THIS HIG-HLA.lsrDEIl5 MACON COUNTY AND WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA ADVERTISER. Vol. .1. HIGHLANDS, MAC OK COUNTY, N. 0., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1885. No. 13. i '.4 NOTICE. Having been appointed Flue Inspector by the Mayor of Highlands, I will enter upon the duties of the office at once. It 13 hoped that all will look to their stove pipes and chimneys and see that they are good and safe, and save themselves and the inspector trouble. J. A. McGuntE. RAILROAD MEETING.. The annual meeting of etockholdres of the Highlands Railroad Co. was held in the Highlands House on the 27th inst., When S. T. Kelsey was re-elected Presl dent, and S. W. Hill. C. A. Boynton, B. Wright, M L Skinner, Jas. Rideoilt and T. F Parker were elected directors for the ensuing yean The President stated that in cdnse quence of the Rabun Gap railroad not having been gone on with, nothing could be done in the direction of the line of survey to connect Highlands with that route. He had been corresponding with parties interested in building railroads from the East to tli6 West Charleston, South Carolina, and Knoxville, Tenn.. being the objective points, but there had been nothing decided upon to fix the routes across the Blue Ridge" for such schemes. From a careful survey of the mountains which he had recently made, he was satisfied that Highlands was on the line of a practicable in fact, most practi cable route through this country to con nect Atlanta and Asheville, or Charles ton and Knoxville; and that one or both of these roads, he was satisfied, woiUd be built in the near future. Col. Alley stated that he had heard from good authority that : nteosureswere how being taken to construct the Rabun Gap railroad. The meeting then adjourned. We learn that some old residents of Highlands Avill be back shortly. They will be welcome. The flume at Trowbridge's mill was damaged td some extent by the he'avy rush of water the other day. Mr. H. N. Redman, from Marengo, la., is looking around Highlands for a loca tion. The Big Fddr niinstrels, frbiil Franklin, gave a concert here last Saturday even ing, which was well attended. Mrs. Wfeich ahd daughter, who1 have been staying in Highlands for two or three months, returned to their home in Charleston on Tuesday. Mr. Rideout says that Mr. Ti 1. Corbin returned a corn sacfe borrowed of him. ffe is how looking for the man wfto re turned a borrowed' umbrella, as lie wishes to start a dime museum; A shaft of flesh coldred marble, elegant ly .polished, from" the Nantahala in Swain County, N. C. was exhibited at, the Ashe- J ville fair. That county is full of such marble. The Frankiln niail carrier was unable to proceed to Franklin yesterday, Big Creek being a raging torrent on account - of the heavy rain; m'aking the ford im passable. Wc learn that the Federal Court will sit at Asheville on Tuesday next. Some whiskey cases from this neighborhood will be on then, and there will be a ga thering of the elans'; Hatton Tumor, Esq'j left Highlands yesterday aftei-noon on horseback for Jacksonville, Florida. His family will go by their own conveyance froth Ashe ville to their destination.' ' It contnferPced to raitfSrly on Wed nesday morntog, ttxtd it kept, oh . steadily till late on Wednesday night. There fell during tlfcrt time no less than" 5.8$ inches of rain tlie heaviest of the season. Yes terday vtt phghtly wet; fmd father Sad Affair. Yesterday morning, child of .Mr. Krimminger s, living it Highlands, got access to a bottle of Fel lows' Syrup of Hypophosphate, and drank its contents, supposed to be about two lurge tea spoonfuls. His little sister dis covered him with the empty bottle, and ran to the mother (who waB very ill in bed) and told her that Willie had drank her medicine. Mrs. Krimminger vainly endeavored to make the child vomit it up, and did not apprehend much danger, but after some time the child went into con vulsions, and Dn Frost was sent for, who, howeverj did not arrive in time to save the child, and he died