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THE AMEK1CUS DAILY TIMES-RECORDER: FRIDAY. OCTOBER 23, 1891.
SMITHVILLE!
SOUTHWEST GEORGIA’S PRIDE KNOWS NOTHING
SUCCESS
BUT
Something Aoout the Town and Its People—A Screed
That Deals Only In Facts—What Smithville
Was, What She Is and What She
Will Be in the Future!
MITHVILLE, Ga., October 20.—
§ [Special.]—“Sraltbrlllc !J| All out
'for Smithville! Change cars fo r
Kufaula, Montgomery and all
foreign points!”
I did not change cars, for my objective
point was Smithville itself—and a busy
little city I found it, for which reason 1
propose to tell the readers of Tiib
Tixes-Rkcokdku something about It.|
In the tint place, Smithville is, as
everybody knows, in Leo county. It is
on the old Southwestern branch of the
“Central" road, twelve miles south of
Americus, twenty-four miles north of
Albany, and Is situated only one milo
from the Sumter county line and throe
miles from the Terrell county line, thus
placing it, as It were, in a corner be
tween three counties.
The fact of the business is, this town
has got “a corner” on a good many oth
ers.
When one leaves the train here, with
the Intention of stopping a day or so,
the first place he makes for Is the hotel,
of which Col. A. XI. MoAfee is the pro
prietor. Situated as the hotel Is—just
at the depot—it is one of the most con'
venlent hotels to be found on the Une of
the road, and the name McAfee is a
guarantee of its comforts and homelike-
say—for beside the architectural beauty
of tiie buildings, the surroundings count
for something. The flower gardens—or
to put it in a more homely phrase, the
front-yards— in Smithville are beauties
perennial. Roses of every variety and
name are found there, and other flowers
in profusion. One’s soul is overcome
with the “fair and faint perfume” that
lingers in the air, and one poetically in
cllncd can, like llayard Taylor, hear the
“far-off tinkle of camel's bells as they
toll through desert sands, bringing with
them that priceless perfume of the des.
ert—the attar of roses P
Smithville, situated as she is, is a com
ing factor in the growth of Georgia. Un
every band thrift and enterprfso nrc vis!
bio. Nothing is wanting to show what ann,im ‘
And talk about eating! There ia where
you find something at every meal to
tempt the appetite of an epicure! Ev
erything about the house is as dean and
neat “as a lady’s parlor," and the ser
vice is above criticism; but beyond all Is
the hearty welcome that Col. MoAfee
and his excellent wife extend to every
one.
“Her price is above rubies’’—so say
the Soriptures—and if that doesn’t ap
ply to Mrs. McAfee some one will have
to get out a search warrant and look up
the person to whom it does. She and
Col. MoAfee make one wish to live In
Smithville all one's life.
Along in '07 Col. William McAfee, the
father of the present proprietor, had an
offer held out to him by the railroad to
open a dinner house in'Smlthville, prom
islng that Smithville should always be
the dinner “stop.” The upshot of the
matter was—the house was opened and
has been successfully conducted ever
sinoe, Col. A. II. MoAfee succeeding his
father in Its management. It was re
built In ’88 by the latter, who for thirty
yean has been a railroad man, and it
stands to-day as one of the most popular
hotels In the Empire State.
flomothlnx about SiulUivills.
Mow I’ll tell you something about the 1
biggest little town in Georgia—for Its
sixe!
In the lint place it was founded In
1857 and was called Ilnnchville—being
on the Southwestern branoh—but It was
not until 1803 that it was Incorporated
In that year an act to incorporate Smith-
ville alias Renwiok was passed by the
legislature and In accordance with that
act the place was known as ltenwlck.
Subsequently, by sot of the legislature,
the name of the town was changed to
Smithville—and there you an!
By the provisions of the act the limits
of the town extended two miles from
the depot, but in 1808 this was amended
and the oircle reduced to three-quarters
of a mile, which is now the present In
corporate limits.
