Newspaper Page Text
of Rome, is at the Arling
To Establish a Dairy.
Messrs. O. C. Beil and Hubert Mun-
dy, both young men, well known in
Gainesville, will very shortly start a
new enterprise in our city. The enter
prise on foot is the establishment of a
dairy to be called the “O. K. Dairy,”
and to be one of the largest in the state..
Fifty cows will be purchased to start
with and this number will be increased
to one hundred or more as the trade in
creases.
These gentlemen have secured good
pasturage near the city and will install
a Dig separator, with a capacity of two
hundred pounds of butter atone churn
ing. Three wagons will be kept on the
road to deliver the dairy’s output to
customers.
This fills a long felt want of the citi-
of this prosperous city, and they
Miss Nannie Mae Shipp is at home
from Nashville, Tennessee. Miss Shipp
has been a student at Vanderbilt for
some time
Mrs. W. N. Cochrane left this week
for Dahlonega, with her brother, Mr.
Sam Sheffield, who has been visiting
her for some time. ,
*
Mrs. Johnson, nee Miss Lizzie Law-
ton, and children, after several days
stay in this city have returned to their
home in Macon.
Mr. E. V. McConnell of this city, who
has been for sotne years studying den
tistry, has gone to Texas to practice
his chosen profession.
Miss Wilia Strange returned to her
home in Danville. Virginia, Monday, af
ter a pleasant stay with Miss Carrie
Johnson, on Green street.
Mrs; *Snsie Whelles and daughters,
who have been the guests of Mrs* iV.
D, Whelchel, returned to their home m
Augusta Wednesday.
Miss Aline "Ward, who has been the
guest of the family of Mr. V. M.
Montgomery for some time, returned
Birthday Party.
Miss Gertrude Williams entertained
a number of her friends at a birthday
party last Saturday, at her mother’s
home on Green street. Delightful re
freshments were served and the young
people enjoyed themselves immensely.
. Lam bkin of Athens, is visiting
LflaraEdge-
Ag nes Goss is a guest of Miss
^Montgomery.
[ Alma Boring is at home after a
hsS . ;
[to Woodstock..
Frank Wallace was in the city a
Lys this week.
[ an d Mrs. Jeff Fynn of Atlanta,
Utfrs. Boring’s.
I ^ a xwell, of Tallahassee, Flor-
L a t the Langston house.
L Hattie Griffith of Atlanta, is a
si of Miss Etta Mae Hynds. .
[iss’Blanche Boone of Marietta,is the
U of Miss Beulah Evans.
Ls Annie Lou Hood of Lagrange,
RUBBER BELTING.
We are headquarters for rubber
belting, all grades and sizes. Our pri
ces are lower and our stock larger than
any Northeast Georgia house. If you
buy your rubber belting of us you will
never have any complaint to make, and
besides, you will save money.
S. W. DAVIDSON & CO.,
BBK-- ? . Gainesville, Ga.
Lathem Brother’s barber shop is
in the Arlington now. 1
sens
will not be slow in coming to the sup
port of these gentlemen in their efforts
to give our people pure, clean milk ajid
butter. Persons who have good milch
cows for sale would do well to .see the
backers of this movement in regard to
placing them on their dairy farm.
Try Lathem Brothers hot baths
they will make you a new man. *
will connect Gainesville and Dahlon
ega, and also on the municipal road
which will put the center of the town
in dleetrie touch with the Southern
depot , and the two cotton mills. En
gineer Carlile, having completed the
survey of the Dahlonega line and the
line running to ,the Pacolet mills, is
now making the necessary maps for
the builders of the road to work from.
Judge Murray, General Warner and
Colonel Price, representing the com
pany, were in conference over the en
terprise in Dahlonega Thursday and
Friday; This morning the two - first
named will be in-Gainesville to talk the
matter over with our citizens and se
cure frdm our capitalists pledges for
subscriptions to the capital stock to the
modest amount of $15,000. In addition
to giving us the trolleys the railway
company proposes to ask for a lighting
franchise from the city, that it may
furnish the municipality and*private
citizens arc and incandescent lights
enough to turn Gainesville’s night into
brightest day. ■ *
This, -in epitome, is the latest electric
railway news; Behind the scheme Are
Pacolet's Boss Carder.