in about two hours after taking the fatal medicine poison to him. Mr. Krimminger lately moved from Missouri on account of his wife's illness, and is now in that state arranging his affairs. The poor sick mother and family have the sympathy of the entire community. On Tuesday evening last, Michael Stern, evangelical preacher, from Knoxville, held . a meeting in the school house in Highlands. There was lidl a large at tendance. Mr. Stern is a German, and was formerly a Roman Catholic. Hatton Turnor, who is on his way from Asheville to Florida, also addressed the audience in an earnest discourse. It was intended to have another meeting on the following evening, which the rain prevented. J. D, Truan, a Swiss, who has been set tled near Knoxville for many year where are a number of his cbuntrymM, visited Highlands on Tuesday, in com pany with Mr. stern, Tftgy. rode all the wa&m horseback, and started for home If i m j jtir. CLEAB CEEEE CORRESPONDENCE. - Clear Creek, Oct. 29, 1885. As milk sickness has already received some notice, and as Dr. Candler has ad-, vanced the theory that its aetiology is due to arsenical pois6n, we have heard statements that seem to confirm his tlie ory, particularly as to the poison being exhaled from the earth. It is said that a gentleman, in order to test the matter concerning its being confined on vegeta ble matter by the dew, placed a bundle of fodder out one night in the poison-generating locality, and took the fodder in the next nibrnihg while tile" dew was on it, and gave it co a yearling. The yearling ate it, and was dead the ensuing morn ing. Ill tm same locality, I am told that rocks may be turned over" early in the day, and that around the bottom edge of the rock the poison may be found, having the appearance of a sulphate. Yet all this seems tb be dissipated by the sunshine', as well as its deleterious effects, and it may be that cuprepus deposits un derhe these places. And td sfty the least, the matter is worth examining into for the benefit ot science; and besides that, snouid copper be tne cause, some one might . unearth a bonanza, as the metal has a known" commercial vahlej Milk sickness is knowil in a small place or two on Brush Creek: and a couple of other sinaJJ coves, in Macon Ctnuity,', yfet those places Are as eH known by the people ; i.n.'..lni:4-.-; I am told that it is a great deal more prev alent in Jackson County triiifl anywhere else in Western North Carolina. Now that peoplejare IobT&ig over this secikto i orthe purpose, of .. buying land for their future hoiries'. thero are land owners litre; who are" land poor, who are determined to take the recent good and sensible advice of The EWhlander, and assist in building up the country by Selling a portion oTtheir lands at moderate and reasonable pricesin fact just what they 6art afford to' take for it without in curring loss: and ther are some very desirabw places down here on Clear Crk. Thire arfi others whdjire aWut b find out that they can get The Hjghiander by sending in their" promise td pay, or a statement pi tlieir inability to pay for it. Tp'grty the feast of it; such offers by a nevfspa'pQF are gencrolis, indulgent and charitable)' scT that ho oris m Jfajron'Ccun- ty, if a newspaper is desired, has any ex cuse tor being without one. Recently, Mr. A. M. Wilson cauerht nine large opossoms in a couple of hours, between his place and Fodderstack moun tain. And a few years aero he ran a buck off the same mountain when t was cov- ored with snow, and the deer leaped down sixty feet and made its escape. And last Monday morning, at the foot of the same mountain, he killed four raccoons out of one tree. And the same morning-. Bud. tne iNimrod of Clear Creek, was nearly made himself again, by bagging another wooacnucK; ana it now believed that he could tackle either a ervascutis or a small razor-oack. Millstone quarries are plentiful here. and A. M. Wilson will soon erect a mill on his place. He has a pair of excellent new stones manufactured near the place. Some of the people are