Newspaper Page Text
THE ASHBURN
H. I). SMITH. EDITOR.
POULAN a
’::rj
i
«SJ>? xxvaxxxYcoc toacococr cm
iccoocouunee*.
Was thought to be a false
report , but was found to be
true.
News broke out among the
people of Worth county that
McGirt &
McPhaul
Were selling Goods cheaper
than any other merchants in the
county , which was investigated
and found correct.
Now we ash the people of
Worth and adjoining counties
to come and examine our line of
1
A A:
YYe Carry a Side Line of
Wash Pots,
Dinner Pots,
Stoves,
Stove Furniture,
Plows,
Plow Gear
M All Farming; Utensils.
FURNITURE!
FURNITURE!
FURNITURE!
Crocltcry
—AND ALL—
Heavy Groceries.
CLOTHING!
We have a large lot of
Clothing selected for the Fall
Trade , and we want to sell
them rapidly. We have pul
them at very low prices. We
can save you enough of money
on one suit of Clothes to pay
you for coming to Poulan.
AVhen you want Hats, come tc
see ns.
AVhen you want Shoes, come tc
see us.
AVhen you want Suits, come tc
see us.
AVhen you want Harness, come tc
see us.
AVhen yon want Groceries, come tc
see us.
AA'heu you want Stoves, come to
see ns.
When you want Furniture, come to
see us.
AVe have good and polite salesmen,
eo that when you come to see ns,
goods will be thrown down to you for
your examination.
AVe carry everything in the HARD-
MARE LINE from a handsome File
to a Grind Rock.
■tobacco.
Everything from a pinch of Snuff tc
a box of Tobacco.
Call and examine our Goods aud gel
prices. AA T e will take pleasure in
showing you. RICE
AA'e have one of the best
MILLS in the country. Bring your
- ■ugh rice and let ns hull it,
Have your corn grouud here.
\A T e will gin your cotton for you and
then buy it or ship it from our ware¬
house free of drayage.
Turn your face this way and make
0 ur store headquarters for trade.
McGirt & McPhaul.
ASHBURN. WORTH CO.. GA.. FRIDAY. AUGUST 27, 1897.
UNFAVORABLE CROP REPORTS
CAUSE A FLURRY.
’HURTS ARE VERY MUCH EXCITED.
Fleecy Staple Comes In ns a Kival for
Wheat In Kapully Advancing
Prices.
The opening cull of the cotton mar¬
ket at New York Monday was attended
with great excitement.
The shorts were panic-stricken by a
! avge number of bull orders and a
sharp advance in Liverpool, Crop
news w as also decidedly bullish, too
much rain in the Atlantic states and
the Mississippi valley, according to
reliable reports, having done exten¬
sive damage, while worms in other
sections were said to ho infesting the
staple greatly to its detriment.
The market opened irregular, with
trades in different parts of the ring
showing a range of 2@3 points. Au¬
gust opened 13 points higher, Septem¬
ber 17, October 22, and November 27.
The rest of the list showed au advance
of 21 to 20 points, the opening range
13 to 17 points above Saturday’s clos¬
ing figure.
The trading was the heaviest in near
months. Over 25,000 bales changed
hands on the call, and at 11:30 tran¬
sactions aggregated 55,000 hales.
New Orleans and Liverpool sent sell¬
ing orders early, but became active
buyers as the market advanced. Com¬
mission houses were heavy purchasers.
Selling for profits by timid bulls
caused a reaction of fi@9 points di¬
rectly folloNving the call, and at 11:30,
after violent fluctuations, the market
was very feverish at a net advance of
20 to 25 points.
AVorld’s visible, September 1, 1895,
was 2,500,000 bales, spinners’ reserves
were estimated as extremely heavy,
having been bought up at low prices.
Cotton was worth bore ;;c more than it
is now when we don’t expect the visi¬
ble to be over 800,000 aud knCw the
invisible to be decidedly less than in
1895. The long expected speculative
revival in cotton seems to have set in.
PLANS SUBMITTED.
Miners ami Operators Make Propositions
For Settlement of Strike.
At a meeting of operators and
miners at Pittsburg, Pa., Monday,
propositions looking to a settlement
of tbe strike were presented by both
sides. Three propositions were of¬
fered hy the operators as follows:
Miners to resume work at the 54
cent rate pending a decision of aboard
of arbitration.
Miners to resume work at au inter¬
mediate rate between the rate demand¬
ed and the one paid prior to the sus¬
pension, pending a decision of a board
of arbitration.
Miners to resume operations with¬
out price named, pending a decision
of a board of arbitration.