Smithville is situated in the heart of a
great cotton and fruit producing district
and is a growing little city of about 1,000
inhabitants. For yean, after its incor
poration, the town had only a gradual
growth, but in 1800, the railroad author
ities erected a handsome building, at a
cost of about $7,000 and moved the gen
eral offices ofjthe Southwestern division
to this point
But in August 1801 the Richmond and
Danville system became the lessees of
the road and out of a spirit of economy
abolished the general offices of the
Southwestern division at Smithville.
But notwithstanding this, beautiful lit
tle Smithville is tnveling along the high*
way to prospeiity at a rate that will take
the wind out of the sails of some of bet
competitors!
8mltbTills end lie Surroundings.
Taken altogether, Smithville la a very
pretty town; and Its Inhabitants are some
of the veryjbest people on God’s green
earth! Generous, hospitable, cultured
and refined, they are possessed of every
trait that goeejto make up God’s noble-
meo; and lam not overdrawing the mat
ter in the least when I say this.
The streets|are laid off almost due east
and west and north and south, and of
course one| who wishes to bujld can
always get a frontage to suit.
In Smith ville one can find more pretty
kesise—and by homes, I mean what I
these people mean. They are energetic,
full of life and business, and some time
in the future Smithville will be heard
from in a way that will surprise those
who have not taken her in account.
Smithville is somewhat different in
her city government from her sister cit
ies, for five councilmen are elected once
a year and they select a mayor and clerk
and treasurer from their number. This
year the roster is ns follows:
D. G. Avera, mayor;
J. F. Johnson, olerk and treasurer;
C. A. Rhodes, E. M. Koarsey and J. L.
Faul, councilmen.
Mr, U. F. Salter is city marshal, and a
mighty good one be Is, but at present he
is sick, and town affairs are looked after
by Mr. B. F. Yeoman, who is, a worthy
substitute.
The city ball Is a wooden, two-story
structure on Main street, the city prison
being in the first story, with the second
reserved for the use of the council and
mayor, where those who transgress the
laws of man answer to Mayor Avera.
None of the city officers receive any
salary, therefore tliore Is very little com
petition for offices. The town's expenses
are paid by the receipts from licenses
and street taxes, and there la no proper
ty tax levied in Smithville, and the town
has neither debts nor bonds—that'
something to boast of!
Ths HmlthTllle Improvement Company.
In July, 1800, the Smithville Improve
ment Company was organized with the
following officers: I). 6. Avera, presi
dent; J. F. Johnson, vice-president, and
W. D. Wells, secretary and treasurer.
The capital stock of the company was
$10,000 and the past year with it was
lucrative enough to authorize the cash
payment of a dividend of 12 per cent.
The Company is in a splendid condl
tlon and its officers being men of well-
known ability and business reputation
have the entire confidence of all inter
ested parties and there Is no doubt but
that they will urge Smithville on to
prosperity.
Bmithvilla's Cotton Warehouse.
One of Smithville's institutions is her
splendid ootton warehouse which was
built in 1885, by Captain It. E. McAfee
whom everybody in Lee county knows,
honors and trusts. The warehouse Is
conveniently situated on the railroad,
within a store’s throw of the depot and
It is claimed that cotton can be handled
in Smltbvll'.e, through this warehouse,
cheaper than can be done in neighboring
cities,
Captain McAfee is ably assisted by
Mr. W. O. Bennett, than whom a better
man never lived; and Mr. Bennett de
serves the confidence that Capt. McAfee
reposes in him. These two gentlemen
are too well known for a pen like mine
to endeavor to sound their praises,
Hmlthville's Hchool Facilities.
One institution of which Smithville is
justly proud is tlio school over which
Captain G. M. i’attison presides. Cap
tain Pattison's school boasts of over a
hundred pupils and Is conducted on a
plan that never fails to give satisfaction,
which is a rare qualification. The wor
thy principal is most ably assisted by
Miss Sebie Wooten, who is well known
In Americus, and has made a most envi
able reputation in the school room,
Another assistant will be added to the
faculty in a short time as the outlook
for a prosperous scholastic year is very
bright.
