Newspaper Page Text
The Fitzgerald Leader
SstablislTed 1890.
VOL. II.
THE FITZGERALD LEADER.
fficial Newspaperof Irwin County, Georgia. Ga.
Rloial Newspaper of City of Fitzgerald.
1'UBLISrtED EVEHY THUK8DAY BY
'o' KNAPP ’[editors and PuBMSHEUS.
Subscription Kates:— One copy, one year
1.50; Six months, Too; Three months, 50o.
- erms— Invariably in advance.
Job and advertising rates made known on
pplioation. Your patronage solicited.
COUNTY OFFICIALS.
. C. Smith,Judge Sup. Conrt.Hawhinville.Ga McRae,
om Eason, Solicitor Sup. Court.
. It. Clements, Co. Judge, Trwinville.
. E. Burch. Co. Solicitcr, Fitzgerald,
■ J Lee. Ordinary. Irwinville,
. B. D. Paulk, Clerk Sup. Court, Irwinville,
;. V. Handley, Sheriff, Fitzgerald,
. L. Royal, Tax Receiver, Sycamore,
. R. Paulk, Tax Collector, Ocllla,
Walker, Co. Treasurer. Irwinville. “
ames
1. J. Hogan, Co. Surveyor, Minnie,
iarion Dixon, School Com., Ocilin,
I. Henderson, Co. Commissioner,
IFTON AND NORTHEASTERN R. R.
“SOLDIERS’ COLONY ROUTE.”
General Offices, Tifton, Georgia.
ol. No 3- Feb. 9. 1897. No. 2. No. 4.
ii. P. M. P. M. p. M.
.
:30 4:00 Lv. Tilton, Ga. Ar. 12:00 7:15
:45 4:13 if Brighton 11:45 7:00
:5B 4:22 f Harding. 11:36 6:51
:15 4:42 If Piuetta. |11:16 11:31
:31 4:4S Irwin. 11:10 6:25
1:43 5:00 f Fletclier. 110:50 6:13
000 5:15 1 Ar. Fitzgerald.Lv-110:45 6:00
Trains Nos. 1, 2.3 and 4 run daily except
ri-atns Nos. 7 and 8 run on Sunday only.
'ridns'conneeVat'ri'ftonwUh railroads,and Georgia Plant and System Ala-
d G. S. & F.
ma at Fitzgerald. President.
4. H.Tift, Vice-President.
IV. O. Tift. Traffic Manager.
F. G. Boatbiqht,
GEORGIA & ALABAMA RAILWAY,
“THE SAVANNAH SHORT LINE.”
issenger Schedule, Effective June 1, ’97,
M A. M. A. M. P. M.
. Delia Ar 10 35 5 05
v » 23 10 55 Lv Fitzgerald 9 45 4 35
.: oo 11 25 Lv. Ar.
• oo 12 25 Ar. Abbeville, Lv. 7 45 3 35
M. P. M. 9 05 2 15
1 40 Cordeie 7 20 12 50
3 00 Ainericus
P. M. A. *1.
7 .55 Montgomery 7 50
J5 4 15 Halena 7 7 25
.'ii 8 35 Ar. Savannah Lv. 30
Sunday—Lv. Ocilla 5 15 p. m; Ar. 9 30 a. m.
{ .Abbeville6 40p.m.; Lv.8 00a.m.
C nose connections at all junctions and ter-
nal points for Vice.Pres. all poiuts. &Gen. Mgr.
cie Gabret, A. Pope, Gen. Pas. Agt.
:ras. N. Right. Ass'tGen'l Pass. Agt.
Ed Stalmngs, T. P. A., Fitzgerald.
Postofflce.
Mail closes at 10:50 a. m. and 5:30 p. m.
Mail closes 20 minutes earlier Sunday even-
m Sace from 7 to 7:30 p. m.
open a. m. °
Office open Sunday from_ h prefer. P. M
Christian Science.
