Haralson banner. (Buchanan, Ga.) 1884-1891, September 06, 1889, Image 1
HARALSON BANNER. VOLUME VI. Thompson & Anderson; W. P, Robinson. 162 Whitehall St., Buchanan, Ga. Atlanta, - Georgia. Thompson, Andersen & Rebinson, Attorneys at Law, Buchanan, Georgia. J. M. Mcßripe, PRICE EDWARDS. Tallapoosa, Buehanan, »Mcßride & Edwards, = ATTORNEYS AT L.AWw. Offices: Tallapoosa and Buchanan. \.\'—.::-;;)A.\IN‘N. R. D, J;\Cl-(-b—';).;'-: Adamson & Jackson, LAWYERS, CARROLLTON, - =~ GEORGIA. JOSEPH S. McDANIEL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BREMEN, GA. Makes a specialty of practicing law. I. N. CHENEY, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, BrEMEN, GA. G. W. Austin, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Carrollton, - Georgia. J. M. NEILL, M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, BUCHANAN, GFORGIA, Offers his professional services to the town and surrounding country. All calls promptly responded to night or day. Office at drugstore of Neill & Co. 1 will be found at night at the Buck Kelly place, 150 yards south of G. M. Roberts’ store JAS. A. BLANCE. J. W. BIGGERS. cedartown, ua. praketown, Ga. BLANCE & BIGGERS. LAWYERS, Will practice in the courts of Haralson county, and in the Federal courts at At lanta. Prompt attention given all busi ness, G. W. MERRELL, W. P. COLE. MERRELL & COLE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Carrollton, - - - Georgia. Will attend superior courts of Haralson county; will give special attention to land liti‘fations; will examine records, titles, and make abstracts of anything connect od therewith; will colleet claims, and ne gotiate loans of S3OO or more on improved farms. Special attention given to the ad ministration of estates, and other things in court of Ordinary of carroll connty. Goldin & Hutcheson, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, Draketown, Ga. M. J. HEAD. A. I. HEAD. suchanan, Ga. Tallapoosa, Ga. HEAD & HEAD, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Buchanan and Tallapoosa, Georgia. GEO. R. HUTCHENT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Tallapoosa, - - - Georgia. Practices law in all the courts of Haral son county. Special attention given to the collection of claims. ta¥ Criminal law a specialty. J. L. COBB, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Carrollton, Ga. Will practice in carroll and adjoining ¢ounties, D. B, HEAD. J. W. ALDRIDGE. HEAD:=&:ALDRIDGE, OONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS, BucHanNaN, GaA. Plans and designs of buildin%s furnish ed, and satisfaction guaranteed. ; John T. Cobb, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, BUCHANAN, GEORGIA. Office’ Young’s old stand. All ecalls promptly filled day or night. Night ¢alls-at the residence of T. P. Moore, BUCHANAN, GEORGIA, FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 6, 1889. LOCAL ITEMS. mr. 8. P. Shepard is on the sick list. Peaches are now getting scarce. Verily “‘the way of the transgressor is hard.” Haralson county has some excellent officials, we are glad to see mr. H, C. Head able to be ont again. To-morrow we decide the fence ques question in this district. Fence or no fence. which will you have? Answer to-morrow. ~ Mr. T. W. Griffith has put a handsome fence around his new dwelling. ‘ We understand that Mr. SBim Dean will run a gin in Buchanan this fall, g ! Mr. W. G. Weatherly has his saw mill up and began sawing last Monday. See the new advertisements of the Ordinary in this issue. Four persons are now behind the bars in the county jail. Wantep—soo bundles fodder at once: J. H. HAraLSON, | Little Joe, son of mr. G. M. R«)bv)'ts,! has been quite sick, but is some better. People were in Buchanan Tues day from all parts of the county. The farmers are having bad weather in which to save their fodder. Bremen district will take a vote on the stock law question at an early day. Mr. Abe Mixon was put in jail last Friday, umder a charge of liquor selling at Bremen. Rev. 6. E. Gardner, the wmethodist preacher of Cedartown, died the other day. He was an able preacher. Will take oats, corn, and fodder in payment for subscription to the Baxner at market price. Want some at once. Mr. J. W. Ogletree is almost ready to go to sawing lumber, and Ire has a novel device for moving his lamber, saw dust, ete. It is all done by machinery. Archie Hicks, colored, who was in jail in default of a SIOO bond for wife beating, was taken ont this week by Messrs John Jordan and B. Osborn. The chairmen of the committees appointed last Tuesday to make ready for the exhibit at the Pied mont Exposition, will meet at Buchanan on the third Tuesday in this month. The officers and law abiding citizens of the county have had a lively time the past week in their dealings with those who neither regard man mnor law. The law must be upheld. Wednesday Sheriff Holcombe arrested Will Burns, ¢olored, who was wanted in Cedartown for as sault and battery. Marshal Wil liams, of Cedartown, came down and took hiwin charge yesterday. Last week Judge Davenport is sued a marriage license to Mr. Clinton H. Weaver and Miss Min nie L. Stevens, of Tallapoosa. We suppose the ceremony has been performed, and wish them much happiness. ~ The probability is that Haral son county will have