Boms u( SmUhvlUe's Hull
The business men of Smithville are of
that caliber that always Indicates suc
cess. Some of them have done business
for even two decadee in the same bonce
and a failure le only heard-of—never ex
perienced in this thriving inland city.
Thera’s J. F. Johnston, who although
»young mania one of the “oldest In
habitants” and be has been in the drug,
fancy goods and stationary business for
Hd carritt at
stock of $$,000 and doee an «nn«i busi
ness of about 412,000. lie is ably assist-
ed by Mr. W. T. Sadder who Is a young
man of sterling worth and splendid
character, Mr. Johnston, besides his
other offices in the city Is a county com
missioner, and be is known all over the
country in a most favorable way, and
wherever he Is known he ia honored and
respected.
Mr. T. S. Burton, who deals in general
merchandise and fertilizers, besides buy
ing cotton, is one of Smltliville's
staunchest business men. lie carries a
stock of $10,009 in merchandise and does
a business amounting to $30,000 per
Annum. Ills right bowers are Messrs. J.
If. Randall and Walter Jennings and
they do him most excellent service.
Mr. Burton is one of those keen, shrewd
business men, whom it is always a bene
fit to know; and his interests in Smlth-
viiie are large and growing. He began
business in 1882, and success lias fol
lowed him closely through the inter
vening years.
The only livery stablo in Smithville Is
owned and operated by Mr. A S. Ansley
who began business bore in December
'00, and whoso vehicles and horses arc
too well known by the traveling public
for me to say much about them. I can
say this however, whenever you want a
rig of any kind in Smithville goto An
sloy and yon can get it.
The firm ol Rhodes ,V Salter, com
posed of C. A. Rhodes and R. T. Salter,
which does business on Main street, is
one well known to everybody in Leo
county, and ns both members of the firm
are general fnvorltes they do a good
business The firm carries a $1,000
stock find do about $5,000 business per
C. C. Ansley is one of the prince of
morcliants in Smithville. Ho occupies
one of the oldest buildings in the town
and carries a stock of about $3,000 with
which he does a business of $15,000 a
year. Mr. Ansley has been in business
for himself seven years, and in that time
has not only gained but retains the con
ftdenco of all the inhabitants of Smith
ville and Lee county.
The Blue Saloon, of which Evans A
Webb are the proprietors, Is another big
bus!nose house, for besides a large and
well-selected stock 'of liquors, the firm
carries a splendid stock of groceries,
hardware and furniture, Messrs. Ev
ans A Webb carry a stock of $4,000, and
do a business of $12,500. They are both
young men of many lino parts, and if
they don't succeed—well, success isn’t
success.
Dr. W. A. Smith (who, by the wny, is
a son of the original founder of the
town, Mr. Griffin Smith, after whom the
town was named) is the pioneer in the
drug business in Smithville. He estab
lished business here in 1870, and is
widely and most favorably known. Car
rying a stock of $2,500, he dues a safe,
conservative business of from $3,500 to
$4,000. Besides drugs he handles
large stock of stationery, tobacco, pipes,
and cigars, and following his motto,
“Merit wins,” the doctor is, of course,
one of the leading men in Smithville.
Now we como to the |x>stoffice, over
which Mrs. V. It. Jossoy holds sway,
and right well does she hold it, for she
was appointed in 1884, under Garfield’s
regime, and has held the office ever
since. Every ono Is loud Id praise as to
her management, and Lee connty, to a
bopee sho will always fill her
present position.
The ladies of Smithville would be at
a loss as to what to do if the firm of
Hiss M. E Chappoll A Co. concluded to
remove elsewhere, for that firm fur
nishes the millinery for the town. The
lstest styles are always found here, so
that the ladies of .Smithville never think
of loavlnghome to gain their desires,
for—there is Miss Chappell A Co.
Mossrs. J. R, Cochran A Son, who deal
in family and fancy groceries, are also
on Main street, and that firm carries a
stock that would do anyone's heart good
to examine. It amounts to about $7,500,
and they do s business of about $10,000.
Everybody knows the firm; and what's
more, they trade at the store.
Burton A Hill is the style of a firm in
Smlilivlllo that does s fine business.