The proposition submitted by the
officers of the miners to tlio special
committee was as follows;
Miners to resume work at the 69
cent rate pending the decision of a
board of arbitration.
The propositions were talked over
in an informal manner by both sides
when an adjournment was taken until
10 o’clock Tuesday morning.
NORTH CAROLINA MILLS.
6tat« Labor Commis.m'onur I’cporls on
Spindle* and Kmploycus.
State Labor Commissioner Hamrick
of North Carolina has completed his
compilation of mill statistics and says
there are 206 cotton, fifteen woolen
and two silk mills, making a total of
223,with 1,030,000 spindles and 23,000
looms.
Gaston leads in spindles, having
113,000, Mecklenburg lias 81,000 and
Rutherford 80,000. There are mills
in forty-seven of the ninety-six coun¬
ties, In the number of factories Gas¬
ton leads with twenty-three, Alamance
having twenty, Randolph eighteen and
Mecklenburg sixteen. Rutherford lias
the largest mill with 74,000 spindles
and 2,400 looms. Hurry county has
one-third of all woolen mills.
The mill employing the most opera¬
tives is Henrietta,in Rutherford, which
has 530 men, 665 women and 345 chil¬
dren.
ASK FOR LOWER RATES.
N’.-w York’s Move To Secure Trade Arouses
Southern Citien*
All the trade centers in the south
appear to have been aroused by New
York’s blow about increased buying
there by the merchants of this section.
New Orleans, Montgomery, Chatta-
nooga and Knoxville have all made
application to the Southeastern Pa's-
enger Association for excursion rates
liVe those given to New York, aud a
committee from the New Atlanta Mer¬
chants’and Manufacturers’ Association
has been in conference with
passenger officials, though the formal
application to the Southeastern Pass¬
enger Association for low rates has not
been made.
SOUTHERN PROGRESS.
Industries lOstabllslied in the South Du¬
ring the Vast Week.
Among the moat important n nv in¬
dustries reported for the past wed, are
the following: The Deratin'Compress
Co., capital §15,000, New Decatur,
Ala.: ail o’eetrie power plant to he
erected at Pensacola, Fla., by a $200,-
000 company; large flouring mills at
Crisman and New Market, Va., and
Sedan, AA r . Ya.; the Gulfport Land and
Improvement Co., capital §200,000,
at Gulfport, Miss.; the G. AV. McDon¬
ald Go., capital §1,000,000, at Clarks¬
burg, W. Ya., to mine coal, manufac¬
ture coke, etc., and the Columbia Gold
Mining Co., capital §30,000, at Rirli-
mond, Ya. The Golgiu Cigarette and
Tobacco Co., capital §10,000, lias been
chartered at Richmond, Ya., and
woodworking plants will he established
at Musgrovo, Ga.; Hartford, Ky,;
Shreveport, La., and at Not Moore and
Wilmington, N. C.
All reports from southern manufac¬
turers and business men continue en¬
couraging and business prospects have
not been so favorable for many years.
A number of idle manufacturing
plants have resumed work during the
past week and Bessemer pig iron has
been advanced. Prices for agricultu¬
ral products are also advancing and
heavy exports of wheat and corn are
reported.
In the south the iron and steel trade
is steadily improving and business
among the textile and lumber mills is
active. — Tradesman (Chattanooga,
Ten n.)
V LOSS TO THE BUSINESS WORLD.
The Demise <>t* John 1*. Lovell Kliuits
Ciei\ev*A\ Kxpyesaiona of Kegvet.
Seldom lias there been such a
general expression of sympathy over
the loss of one whose life has been
devoted to business pursuits, as has
been called forth by the recent death
at Cottage City, Mass., of that vener¬
able landmark of the business world,
tlie late Jolin P. Lovell, founder and
president of the John ]?. Lovell Arms
Company, of Boston. Numerous mes¬
sages and letters of condolence on the
death of the honored father have been
received by Col. Benjamin S. Lovell,
treasurer of the Lovell Anns Com¬
pany. The wide scope covered by
these communications is in itself evi-
deuce of the great regard in which lie
was held by the leaders in business
and public life.
These expressions of sympathy were
not confined to New England, but they
wove received froin every prominent
business centre of t’e North, East,
West and South—in fact, from every
portion of the Union; because the
name of John P. Lovell, and the, cor¬
poration created by him, have been
for more than a half century the
synonym of honest dealing and busi¬
ness integrity. Even from English
firms with whom Mr, Lovell had en¬
joyed tlio pleasantest business rela¬
tions for more tlmn fifty year* Colonel
Lovell lias received messages of con¬
dolence on the death of his father.
DENIAL FROM YVEYLEK.