a fair next year. It’s rather a long way off to begin to talk about it, but re member the prediction. Our in terests demand it, and the people are beginning to see it. Sheriff Stephens, of Clebourne county, Ala., was here on Wednes day, and carried Jim Mann to Alabama, where he was wanted for using improper langunage in the presence of ladies. This is an offense that is too common, and demands more attention at the hands of the officers of the law. | Rev. Dr. I. P. Cheney, of Car rollton, will begin a protracted meeting in Buchanan on the sec ond Sunday in September. Let everybody go to work to make the Haralson county exhibit at the Piedmont Exposition the biggest and best thing there. Do all you can. From present indications, Judge Davenport will soon reap a harvest in the way of issuing marriage licenses. If our subscribers pay up all right this fall, as we be lieve they will, we may want one of those permits ourself' before they are all gone. A subseription listis being civenlated here to get up a singing school for Mr. John Goldin, to be taught just after the ‘close of the literary sehools, Mr. Goldin s a fine singer, and we hope our people 'will all take an interest in getting up the school for him. Goed singing is an ae l complishment greatly to be desired, and we have many fine voices in Buchanan that need training. I have on hand and still receiv g the Cheapest and Best stock of Shoes ever brought to this place. Call while attending court and look for yourselves. G. M. Rosßerts. The third quarterly conference of the Buehanan eirenit of the M. K. church was held here last Saturday, Dr. Glenn, the presiding elder, preached an able sermon in the morning. Rev. L. D, Cog gin has sinee been conducting the pro tracted services, assisted by Rev. T. M. Moore. The serviees have been well at tended and a good deal of interest mani fested, with two aeccessions. The meet ing will close to-day. The feather renovator is now at work. Mr. G. D. Griffith, C. 8. C., re ports that there are forty schools in the county. In visiting these various schools he found 1,897 white children enrolled and 1,450 in attendance. There is only one colored school in the county. It had 96 pupils enrolled and 75 in attendanee. This is a very good showing, and also serves to give an idea of the small per cent of our population made up of negroes. MONEY LOANED. Head & Head, Attorneys-at- Law, will lend money on improved farms. Special rates until Octo ber Ist. For further particulars call on or address ns at Buchanan and Tallapoosa, Ga. HEeap & Heap. Prof. M. D. West has been elec ted principal of the Harpersville, Ala., high school. This is a fine school, and Mr. West gets a good salary. The people of Harpers ville are fortunate in securing his services. He is a young man of fine morals, and a splengid educa tion. He is a graduate of the Peabody Normal school, and has given universal satisfaction to his patrons at this place. The liver and kidneys must be kept in good condition. Hood'’s Sarsaparilla is a great remedy for regulating these organs. The committee on the repair of the court house, consisting of S. M. Davenport, G. F. Reid and John M. Lipham, met here last Tuesday and determined upon what work should be done, and to have it done as early as prac ticable.. The plastering is to be properly fixed and whitewashed, and the blinds, windows and doors are all to be put in order and nicely painted. The inside of the court house is to receive a general overhaunling, and when completed it will present a much better appearance, and add much to comfort. Advice to Mothers. Mrs. WiNszow’s SoorHING ByrUPshould always be used when children axe cutting teeth, It res lieves thelittlesuffererat once; it producesnatural, quiet sleep, and the little cherub awakesas *‘bright as a button.” [t is very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allaysall pain, regulates the bowels, and is the best known remedy for diarrhoea, whether arising from teething or other causes. Twenty-five centa a bottles It has been apparent to all observing persons that whiskey has been dispensed entirely too freely about Buchanan for some time. Hence some of our eitizens began to watch proceedings, and last Saturday night resulted in ecatching up with a lot of whiskey and jailing it and some of the law breakers, Mr. D. B. Head had reason to suspicion Jim Branch, colored, of selling whiskey. So he watched Jim go to the still hoase of Mr. J. E. Street and get some whiskey.— Upon notifying the mayor and marshal, Branch was arrested and put in jail.