Services every Sunday morning 10:30: Sun¬
day school 11:30. and Sunday evening Odd Fellows services
at 7:30, over McCollum’s in the
ball Fine avenue. A cordial invitation is ex¬
tended to all of whatever creed or calling.
CHENEY & BURCH,
ATTO R N E Y-AT- LAW,
Office— In Paulk Building. Grant Street,
FITZGERALD, ’ GEORGIA.
WAY & JAY,
Attorney-at-Law,
Fitzgerald, Georgia.
Office —In the Slayton & Kern building; on
Pine avenue. _
E. W. Ryman, Is. Kennedy,
Of South Dakota. Of Savannah.
RYMAN & KENNEDY,
1 In Fitzgerald Block.
Office—
Be On the Safe Side
And Take Your Work to
H. WETTSTEIN,
The Pioneer Jeweler.
patches, Diamonds, .Jewelery, Spectacles, Clocks, etc., Silver- at
: • ware,
i. Lowest Living Rates.
FITZGERALD, GEORGIA,
Grant St. Between Pine and Central Ava.
DR. J. H. POWELL,
(Late of the Best American Hospitals)
Specialist in Chronic Diseases,
Of Men anti Women,
Office, 8. Grant street, near Magnolia. (Per¬
manently located.)
Drs. C. 1 & L> C. Holtzdorf,
Office— In Slayton & Kern building, ‘oppo¬
site Commercial hotel, Fitzgerald, Ga
Phone 31.
WE
List - Property
+ ■■■'■.....= AND s -f
Pay : Taxes
For non-resident property owners. We also
furnish Abstract ol Titles when desired. En¬
close stamp giving full information,
I MWMl M & CO, Fiasgerald, 6a,
Steal Estate Dealers.
“MAN WAS BORN TO HUSTLE,”
FITZGERALD, IRWIN COUNTY, .GEORGIA, AUGUST 19, 1897.
The people of Key West, Fla., say
that Johnson, the rapist, must be
hung by law at once or he will be
lynched.
The Rome Tribune says a delicate
girl can ride a score of miles on a bi-
hycle, but can’t help her mother wash
the dishes._
A Rome cotton mill has secured a
coutract to make 1,300,000 yards of
ducking to be used in making Uncle
Sam’s mail sacks.
The fashion papers announce that
the latest thing in garters is a silver
snake, But this is not the prettiest
thing in g arters.
___
Irwin county’s taxable property
shows a gain of SI85,000 over last
year’s assessments,and $50,000 of this
gain is said to be in Fitzgerald.—Ab¬
beville Chronicle.
Fitzgerald is not dead yet, as many
predicted she would be, ere this, but
; s still growing, and is destined to be
one of Georgia’s largest cities—
Swainsboro Herald. .
The shirt waist girl with the frizz
iron curl and the straw hat weird and
queer, now walks the street with a
smile that’s sweet, and her necktie
under her ear.—New York Press.
Wiregrass Georgia wouldn’t ex¬
change her climate, her health and
her agricultural resources for all the
gold mines on the western slope, ob¬
serves the Waycross Herald.
Dogs, as a food product, are now
worth $2 a pound in the Klondike re¬
gions. Here is a chance for some en¬
terprising speculator to coin money
out of poodles which can be had for
the aski ng.
The democrats of Virginia have en¬
dorsed tiie Chicago platform and have
nominated J. II. Taylor for the gov¬
ernorship. The State convention was
full of enthusiasm and the leaders say
they are going to make a winning
fight.
Chicago men are nothing if not re¬
sourceful and progressive. A case lias
just come to light where one of them
supported five wives on a salary of $60
a month. Incidently he had each of
his wives write to her parents for as¬
sistance with marked regularity.
Mr John T. Howell, one of Sum¬
ter’s prosperous farmers, brought in a
very peculiar species of watermelon
yesterday. They were yellow as
pumpkins on the outside, while their
meat was almost blood red, dotted
here and there with black seeds.
Nothing like them was ever seen in
Americus before.—Times-Recorder.