Says Kvangalina C’iHii<*i*og Has
Not S»n»t<*n«;e<l or Tried.
Captain General Weyler, in a cable
dispatch from Havana to tbe New
Yorlv World, denies the report that,
Evangclina Cisneros, a Cuban girl of
eighteen, of sensational beauty, gentle
breeding and pure life, had been tried
or sentenced to imprisonment, for
twenty years in the Spanish penal col¬
ony at Ceuta,
The girl is the niece of the presi¬
dent of the Cuban republic. General
Weyler’s dispatch to the World reads
as follows;
“For judicial reasons there Is ori trial in
the preliminary stages a person named
Evangclina Gossio Cisneros, who deceitfully
lured to Imr house the military commander
of the Isle of Pines, had men posted secret¬
ly, who tied him and attempted to assassin¬
ate Dim. This case is in its preliminary
stages, and has not as yet been on trial hy a
competent tribunal, and consequently no
sentence has as yet been passed nor ap¬
proved by me. I answer The World with
the frankness and truth that characterize
all my acts. WKVr.KK.”
USE OF TOBACCO FORBIDDEN.
Central Kailroart Say* Kinployes Must Ab-
jlire t be Weed.
Among the now ™l„ —nlg.tri
by the Central Railroad o 1 Georgia
for tbe government of its employes, is
one which forbids the use of tobacco
around any passenger station and the
use of it by trainmen on passenger
trains.
MODE MILLS RESUME.
New England Factories Start I p After
Idleness—Outlook Enouraging;.
Dispatches from different New Eng-
land manufacturing centers announce
that many cotton mills which have
been , idle resumed i operation . ,, M \r, m „,i„_ lay.
During a part of July and August
thousands of spindles were not operat-
«•< <» »cti„„ owl« K (»«»»,(,(,».
tory conditions winch prevailed, either
iu the finished goods or new cotton
market, or to the need of repairs.
In addition to this several other
mills closed for two weeks in accord-
anee with tlieir annual midsummer
custom. Many of the Fall River mills
resumed operation last week.
TUB S.tIJItATIl
INTERNATIONAL LESSON COMMENTS
FOR AUGUST 29.
Lc-sou Tc\(; “I'nul Oppose,! to MphcsuK.*'
Arts vix., -Jl-ttl—finhlcu Text*. I.vikv
xii., l.» — ('omiui'iitur.v on the Day's
Lesson by tin* IJov. l>. U, Strums,
21 . "After tliese tiling", ........ailed, Paul
purposed in the spirit to go to Jerusalem,
saying,‘After i Have Ueeu tiicr.' I must also
see Koine.’’’ Our last lesson in tile Acts
left Paul nt Corinth, where lie couttuued a
year ami six months tenehing flic word of
• old. lie Mien retnrued to Antioch in Syria,
taking his Ephesus, (’lesarea anil Jerusalem on
way. After some lime spout nt Antioch
Inal started mi his third missionary tour,
going through (inlntin and Phrygia till lie
cumo to Ephesus, where lie had left Ai|uiln
and 1’rlsrilln, and to wlilcli city lie had
promised to return. Mod willing Ephesus (chapter
xviii., 21). lie, tarried at over
two years (xix., 10; xx., 31), and all the
province of Asia heard the word of the Lord
Jesus, so that many believed, the nmne of
the Lord Jesus was magnified, the word of
thousands Mod grew mightily dollars’ and worth prevailed, of bad books and
of
Were burned. Here begins our lesson.
Macedonia 22. “His purpose was to go through
and Actinia, where lie had been
on his previous tour, but he still tarries in
Asia a season white he sends TimotUeus and
Erastus ahead of him into Macedonia. In
a future lesssou we shall lmvo Ids testimony
as to his labors in Asia. Whether sojourn¬
ing or journeying his one ambition was
I hat Christ should he magnified in hint and
that ho might better know Him (Phil. i„
20; ill., 10).
23. ‘‘And about that time there arose no
small stir concerning the way" (II. Vd. In
the margin of chapter ix\, 2, tills way is
called “The Way." gee also in the It. V.
chapters xix., 9; xxii., 4; xxiV., H, 22. Jesus
Himself said, “1 am the. Way” "Blessed (Jas. xiv.,0).
In Ps. cxix., 1, we read, are the
uudeflled in the way who walk in the law
of the Lord. It is a heavenly way, hut very It Is
narrow, and few (here be that Mud it.
in Him, and with Him and excludes all that
is not of Him.