— Then Sheriff Holcombe, assisted by Messrs. D. B, Head, J. ». Thomasson, W. J. Head, m. J, Head, T'. w. Griffith, and others, proceeded to investigate the still house. In i: were found about fifty gal lons of whiskey, bearing the warehouse stamp, but devoid of the revenue stamp. ‘The whiskey was carried to the jail, i where it now remains, and the matter telegraphed to the revenue collector, On monday mr. J. E. Street, who had given a bill of sale to a portion of the whiskey deposited in the warehouse to mr T. w. Griffith, was tried for larceny after trust, and in default of a SSOO bond, was lodged in jail. Revenue officers came on Mon day and opened the warehouse, where more than 150 gallons of whiskey had been deposited, but no whiskey was to be found. Mr. Street claims to have held the keys to the still house, where the whiskey was found, but denies knowing anything of the removal of the whiskey from the warehouse to the still house, though both houses were securely locked. Jim Branch, charged with selling whis key, was tried monday and remanded to jail for want of friends to stand a S4OO bond. The revenue officers will proba bly soon remove Street and Branch to At lanta, and soon thereafter to Sing Sing. At least, it looks this way now. “It goes right to the spot,’’ said an old gentleman, who found great benefit in Ayer’s Sarsa parilla. He wasright. Derange ments of the stomach, liver, and kidneys are more speedily reme died by this medicine than by any other. It reaches the trouble di rectly. By invitation of Mr. Isaac Weatherby we visited his peach orchard the other day, where we enjoyed some of as fine fruit as we ever ate. While there we also took a walk through his garden and a portion of his corn and cot ton. In his garden we noticed some fine turnips, but our atten tion was particularly attracted by the extra size of his cabbage and beets. We did not measure them, but he has several beets that will far surpass in size any we have ever seen. They are almost equal to the famous California beets, of which we have heard so much.— His corn is exceedingly fine, and his cotton is generally good, but he has an acre and a half in cotton that will take the premium. It is beyond doubt the best we ever beheld. Mr. Weatherby has before gathered three bales of cotton off this piece of ground (which is two bales per acre) but this year he ex pects to gather four bales from it. The rows are five feet apart; the cotton will average about five feet in height, and the branches are interlocked so as to make it diffi cult to pass through it. It is very heavily fruited, and will show you what our soil is capable of producing when properly tilled. Mr. Weatherby is one of the most successful farmers in the state, and we heard it remarked of him the other day, that he seemed to make a crop easier than anybody. Give us more farmers after the order of Mr. Weatherby. BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE. Tae Brst SALVE in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chap ped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For Sale by Neill & Co. 4 NUMBER 35. I(e 3 L i "‘"‘A———‘—;fl‘. 7&“'.’; R SO & ) A ;@ %l bb 1 q/‘ i ! | ‘r k‘ i .;‘.}l 'NG UWDQ. I S 4 e G \K | | ' ' Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomeness. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold in competion with the multitude of low tests, short weight alum or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans. [loyal Baking Powder Co. 106 Wall St. N, Y. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NOTICE. GEORGIA—HArALsoN CoUuNTY. All persons are hereby notified that more than fifteen freeholders of the 1251 district G. M., said county, have filed with me their petition asking that an election be held in said district as provided for under section 1455 of the revised code of 1882 and the acts amendatory thereto on the question of fence or stock law. Given under my hand and official signature this 4th day of September, 1889, S M DAVENPORT, Ordinary. GEORGlA—Hararson Counrty. To all whom it may coneern: Mrs. M. C. Summerville has in due form applied to the nudersigned for permanent letters of administration on the estate of F, M. Summerville, late of said county, deceas ed, and I will pass upon said application on the first Monday in October next.— Given under my hand and official signa ture this 4th day of September 1889. S M DAVENPORT, | Ordinary. T IR KR TOMAND STW Y 0 A 1T S LSS SRRSO RIS 00 ESORS. GEORGIA—HArALsoN CounTy: ~ To all whom it may concern: J. 8. M. Biggers, administrator of Joseph Loma nack, deceased, has in due form applied to the uudersigned for leave to sell the lands belonging to the estate of said de ceased, and said application will be heard on the first Monday in Oectober next.— '}‘his 2nd day of September, 1889, S. M. DAVENPORT, Ordinary. AN Y 4 HON) P T D RST L 1 A A Tl DI RS KD GEORGIA—HaraLson CounTy: To all whom it may concern: 8. W. Strickland and F. M. Hutcheson having in due form applied to the undersigned for the guardianship of the property of William M., Martha J., John 8., Joseph A., Wilburn 0., and L. 7T, Strickland, minor children of J. F. Strickland de ceased, notice is hereby given that their application will be heard at my office on the first Monday in October next. Given under my hand and official signature this 2nd day of September, 1889. S. M. DAVENPORT, : : Ordinary. STATE OF GEORGIA, Hararson County. } Whereas, Price Edwards, attorney for W. 8. 1. Bush, adwministrator of J. V. Bush, represents to the court in his peti tion duly filed and entered on record. that he has fuily administered J, V. Bush’s estate, This is therefore to cite all persons concerned, heirs and credit ors, to show cause, if any they can, why said administrator should not be dis charged from his administration and receive letters of dismission on the first Monday in Nevember, 1889. Witness my hand and official signature this 31st day of July, 1889, S M DAVENPORT, . ; Ordinary..