The Augusta News hits hard. It
says that “a Chicago child was in love
at 6, engaged at 10 and married at 14.
Now, if she is divorced at 16, in the
vaudeville at 17 and takes rough on
rats at 23, she will have completed
the circuit in much less time than
many foolish women.”
If advertising does not pay why is it
that the Youth’s Companion gets over
$800 a year for a one-inch space each
issue? How is it that the Ladies’
Home Journal gets $4,000 for a page
ad? Why do four advertisers pay $6,-
000 each for a quarter-page ad in the
back cover in Munsey’s Magazine?
Are advertisers throwing money away
like this, or does it really pay them?—
Ad Sense.
Cotton has begun to come in, and in
a month or so there will be a steady
flow of coin of the realm into the sun¬
ny South. If that “wave of prosper¬
ity” doesn’t put in its appearance
then, we will reluctantly conclude that
there “aint no sicli a ding thing,” and
begin to study the “simmon” and
“bullace” crops, depending on “Brer
Possum” and “Ole Molly Hare” for
fresh meat.—Macon Tribune.
The new system of pressing cotton
into bales of cylindrical shape prom¬
ises to be a great success. A number
of new compresses will be built in the
South this season, and if they prove to
be a success, many more will be con-
structed in time for the next crop.
The company which has been formed
to push the cylindrical process of
baling has a capital of $6,000,000, and
Mr. Searles, of sugar trust fame, is its
president. The company will not only
gin and compress the planter’s cotton,
but will enter the market as buyers
and purchase his crop as well.—Amer¬
icus Times-Recorder.
Of pins it is said that some pne of
the large department stores often or-
der 100 cases at a time. Each case
contains 108 dozen papers and each
paper bolds 360 pins, so a little use of
the multiplication table will show
what an immense thing even the ore
order means. The yearly output of
pins from the largest factory in the
United States, it is claimed, would, if
placed end to end, reach three times
around the world.
Governor Atkinson insists on uni¬
form text books for the schools of the
State and teachers almost unani¬
mously oppose such a scheme. With¬
out knowing all of the ins and outs of
the question it would seem that the
governor is correct. It would stand
to reason that all pupils should be
taught the same, and there is no doubt
but that there some are infinitely su¬
perior to others, and again as the gov¬
ernor has stated, uniformity of books
would mean that they could be bought
much cheaper. It is a fight which has
been coming on for some time and will
probably be settled only when the
legislature takes it up and passes a
definite law upon the subject.—Anaer-
icus Herald.
One of the greatest hits that Pope
Brown seems tc have made in his
speech to the agricultural society at
Tybee was that the farmers paid en¬
tirely toojmuch interest on the money
which they borrowed, and if it were
not for high rates of interest the
farmers would all have money of their
own in the banks. The Honorable
Pope should have gone further and
added that if Georgia had good col¬
lection laws the farmer could borrow
money for very little more than half
what it now costs him. The collection
laws of Georgia as they now stand are
little less than a curse to bo'-rower and
lender alike, yet as soon as there is a
suggestion that they be made better
every borrower in the State seems to
think that such a change would mean
that the lenders would have such ad¬
ditional power that they would in¬
crease rates at once. The very oppo¬
site would be the case as can be seen
in any State where the laws bearing
on this issue are what they should be.
Is there no legislator who has sufii-
cient nerve to introduce such a bill in¬
to the house and fight it through to its
passage into a lawV If there should be
such a one he would accomplish more
for the people of this State by such an
act than has been done in the legisla¬
ture for 20 years.—Americas Herald.
What a Northern Man Can Do.
Abbeville Chronicle,
We have in our office a stalk of su¬
gar cane four feet high, and over five
inches in circumference at the lower
end; an ear of corn eleven inches
long, grown from Missouri seed; two
beautiful ears of white Dent corn,
nine inches long, grown from Georgia
seed and both from the same stalk;
also the finest speciman of the yellow
yam, of this season’s growth, we have
seen.
All these were grown by Mr. 1. S.