24,25. “Sirs, ye know that hy this craft
we have our wealth.” This is the begin¬
ning of the address of Demetrius, a silver¬
smith, to his fellow workmen, whom ho had
called together. Ills theme was tlioircraft
or trade or manner of making money, a
subject which will get au interested avail-
ence almost any time. Witness the labor
organizations and tlio strikes often as¬
sociated therewith in our own day. What¬
ever will seem to turn more money into
people’s pockets is apt to be an Interesting
subject. Ephesus, but almost
2/k “Not alone at
throughout all Asia, this Paul hath per-
snaded and testimony turned away much people.”
What a good to Paul, or rather
to the Spirit’s work through Paul, in the
name of the Lord Jesus! The Lord, through
him, had turned many from idols unto Hod
(I Iliess. i., if), so many that the idol busi¬
ness was suffering severely, and those in¬
terested were greatly stirred.
27. “Not only this our craft is in danger
to be sot at nought, but also that the tem¬
ple, of the great goddess Diana should be
despised.” It would never do to lmve sueli
magnificence, that nil the world worshiped,
despised, for what would all the world ever
do without Diana? Vet three men dared
to despise Nebuchadnezzar's image, which
all the world worshiped, will and dare the time despise will
come when many to
anotiier image, which all the world will
worship (Itev. xlif., 3, 15), choosing dentil
rather than sueli favor.
2H. “And when they heard they were
full of wrath and cried out, si ‘living, ‘Great
is Diana of the Eplieslnns. somebody; . Th Hlmon Midas
boasted himself to bo
the sorcerer gave out that, himself was
some great one; the coming antichrist will
proclaim that ho himself is Hod, and many
will believe it, and great will lie his wrath
against all who oppose him. The devil will
gather the armies of earth against Mod both
at the beginning and end of the next thou¬
sand years, but all will he overcome by tint
Lamb, for lie is King of kings and Lord of
lords (itev. xix., 13; xx., H; xvil., 14; 1J
These, ii., 4, 8).
23. “And the whole city was filled with
confusion.” Confusion and chaos are not
the work of Mod, but of tlm devil, whether
in an individual or in a household or in
the world, and therefore some think that
the work of the devil may lie seen as far
hack in the Bible story as Men. t,, 2; that
in tiio beginning Mod must have created
ail sponsthTo things good and that an enemy was re-
for the ediaos of verse 2.
30,31, Paul would willingly have stood
by his friends, who for his sake and for
Christ’s sake were in danger, but already Ills friends been
would not suffer him. lie had
stoned and left for dead, and be was ready
any time to die for Christ (xiv., 19; xxi.,
13), It was never with him a thought or
personal comfort, but only of how lie could
magnify Christ. circumstances Sometimes we forward are when com¬
pelled by to go
we would fain keep back and sometimes to
keep back when we would fain go forward.
The way of rest is to do what you can go
forward if the way opens, and, if not, stay.
“Do as occasion serve thee, for Mod Is with
thee” ft Sam. x„ 7>. Trust Him to manage
<*vc he <juiet rything, and and confident. believe that lie does, and
32. “Home therefore cried one tiling, and
some another, for the assembly was con-
fused, and the more part know not where¬
fore they were come together.” This was
notan assembly of believers, but Mod, of the
world’s pooplc, the enemies of and
yet it is a fair description of th« so called
church of to-day, and for the preaehersareery- and It might he
fng one tiling another,
said that the most of those who go to
church once a week know not why they go
or what they really do believe. of
33. “And they drew Alexander out the
B'S’Sj IK
Tim., iv., 14, Alexander the coppersmith,
then the smiths were rigiit in their squab-
bio, silversmiths and coppersmiths (verse
24), or in other words, jt was business and
Idolatry versus Christ, It certainly should
not be so that, business should be against
Christ, but it Is too much the ease, and will
be very decidedly so at the time of Ills
coming In power and glory (Itev. xili., 17;
Xviii., il-18).
34. “When they knew that lie was a Jew,
all with one voice, about the space of two
hours, cried out, Groat 1 is Diana of the
Ephesians.” How few er ■y out, “Great is
Jesus of Nazareth!” yet “1 lira hath Mod ex-
alted" (Acts v., 31), and Hfs’inune Ifim alone, giving
Him a name, and at every knee
xhouhl how (1‘hil ii„ U10), The time will
come when all who exalt themselves against
Him shall be brought down, and the Lord
alone exalted in that. Therefore It is wise
to cease from men whose breath is in his
It has been shown that out of 1,000*
0< 0 | • year" >pIN 225 women reached the age
of ln<) while only 82 men com-
pitted the kentury. Just why the
women managd to get most out of ex¬
istence is still an Oi.sn ouestiou.