Tills house deals in furniture and hard
ware, and began business iu 1881). It
carries a stock of from $1,500 to $2,000
and holds a trado amounting to from
$4,000 to $>,000 per annum. Both mem
bers of the firm are live, progressive
men, and one can always depend on
what they say.
T. A. Holloway’s beef market is one
of .Smithville's features, and that gentle
man furnishes the town and a good deal
of the surrounding country with some
thing fresh to oat. Mr. Holloway Is a
good citizen, and what's more, be is a
good butcher.
Now here's another saloon of which
Mr. Kearsey is proprietor, and he keeps
the beet of everything. Of course, being
s newspaper man, 1 was debarred the
pleasure of “looking upon the wine when
it was red,” but I can say tills much
about Mr. Kearsey, that he is one of
those men that it is always a benefit to
meet Mr. Keareey (I ought to call him
Colonel) is a South Carolinian, and he
began business In SmlthvlUs In January,
1800i lie has the able assistance of Mr.
A. J. Jennings, whom everybody in Loo
county knows end likes. Besides being
one of the snccessfnl business men of
Smithville, Col. Kearsey is a member of
the town council, mayor pro tern and a
director of the Smithville Improvement
Company.
Captain Oliver Hays la not really a
resident of SmltbviUe for his elegant
home Is tores mites from tbs sity; bat
there’s one thing certain that Captain
Hays uses sit his broad Influence for the
benefit of of the town. He has an ex
cellent grove of LeConte and Keiffer
pears end be markets an immense
amount of fruit every yasr. He oiesred
over $750 ou two seres of pear trees this
season and he isn't stuck up about it,
either.
And right here I want to say that Cap
tain nays is a man of “infiooence” for
he chartered a special train and sent me
ta Americus—it was a crank car!
Mr. D. G, Avera, who besides being
mayor of Smithville, Is a dealer in gen
eral merchandise; and if one should go
to the town without meeting Mr. Avera
one had best not go at all. Mr. Avera
Is a gentleman of the school now named
the old school; n6t that be is old, but
that civility and courtesy are a rare
quantity In this day and generation.
T. J. Avera began business in Smith-
ville in 18115 and D. O. Avera succeeded
him in 1874. The house carries a stock
of general merchandise amounting to
$10,000 and does a business of from
$35,000 to $40,000 a year. Besides his
large mercantile interests Mr. Aveia has
a pear grove of ten acrea from which he
ships, when the seasons are good, about
1,000 crates of fruit
Mr, Avera is one of the foremost men
in Smithville and without him tho bust
men would be at a loss.
The LeConte Nursery at Smithville Is
worthy of a better pen than mine, for I
can't do It justice. Situated in the heart
of the town it covers 50 acres and it
adds so much to the beauty of the town
as to make it a most noticeable feature
to every one who visits Smithville. The
straight, long rows of stately trees that
rear their heads in the acme of perfec
tlon, bending and bowing to the soft
southern breezes that chase like sun
light across the fields of green, gives one
an Indefinite longing to stay with them
forever! •
Outside of town, about a mile from
the depot, the LeConte Nursery has an
other grove of fifty acres, and from the
two groves from 8,000 to 10,000 bushels
of pears are shipped annually.
Mr. W. W. Thompson Is the proprie
tor and manager of the these magnificent
groves and he is ably assisted by bis son,
Mr. O. L. Thompson. These two gen
tlemen make a strong team, and for that
reason the pears and trees from this
grove are shipped all over the United
States.
Sow, to Change tho Subject.
The future of Smithville, ono of the
brightest diadems in Georgia’s crown of
glory, dopends mostly on Its Inhabitants,
and I’ll wager anything on earth that
they are going to do their part. The
town is so situated that It can, and does
demand a great deal of attention; and
the people in it are of such a nature that
they will see that every hope for the
town Is fulfilled!
The health statistics or Smithville are
surprising, for in the past decads there
bus been so little sickness that even now
two physicians attend to all the patients
not only in Smithville, but tho surround
ing country.