Swan on his place about a mile from
town. Mr. Swan is from Minnesota,
and came here less than two years
ago. lie bought land right in the
woods, which was cleared up and
planted in peas last year. This sea¬
son a variety of regular crops were
planted, and though the land is new
and this is Mr. Swan’s first experience
in farming in the South, the specimens
above mentioned show how well he is
succeeding with sugar cane, corn and
potatoes.
Mr. Sw'an says a good yield of corn
is assured, and from the same land he
will get a crop of peas worth nearly as
.much as the corn. After gathering
the peas, he will turn under the vines
and sow alfalfa and oats. He has ex¬
perimented sufficiently witli alfalfa to
prove that it is a success here, and
every one knows this is a splendid oat
country. He has no fears of not being
able to make an ample living on Wil¬
cox county soil.
Mr. Swan’s success, though grati¬
fying, is by no means exceptional.
Hundreds of other northern men have
made money and many have accumu¬
lated a competency by farming in
South Georgia. Some have failed es
meu do everywhere, but in nine cases
out of ten it was for want of either
intelligence or energy.
For all the news read, The Leader.
Anti-llat Ordinance.
The city council of Atlanta are af¬
ter women who wear hats at the thea¬
tre. The following ordinance was
passed at their last meeting:
Be it ordained that it shall be the
duty of the proprietor, lessee or other
persons in charge of each and every
opera house and theatre in the city of
Atlanta to require ladies who attend
performances in such theatres or
opera houses to remove their hats be¬
fore the beginning of and keep them
off during the performance.
“That such proprietor, lessee or
other person in charge of an opera
house rr theatre who shall violate the
preceding section of this ordinance
upon conviction shall be fined in the
recorder’s court not exceeding $100 or
imprisonment not exceeding 30 days.
A Wonderful Institution.
Abbeville Chronicle.
Fitzgeraldhas a labor exchange that
is worthy of imitation in other towns.
It is composed of laborers, manufac¬
turers, mechanics, bakers, butchers,
ice men, druggists, physicians, den¬
tists and dealers in all lines; and they
have a depository where lumber, cord-
wood, charcoal, hay, grain and all
products of labor are received as de¬
posits from members. Checks are is¬
sued against these deposits, and they
pas? at par in all establishments and
among all members of the association.
Tnese checks will buy building ma¬
terial for a house, and pay the brick¬
layer, carpenter, plasterer and painter
—provided one lias enouglt of them.
They will furnish the house, buy
shoes, hats, clothing and groceries for
the family and school books for the
children. They will pay the butcher
and the baker, and are receivable for
hauling lumber or drawing teeth, cut¬
ting wood or cutting hair. They will
buy medicine for the sick, pay the doc¬
tor and the funeral expenses. In fact
they are good for everything but the
crown in the other world. The con¬
cern doesn’t deal in foreign exchange.
* The School Fund Trouble,
Attorney General Terrell has furn¬
ished the following written opinion in
regard to the law covering the school
fund, which has been a source of con¬
siderable worry to the State authori¬
ties recently:
“The legislature at the last session
appropriated $600,000 from general
taxes for support of the common
schools for 1897 and $1,000,000 for
1S98. The tax to raise the sum for
1897 the law provides shall be levied
and collected the present year, but
gives the governor and comptroller-
general no authority to levy anything
this year for 1898. The $1,000,000 for
1898, thelaw further provides,shall he
levied and collected in 1898. If the
legislature at its next session does not
chunge the law the school fund will
get the $600,000 for 1897 and the $1,-
000,000 for 1898.
“Heretofore the special tax col¬
lected early in the year and one-half
of the monthly rental of the State road,
which form part of the school fund,
have been nearly sufficient to meet the
quarterly payments due the teachers
for tne first, second and third quarters,
but inasmuch as the appropriation
from the general taxes for 1896 is so
much larger than for previous years,
and as the general taxes will not be
collected and paid into the treasury
before December of that year the in¬
crease of $400,000 will not be availa¬
ble until December unless the legisla¬
ture makes some provisions to cover
the same. While the legislature in¬
creased the school fund $400,003 for
1898 it provided no means for teach¬
ers to get the benefit of the increase
until the last quarter of the year.
