The Dade County weekly times. (Trenton, Ga.) 1889-1889, October 19, 1889, Image 4

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THE vv l y TIMES henton, c*. f. Jl j. majors editor and proprietor 1 00 PER ANNUM, IN A DVA KCE PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNiNG ipacb. | 1 m<> j Binn«. | 4 m<w. | I yanr. Tioih t iachea... 8») I till | !<!*> no Bim he.... >l« I HIM) f It MO » « 4 in< he». .. | «on | 18 50 | IS Oil | 85 11 £ nils bin., j 7 «>>» I IS IK) j V. OP I 4'lo H column.. I II 111 *i O' 0»i | H> it 1 roluinn | 15 00 I 8s «n | 00 <W | lium La*.l*it adtrrli.-Tn-iit. «« t*i« !<*<•«' column tnri l«u>in*«9 notice* ten eon!' (Mr line lor •*e)i inttrtlan. Aiito’ad la la the iMrtftOlM a* Tn.iTgi «** •a ninor. Iron and Coal. Tba recant rise iu the price of iron is causing capital to seek tielda where it can successfully compete with furnaces already in »p«r»tion. In glancing over the various pointe laying claim to superiority in thie respect, it has been con ceded that Lockout Valley leads, because it has the eoal and iron near each other, hut at no point more conveniently situated than at Trenton, Ga. Thia place ie on the Alabama Great Southern rail road, eighteen miles southwest of Uhaltanooga, in one of the moat beautiful vallcya in the South. It is peculiarly situated for manufac turing iron, having a vein five feet in thickness within a mile of the railroad on both aides. It lies horizontally and passes through the hills and the mountains and is easily worked. It has been cal oulated that over thirty million tons of thia ore can be mined and loaded on cars at a cost not to ex cead 75 cents per ton There is also a coal field in Sand Mountain within two miles of the railroad at Trenton, ia which are found the same veins of coal that have been ao successfully worked by the Dade Coal Company at Coai City for the past twenty years. This would settle the ms’ter as to the supply, quality and cheapness of coke. Unlimited quantities of the very be6t limestone abounds on the ground. And last but not least of all, a haul of miles by rail will take the iron to the Tennessee river where it ct;. be loaded on barges for all points on the Tennessee, Missis sippi Birmingham hauls ooke from five to thirty miles, ore from fiv* to eighteen miles, and limestone about thirty miles, while the nearest point to river navigation is over one hundred miles. Hence it will be seen that Trenton possesses greater facilities for making cheap iron than Bir mingham. Birmingham furnaces are supplied with water by the water company, and this is not a small item. Water is here in abundance. Enough to supply fifty furnaces and same number of other industries. Not only will the above fact* I apply to Biimingham but iu nearly every esse to the /other iron fur naces in operation and in course of construction Dr. Little, late geologist of the State of Georgia, who served iu noth Alabama and Georgia in that capacity, says that the)e are three coal in | Sami Mountain, each from three J to rive fe*t in thickness. Those veins crop out on the East aide of the mountain within two miles of Trenton, and they art Ihe same from which the Dadt Coal Com pany is now mining th* coal to furnish the furnaces at Chutta nnoga and Rising Fawn, which makes a very superior article of iron. The coal field extends well to the river at Stereson, Alabama, a distance of twenty miles. This coal field is practically inexhaus - ible, and only until recently has it become known to capitalists as their attention has been attracted to Birmingham and other points. The fact is now known, v owev»r, and this knowledge has caused the recent influx of capital to this im mediate section, and, as a conse quence, the recent rise iu real es tate values at this place. But the end is not yet, and the little town of Trenton will become, in the near future, an important factor in *ha manufacture of iron. We make this prediction—that in less than five years the smoke from fire furnaces will arise within two miles of Trenton, and a dozen! other factories will contribute to wards starting another Leneigh' Valley. The editor of thv Fort Payne 1 Journal is at his oil game. He i was never known to speak a kind word for a coiupsditor. We have! one consola.ion of knowing that; Fort Payne parties are the heaviest! purchasers of rml estat» here and: without being begged to do so. Trentou is so admirably located and its » -*ral wealth being a realty inve dors know where to put their rwom-y. To the Jourgnl, no doubt. . mparisons are odious. Three weeks ago the average T. onion cit run could bo interest' d u a dog fight or any other harm less amusement. Now they nr** hustling to sail real estate *Dd getting there in grand shape. The Dade Coal Company i:- Pav ing more coke ovens built at their mir.es. Tins company has spent over $30,000 this year in improvt ments. These mines arc only six miles from Trenton and employ* 800 men and have been worked 25 years. Over $200,000 worth of Trentor dirt changed hands in four days SI,OOO would cover the proceeds during the mo ith of August in the whole county. Without a line of advertising matter and without the solicitation of any one Trenton’s boom came. And by her unmatched resources has captured al} that have entered , her limits, Gkokuia, Dade County:— Whereas James S Kennedy admin estrater of Hugh L Kennedy, de-j ceased represents lo th»> court in ; his petition duly, filed and r»n tired I on record, that he Ims fully admin- j inti rod Hugh L Kennedy’s estate.: This is therefore 'o cite all per sons concerned, kindred and cred itors. to show cause, if any they can, why s«id administrator. should not be discharged from his administration and rec ivo hitters of hismisiou on the fir t Monu-v in December 1889. ' A Bennett, Ordinary. * a Mk VIIOE £«£» «*J —Ml— "»,< «l • A— i « • —al* < W I C All— k CVI .!»« —* *-*»• w y >»4 <•> **# • w." p “*-«*> WMtmm tbu. »A**air*A»i-. Pis writM . U*» *«*•« W#*"» «■! \ jgSHpn Mw#«ua*4 te **« *m *i^M flMHa]mHx: -• —W" * to* «•*«" A-r / *wr , < bonis# I Ui w wiMe* h 4 <&*&* Aof ' ■< id*««e wliaq f a-.** •«« *4 »*- fan imam. 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ViWk S— •v»4j*a»» ,'V 0,,.. • r-f V' t THE OWIVI ft ‘ THE ETHIOPIAN CAN NOT 6NANNC N»8 Rill NOR THE IEORARD NIS RRBTR.” ■ABKUN M , M Ml . u tkla ISK la I*OUI WaiWUto OAJT HOT IIS RBMOVSB WIVBOHI Ik tnTKO VIH4B THE fABBICi NO MOT I BOR OB SCWLIHIIT BB 41IBEH. CAW BE VUD WITH STAMP OB FEW. RETAIL PRICE, 25c. also MA»n»A'iire—ia os Writing id trying Inks* Smßr( MtteUtgt, Wafers, Era. Th iPOEUS DAVIDS GR„ HEW Y9HK cm 'T tiiiianiD IM*