Smithville handles a good deal of cot
ton, and this year the receipts will ran
up to 4,000 bales. The staple is han
dled here very cheaply, and so Sralth-
ville docs the business.
Nine years ago Smithville got weary of
the “Inocnous desentudo” in which she
had lain for years, and to put it mildly,
got s move ou hersolf. ' Up to that time
not a bale of ootton was sold in the town
but now—well, she hendles all ths way
from 3,000 to 5.000 a year! The business
men of the town mean business, and
they are going to have it—that’s all
there is about the matter.
In 1800, when the depot was built, the
railroad company built a “coal shute” at
Smithville and at the present time about
sixty tons are bandied daily. This is
easily accounted for when It is remom-
bored that about thirty trains pasj
Smithville daily. The splendid depot
here is still occupied by train dispatch
ers, and the bridge supervisor, and its
elegant waiting rooms are always filled
when "train time” Is near at hand.
The Fruit Crops.
Lee county is the centre for the cul
ture of tho LeConte and Keiffer pear
and if the season hod been good, over
100,000 boxes of the luscious fruit would
have gone from this place, la 1889,
there wore 30,000 bushels of pears
shipped from Smithville and only the
freeze of lost March prevented the ship
ment of nearly three times that amount,
this year.
The largost growers of fruit in Leo
county are W. W. Thompson, O. Hays,
I>. ti. Avera, J. D. Reichert and Mr.
Atkins, and if anybody wants to know
anything about LeConte pears let them
write to either of these geutlomen.
Some (fthor Mon I Met.
Smithville has a splendid weekly pa
per—The News—and Mr. George Ed
ward Clarke Is Us oontrolllLg genius.
Although young, Mr: Clarke is a man of
wide experience, and he graces the tri
pod in a way that stamps him as s real
newspaper man. He is bold and fear
less—aggressive, in other words—and he
is doing some mighty good work for
Smithville. Ho is only twenty years of
ago, but since he wss thirteen he has
been In the badness. When ho wss only
sixteen bo was editor nod proprietor of
the Statesboro (Ga.) Eagle, which paper
he sold to remove to Smithville la ’801
Since his advent in this place Mr, Clarke
has mad* some warm fri*nfls,and he
deserves them, for George Clarice U one
of those mow who, tree as steel to his
friends, always gives the opposition s
chance. If he doeen’t inscribe bis name
“sway np yonder” In the newspaper
business it wont be his fault.
And talking shout newspapers brings
to mind that Smithville Is the place
where Frank L. Stanton stepped from
“the case” to fame; end you just ought
to bear the folks down there talk about
him!
Hon. J. F. Watson, judge of the Lee
county court, makes his home in Smith-
ville, but It is -more than probable that
after January he will become s resident
of Amerious and enter the legal tourney
for which his large experience and
depth of legal lore so well befit him.
While his removal will be a loss to
Smithville it will be a gain for Ameri
cas. He has worn the ermine as county
judge In Lee county for six years, and
every legal light In the connty burns the
brighter for his presence.
One of the leading men In Lee county IFIM/ 1 !
Is G. W. Warwick, attorney-at-law. Mr. l\ii'|vl
Warwick Is one of those men whose ev
ery presence speaks of the majesty of
the law. Deeply versed In - jurispru
dence, as It wells up from Blaukatone
and permeates the whole of the civilized
world, he is of that well-balanced na
ture that knows only justice. He is
honored, respected and beloved by all
who know him, .and, what adds to the
beauty of his well-rounded character,
he is an ardent churchm.in. Ho is, of
all men, sans peuer. et sans reproach.
1 met Hon. W. I),. Welle, tho senior of
the firm of Welle, Burton A McManus.
He la the representative from this coun-
ty, and, like a damaaceno blade, is as
true. He is a worthy representative not
only of this county, but of his father,
Mr. William Wells, who years and years
ago built the grist mill on Muckaloochee
creek, the pretty stream that steals
away down the grassy hollows and
through the pretty valleys of Lee coun
ty. Toe mill furnishes meal for Lee
and adjacent counties, and it la expected
that, when certain improvements about
the mill proper and the sidetracks are
put in, the mill will tarn out about 500
or 1,500 bushels per week. Mr. Wells
says that hewtli see that every detail
that goes to make up a perfect mill Is
carried out, and Smlthville’s citizens are
looking forward to great things from
the Muckaloochee mill.