This oversight can and doubtless will
be remedied by appropriate legislation
this fall.”
The latest official estimate of the
population of the United States is 77,-
000,068, and the percapita circulation
$22.63 for every man, woman and
child. The fellow who hasn’t that
much money jingling in his pocket
will doubtless be found as usual de¬
nying the statement or claiming that
the government has given some other
fellow his $22.53.
Allen D. Candler, secretary of State,
is being prominently mentioned by the
State press for govereor. Mr. Can¬
dler is a man of wonderful executive
ability, and would grace the chair of
the governor’s office in a creditable
manner.
.J. 11. U. F. KNAPP, KNAPP, ; | Editornnd Publishers,
NO. 33.
T. W. HAYDE,
DEALER IN I
I I )
| Mouldings, Brick, Lime, Cement, Etc.
a <|> On and after this date we will take orders for While Pine Sash both and Doors and quality for uutek of ^
X jind prompt delivery. We guarantee to meet competion in price that sold in the
goods. It is asked us why we sell nearly all the Sash and Doors are I
city, and our answer is that as we carry strictly home manufactured goods. We are
glad to believe the people realize the importance of protecting home industries and
tnereby keep the money at home, which is a great benefit to our county and Stnte; !
but we occasionally have a customer who has heard that putty does not stick so
well to yellow pine sash as white pine, (which, under our system of preparing the
sash, we are prepared to contradict by a guarantee it will), and for this class of cus¬
tomers we will hereafter be prepared to give them estimates on White Pine goods that lor
quick delivery. While we are at it we desire to call your attention to the fact
we are headquarters for Brick and that it was but a few months ago that we com-
& menced selling brick, at which time a poor quality of brick was selling here at HD.ot)
X X per 1,000. We are now maintaining a yard price on 1.000 brick at of *0.00, Glass, and and in quan- will
titles at a very much lower figure We also carry a large stock
be pleased, on short notice, to make estimates on Plate and Window Glass for store
X fronts. Remember our location on
I Central Av., Opposite the New Cotton Warehouse.
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SfS DRY-GOODS sk
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«4> NOTIONS,
JCUOTHINS #
Shoes, Hats, Caps, »#
a. ^ 1 'J,
* Trunks, Valises, Etc. $
*£■
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Jjjg We invite you to make our Store headquarters. We
1 solicit a part of vour atronage. •4' f*
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HARRTS0N1SBR0S i
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sL> FITZGERALD, GEORGIA.
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j| j sfe
ClearanceSale
Every one knows that a merchant must not
carry goods over from one season to another.
For 30 Days
We shall make a GENUINE CLEARANCE
SALE. You will realize that we mean just
what we say when you come in and get our
prices. We do just as we advertise. Our
stock consists of Mens and Boys’ Suits, black
Alapaca Coats and many other summer Coats
from 75c to $2.00. Mens’ Pants, (light weight)
will be closed out at almost your own price.
Nice Laundred Percale Shirts and Gentlemens’
Straw Hats in latest styles. You will save a
little money by coming to us.
D. C. McCOLLUM,
+jV| •F-5"5‘++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Mi
|{The Corner G rocery.!,. %m
tms. W. WHITCHARD & BRO., Prop’rs. t *i
+ T + +
JO Ti*)T .. .. J We Stock carry and a Poultry full line I Food, of Groceries. the only Feed reliable and Fertilizers Condition Powder. Magic tm
Acts like magic We sell the celebrated “ Atlantic Dissnlved *
J TO 4»; J 2 grades. Bone,” the Call best and fertilzer price our on goods. the market, at same prioe of cheap * 4 *
Corner Thomas and Oconee. ❖
*
, ++++++++4-+++++4‘+4-M-H < ++4.++++4.+++^.^., 4-
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GET Our prices on all classes
of Job work.