Mr. D. Schofield, who has been away
for a week or more visiting relatives
and friends in Clarke county, returned
home Saturday. He is to be the boss
carder at the new Pacolet mill at New
Holland.
At this season you begin pricing
hardware, soon to be put in use. Come
to see us before you buy, as our prices
are lower than any other house. See
us now for your rubber belting, mow
ers and rakes, etc,
S. W. DAVIDSON & CO.,
Gainesville, Ga.
Miss Fatima Coker, who presides
with so much grace and dignity over
the millinery department of the J. F.
Murphy Co., left Monday afternoon on
the vestibule for the eastern markets,
to purchase the fall and winter stock
of millinery for the above company.
Miss Coker is a young woman of rare
intellectual attainments and fine busi
ness acumen, and the patrons of the
house with which she is connected will
find everything new, tasty and up-to-
Miss Coker's
the Covington Star. His wife is a
guest of Mrs. G. R. Bickers, on Spring
street,
For fine livery see D. E. Evans.
Services at Baptist Church.
Rev. A. ]. Montcrief of Lagrange,
who has been the gue$t pf prof, A, W,
Yan Hoose fop some tjiqe, will ppeucb
at the First Baptist church Sunday at
the regular bpurs. It bad been sup-,
posed that there would be no service
the Baptist church Sunday, owing tq
the absence of Dr, Wynne, but
Montcrief agreed to fill the pulpit in
the doctor’s stead.
A Sure Remedy Sent to Mayor Mitchell
by a Floridian,
Mayor Mitchell has received from a
party Ip Florida a recipe for curing
hydrophobia. The writer, says that,
noticing accounts of a death from this
terrible disease in our city, he hopes
this will perhaps be of. service in cage
of a similar happening. Our readers
would perhapa do well to preserve the
following, which is an extract from the
Country Gentleman:
*‘I can give facts which may be of use
to somebody, thereby saving life, -the
time between the biting of an animal
by a mad dog and showing signs of hy
drophobia is not less than nine days,
but may be nine months. After the
animal has become rabid, bite or
scratch with the teeth upon a person,
or slobber comidg in contact with a
sore or raw place, would produce hy
drophobia just as though he had been
bitten by a mad dog. Hydrophobia
date in her purchases,
sweet and amiable disposition has won
for her many warm personal friends in
Gainesville, who will greatly miss her
during her stay north.
. Fletcher M. Johnson of Gaines-
was in town Tuesday.—Buford
s Mary Merritt is at home after a
ileasant visit to friends in south
The quickest busline is D. E. Evans’s
Also baggage transfer.
The quickest cure
forgoi,ps,ORiP, etc.
I. Charles W. West of Savannah, is
pst of the family of Mr. W. H.
bbell. ‘
l A. J. Montcrief left the cit y Wed-
ly, after a visit to Prof. A. W#
Hoose.
IBJ Richardson, of Gainesville, was
p this week—Dawson County
tertiser. . } r : ' i
Ls Maud Stringer of Buford, is
Iding a few days with Miss Maud
Bgomery.
Threw at the Boss.
The little negro “Bill” who has, been
driving Mr. Dal Martin’s bus got a lit
tle crossways this week, and Mr. Mar
tin undertook to administer a lesson to
the youngster in the shape of a whip
ping, but the negro ran and gathering a
handful of rocks, threw them at Mr,
Martin with such force that had one of
them struck him, it would have inflict
ed a. severe if not a serious wound.
“Bill” then dug, but the cops gave
chase and the young culprit was
brought before the mayor, and fined
one dollar and cost.
trolley communication between all
parts of the city, and with the rich
mining and agricultural district of the
mountains, of which she is the queen
city and chief base of supplies. It is
likely that local subscribers to the stock
will tumble over each other in ah en
deavor to invest their money where it
is certain to pay rich dividends. Mean
while, the possession of these great ad
vantages and conveniences will attract
to our city a multitude of small indus
tries—mayhap some large ones—our
population wiU increase, property will
enhance in value, and the boom started
by the cotton mill inen will—like an
avalanche—sweep steadily onward,
making accretions at every step, until
Gainesville is pustibd into tbq rich val
ley of plenty; and prosperity, and be
comes, not a minor: municipality in the
empire state, but dne of its foremost
cities.
jffeanfhp
Signature
NOTICE*
1 have this day resigned my position
with the Red Store on Green street, to
accept one wish Geo. G. Price at “The
White Grocery.” I will be pleased to
have my friends call and see me as I
will be prepared to fill any order in the
staple and Fancy Grocery line. ’Phone
your orders in.