Of Mr. Wells himself, too much can
not be said about that gentleman. Ho
fought vigorously for every measure
that was Introduced in the lately ad
journed legislature for the benefit of
Smithville and Loo county, and there are
already Indications of higher honors
that are to bo thrust upon him.
Smithville is so healthy that physi
cians are novor needed—that Is, hardly
ever—but whatever wnnts the people of
the town have, so far as a family physl
clan Is concerned, are attended to by
Drs, W. T. Simpson and J. F. McMatb.
Thoso gentlemen aro favorites in all the
families in and around here, and they
look closely after the temporal welfare
of tho residents of Smithville and its
vicinity with an energy that is worthy of
emulation in larger places.
To use a homely phrase, “they know
their business and they attend to it.”
Last, but not losst by a good deal, is
Justice J. D. Snellgrove, who holds the
scales for the blind Goddess, so for as
SmlthvlUs end its district Is concerned.
He is a man of many excellent parts and
Is so honor to Us town and county.
Mow In Conclusion.
I have triod faithfully to givoyou
some idea of what SmlthvlUs is sad if I
have failed in any degree it has been an
error of the brain Instead of the heart,
for I am really In love with the place
and the people.
There is no doubt but that the rosy
Unted fingers of the Future are already
upon the hasps and clasps of the gates
to Success and Prosperity, and when
once they are opened Smithville will
win the race by a length!
The sterling worth of the business
men of Smithville—the keen, shrewd
men who always make a town—have de
cided Smlthville’s future and baring
done so, the results may confidently bo
expected.
Keep an eye on SmltUvllle!
Fuank Hamilton G'oxoi.kv.
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Thrilling and Terrific
2 & 4 Horse Chariot Races
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For Over Fifty Year,
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup has been
used for children teething. It soothes
the child, softens the gums, allays all
pain, cures wind collo, and la the best
remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents
a bottle. Sold by all druggists through
out the world.
When Baby wss sick, we *sve bar Castoria.
When shews! s Child, toe cried toe Caaiofis.
When she became Kiss; she clung to Castoria
Vheoshthad Children, she gars them Caatorie.
A little sugar added to beets, corn,
peas, squash, etc., daring or after cook
ing will Improve them, particularly If
poor.
Perfect action and perfect health re
sult from tbs use of DeWltt’s Little
Early risers, s perfect little pUL For
sale by the Davenport Drag Company.
A sack of the best salt standing where
there la a smell of fteh or any objection
able odor win absorb the flavor.
Don’t storm the system os yon would
a fort. If held bv the enemy, const!-
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These Uttla pills are wonderful eon-
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aytp teres incident to * cfcango If
IT entirely and permanently relieve} all pw®*
Incident to female rtisoo*c«. indigeotloQe J*g*
ssS
up from tbe first done, it maxes women
• REGULAR, HEALTHY ARO HAPPY.
For tbe cure of hysteria, neuralgia. orsntM
pains, rsatlesanees. nervousness, etc., it is wun*
out a rival or a peer In the whole range of ms-
terla medico. Ills not a so-called patent ■sedl-
cfns, bat U Is prepared by the direction of sa
.mln.nl ■pn-Guiit. who hu modo l.motodU-
HM a Ufa Mod,. It o«,tr MU. Midi,
A PANACEA FOB 8UFFEBINQ WOMEN,
Thmusads ol whom stioat lu vino, ood mjM
iu pralao. By Iho ooo ol Loiomal thewhoi.
ffl^jSMroftKosodMdilovi-M^Mj
II ABBOTT’S ,
EAS W
cor^Ss m
Bunions 43
pAM/.;
MspeedilV^
8te^fc W:THOl)I
s vo WARTS
PAIN.
For sola by tha DAVENPORT DBU0
COMPANY Americas, Ga.