spec¬
tators. Such occurrences make a
think wonderfully hard, if
his time is not consumed in look¬
about to see whether the sun
in eclipse.
Uncle Frank Perry will move
to Knoxville and will be a most
addition to her citizen¬
ship.
Mr. W. S. Bond’s little boy
Freddie, seven years old, died
Sunday night last of convulsions.
He was a bright little fellow and
had been sick but a few hours.
To the bereaved we ex end con¬
dolence.
Judge A. F. Williams dropped
ift to see us since his return from
Penlield. lie reports that his
daughter, Miss Josie, who is now
in that place, is in a very feeble
condition.
People wait until court week,
many of them, to bring beef,
mutton, pork and such articles to
town for sale and because they
can’t then dispose of a sufficiency
to supply ten thousand people
the town is the recipient of tons
of abuse. Good folks, people
about here eat fifty-two weeks in
each year.
NO. 63.
John A. Miller
is dead and in his death Crawford
loses a good citizen—loyal and
true to a letter; his children, who
ioved him without equivocation
or any particle of reserve, a kind
forbearing and loving father. He
leaves them a heritage of which
they are proud and which is
rather to be chosen than great
riches,—a good name. The writer
never heard any one Speak harsh¬
ly of him. He was unassuming,
modest and the full type of a
true gentleman in all his deal¬
ings with his fellowman and all
bearings in the different walks of
this life.
Mr. Miller was provident. His
family lacked for nothing that
adds to comfort and makes
plenty in this life. He promptly
met his obligations. His worldy
affairs are left in good shape.
In his forty-seventh year our
friend left us; died in his native
county and sleeps in its embrace
but a short distance from the
place of his birth. Iro Crawford
he was born, reared, lived and
died -and his people hang this
laudable, living, lasting escutch¬
eon about his memory: a great
loss, but thanks for the hope of
inestimable gain to our compan¬
ion and true friend.
He leaves four children and
other relatives. His good wife,
daughter of the late Howell Ad¬
ams, died about fourteen years
ago and awaits his arrival on
the other shore.
In religeous ma tiers he made
no ostensible pretensions; but,
from a human standpoint and
the general characteristics of his
life since known to the writer,
the conclusion is that his titles to
mansions in the skies are clear—
not shadowed by any cloud.
ELECTION NOTICE!
On November 2nd next, an election
Mayor of the town of Roberta,
Ga., to fill the unexpired term of A.
J. Danielly, resigned.
By order of the council.
A. J. DANIELLY, Mayor.
Oct. 4th, 1893.
NOTICE! NOTICE!
To barter, sell or exchange for
in the town of Roberta on the
day is a violation of the
of this State and town or to fol¬
any other daily avocation to
money. Therefore he that fol¬
it shall be lined as follows: $25.
the first offense and $30. for the
&c.
Also any liquor dealer who keeps
his place of business after the
hour of 10 o’clock p. m. violates the
of tli is town and lie or they does
shall be fined as follows: for the
offense be shall pay $10 and for
tiie second $20. and for the third of¬
his license shall be revoked,
unless party shows certificate from
By the council,
A. J. DANIELLY, Mayor.
Oct. 4th, 1893.
FOR SALE.
Good Bedsteads, Spring Mat¬
tresses, Cloths for Tables, Tables
other good articles of furni¬
ture suited to any household, at
low prices, next thirty days.
E. E. Dent, Dent House.
FOR RENT.
Iii Roberta, the best town on
the A. & F. Road, a new Hotel.
rooms. Business estab¬
lished. Good water. 20 yards
from depot. Possession give i 3rd
Nov. next. Address McCrary
& Walker, Roberta, Ga.
We give the best advertising
rates in the best advertising me¬
in this section. All com
bined make a go.