JNO. W. BAILEY,
3, J. R. Boone and Miss Eya
>pson left this week for Mont
J, Tennessee:
Hair Cut fifteen* cents at Lathem
Brothers new barber shop.
Meeting at Mafdis Church.
Rev. B. F. Frazer, pastor of Walker
Street Methodist church, Atlanta, will
begin a protracted meeting at Sardis
church tomorrow. Mr. Frazer is a Hall
county boy and is well known by the
people here. He has a membership at
Walker Street of fourteen hundred,
and receives a salary of $1,800 a year.
His many friends about here will glad
ly welcome him to Sardis, and a great
meeting is expected.
1 Mr. G. M. Byrd Bobbed of *65 at His
^ Home Last Sunday Night.
> -
Mr. George M. Byrd, a young man
r formerly of Gainesville, who is now
v visiting home folks, was aroused from
£ his slumbers last Sunday night by a
t slight rapping on the head of his bed.
j He opened bis eyes and raised himself
r slightly, just in time to seethe should-
L ers of a man as the figure glided out of
the room. Mr. Byrd grabbed his pistol
and pursued the retreating figure
through the blackness of the night,
firing five shots at him as he hastily
ran into the street. Mr. Byrd, was
somewhat excited, but went back to
bed and tried to sleep, not supposing
the burglar had been able to secure
any booty. But on rising the next
morning he discovered that two coats,
which had been hanging on the head of
bis bed the night before were missing.
They had evidently been carried off by
the midnight marauder, but a belt was
still there, and that was perhaps “What
made the noise and waked him. On
going out into the yard, howeyer, he
found one coat lying on the piazza, and
the other a little luther on. By this
time he was getting real interested* for
he had remembered a pocketbook
which he had left in his coat contain
ing $65. On recovering the last coat
the pocketbook was gone, and this he
saw lyingstill futher ahead—empt r,
Mr. Byrd notified the authorities,
but, as he could give no discription of
the burglar, it being very dark, the
officers are at a loss to know what step
o take. The burglar is evidently up
to his business.
H. C* Flowers sells the Singer
Sewing Machine, the best in the world.
A Busy Clergyman.
Rev. J. A. Bell returned home Thurs
day night from Bowman, Elbert coun-
' GUARANTEED
UNDER A
$5,000 DEPOSIT
R ‘ R * FARE PAH >
aggEI 200 free
Jrfl *** mWM^~ Scholarships offered.
■*- . W Write quick to
CA.-ALA. BU8INESS COLLEGE, Macon, C»
For Coughs of all kinds,
DR. BYERS.
Diseases of the Eye
EAR, NOSE AND
THROAT. .
Young Men Journey Westward.
Messrs. W. C. Giles and C. E. Miller,
who live in the Glades district near
White Sulphur, left Thursday for—so
they said—California. It is not known
where they will land, however, and
some of their friends expect them back
home in a few u days, while others say
they’ll stick out west and make a' for
tune. .
RECEIVER’S SALE.
Will sell at public outcry, on Satur
day, August 24th, 1901, the entire stock
of goods of Smith & Hutchinson, in
bulk. Sale to take place at Flowery
Branch, Ga., and will commence at
11 o’cloek, and goods will be sold to
the highest bidder for cash. Come and
buy a bargain.
L F. DUNCAN, Beeeiver.
MOWER AND RAKE.
Buy only the Osborn Columbia Mdw-
er and Rake, which is the best made.
We save you money on these goods by
giving you rock-bottom prices. Call
and let us show you one. ’
S. W. DAVIDSON & CO.,
Gainesville, Ga.