I (1 nil
i VJi ■J
• it DEALERS IX • M
fellow Pie Lumber
Ashburn, Ga.
INI JSSIX
411 Orta lor i
Laths , Shingles , Slaves,
Car Sills , Bridge Stuff,
Flooring , Moulding , Brack¬
ets,, Ceiling, Etc.,
Will Receive Prompt Atfsntioo.
0
ii e carry a well selected ami assorted
stock of
Dry Goods,
Hardware,
Groceries, Etc.
If in need of anything in
CLOTHING,
Such as MEN’S AND BOYS’
SUITS, We Can Fit You.
WE HAVE A NICE STOCK OF
LADIES’ DRESS GOODS AND
TRIMMINGS
would be pleased to show
the ladies of Asliburn and am-
rounding country.
i
OUR CANDIES...
Are Fresh and Fine.
Flour,
Meat,
Grits,
Itice,
Sugar
>X< Meal, — ^5
And fact , any and , eveij .n thing :„„(i,«t that is
in
kept in a ii rat-class Grocery House can
be had at our Large Brick Store as
olmap ... as the ,.i, -up- .
We Larry rllll Lilia .
H Ol
FUHNITUH.B:
UP STAIRS
Our Stuck of SHOES Is Complete, with
a Specialty of Ladies’ aud Chil¬
dren’s Flue Sunday Wear,
We also handle the best brands of
Cigars, Tobacco , Snuff, Etc.
Full line of the best makes of
STOVES NOW ON HAND.
All kinds of STOCK FEED at
REASONABLE PRICES.
The citizens of Ashburn and sur¬
rounding country are cordially invited
to call and inspect our stock.
We have a Wagon Yard and Stalls,
Feed Troughs, etc., for the conveni¬
ence of our customers especially.
Respectfully,
J. S. BETTS & CO.
VOL. VI. NO.
Dr. J. F. Gardner,
I'liygicinn and Surgeon.
Calls Answered Promptly
DAY AND NIGHT.
Special attention given to disease*
of women and children.
Residence at the Hicks place.
ASH BURN, GEORGIA.
DR. J. F. GREGORY A CO.,
SPECIALISTS.
Rupture, Catarrh, Rectal Diseases,
Hemorrhoids (Riles), Fistulas Cured.
NO KN IKK, NO PAIN.
Room No. 1, Heard Building,
Oordele, Ga.
1(57 Cotton Ave., Macon, Ga.
WARREN L. STORY,
Physician and Surgeon,
SYCAHOBH, OA.
Diseases of Nose aud Throat,
im. wTjTturner,
Physician and Surgeon,
AsHiirns, oa.
Special Attention Given to Diseases of
Women and Children.
Office in Room No. 2, Betts Build-
ing.
Residence: W. A. Shingler’s.
Calls Answered Day or Night.
Telephone No. 1H.
DR. T. H. THRASHER,
Physician and Surgeon,
Ashburn, Georgia.
General Practice Solicited. Office
iu the Christian Building.
C. E. WALKER,
Physician and Surgeon,
Sycamobb, -;- Georgia.
GKO. W. COOPER,
DENTIST,
Ashburn, Gkoboia.
Office, Boom No. 4, Betts Building.
W. B. CONE, D. D. S.
I Make a Specialty of Crown, Bridges
and Replantations.
Teeth Extracted Without Pftiu.
Ashburn, . \ Gkoboia.
AV. T. WILLIAMS,
Attorney nt Law.
Land and Collections,
Sycamore, -:- Gkoboia.
A. J. DAVIS,
Attorney nt Law,
Ashburn, -;- Gkoboia.
Real Estate and Collections.
Prompt attention to all business placed
in our hands.
B. H. WHITE,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
Ahhiickv, Gkoboia.
Will practice in all the Courts, State
and Federal,
J. G. IMLHILL,
Attorney at Law,
Sylvester, - - Gkoboia.
Practice in all the Courts. Patronage
Solicited.
W. A. HAAVKINS,
Attorney at Law,
e Building, Rooms 4 aud 5,
Cokokle, Gkoboia.
Prompt attention given to all business
intrusted to my care.
John F. Powell, J. W. Powalx,
Vienna, Ga. Asliburn, Ga.
JNO. F. POWELL A HON,
Attorneys at Law.
AVe practice in all the courts. Im¬
mediate and careful attention given to
business placed in our hands. Em¬
ploying one secures services of both.
Business solicited and inquiries
promptly answered.
FRANK PARK,
Attorney - at - Law,
Pollan, Geobgia.
B. AV. ADKINS,
Attorney at Law,
Collections a Specialty,
Poulan, Georgia.