putting in rye. while others are Catherine corn. The Sabbath school is flourishing under tne superintendence of T. O. White, and the district school is making fine progress under the surveillance of its fair gover- nante, miss suia Rice. Cheops. CAKT00GECHAYE CORRESPONDENCE. JNonah, Uct. 20, 18S5. Jack Frost has caueht several of us nap ping, and has pulled, our corn and cane fodder for us this fall. ah s i- uiup m luih wjvvuaiiip are icixicii Jia- blygood. The corn crop has, as far as possible.made amends for the short wheat crop or last summer, some complain oi their corn hot earing, but as a general rule the corn and Irish aiicl sweet potato . .1 .az. ... crops are good. There has been more sorgum cane made this year than was ev er before made" here? and the" crdps are good, though the mill nien say the yield of syrup is not so -good as usual. Baby shows must surely be in order on Cartoogecbaye". We recently had three arrivals in one day, and a considerable number of others at short '. intervals. While on the baby subject I should men tion the fact that within less than two years, and within Jess' than three miles of where I now sit, there have been born four pairs of twins. Can any township beat this record t Tav-nnvinrr ti'mp -Anfra.11v Hrinrs fliA com7laint of hard timd the com- plaint is unusually loud and distressing just ndW front the fact that cattle (almost the only money crop of this country) are very low, and slow sale even at low prices. The mast is5 tlriusualiy large in this sec tion this fall, and the number of hogs in the mountains is unusually stfiall, there fore poor hogs in the mountains are not to be seen, t : . . I . . r As I would like the readers of The Highlander to have more real and true information concerning "milk-sick," I would be, glad (as I know a great many Ifi others of your readers . jWOuId) td see an article; on tliat subject from Pr Brab son or Dr. Rush, o'f Smith's Bridge town- i. ; i '. t i m ' 'ii ship, wiio'i know are as faniiUar with the subject ds.,fchjjr dhe . prdfessional. or uou-proressionai, m ine couniry; ivi. From the Jieowee (jourieri THE SOUTH SIDE RAILWAY. . Walhalla, S. G, Oct 17 185. Messrs. EDitdRs: Itiduiries are made as to the above named railway ax to its route and purprises. , Please sa that the promotdre Of said railway, have in view it. i -iv ' J i tne ouueuns or a bnort uno rauwuy irom th mountains to 1i$. sedbpurd via cen trally thfcnien the cbunties of Oconee. Andersdii, Abbeville, Edgefield and Aik en, and thence by the most practicable route to the ''City by the".Sea-.V pitheY via tne souui uaronna itauway orocnerwise. claimirfg to save" in distinct at least sixty miles td gt f foni Wamaia to Charleston, and protortionatety so as to Anderson. Abbeville and Edgefield Cotirt Houses; sixty miles' leSs.fJian via Beltdfl and Co lumbia to' ChffrlesCbn-two hours by pas- senger and four hdurs by freight trains- as to the twa routes, viz. via Belton and Columbia and via AndersdoV Abbeville and Edgefield to Aiken sM thence to Charleston. Indeed by .the new route. provided thU Soilth Sld"6 Railway should be extended to Jtrankun, - in. Western North Carolina, it would ptece Charles ton by rail as near there as it w now to Walhalla twelve hours front .Frankhn, N. C, via Glaytoa, Ga.,' to ChaTlestoh'; Wtf.' PlfifeKT. DIED, Near Highlands, on the 84th inst., Jno. N. Gibson. In Highlands, on the 29th inst., Willie, son of W. B. Krimminger, aged two years. Meteorological Observations at High lands for the week ending Oct. 27, '85. Miss Mary Chapin, Observer. Date Temi Mean li 34.8 30.2 39.2 88,5 88.2 46 48.2 39.3 ratnre Bel' re Rain fall r t Low't Hu'y Oct. 21 29 88.7 Fair 22 23 24 25 26 27 63 22 62.8 Clear 55 28 78.8 Clear 54 29 70.8 Clear 54 29 72.5 Clear 57 29 78.8 Fail 57 40 89.7 Cloudy 57 22 77.4 Week HIGHLANDS LAND AGENCY WE HAVE ON HAND A LARGE AMOUNT Off" Farming, Grazing TiVi-M-r- fi,vm -i A Aluu wiww-mii -HmUCl JUclllCLSi HOUSES AND LOTS iN THE TOWN OF HIGHLANDS Beaotiful Bsiliiil m, k Parties haviiig cheap" properties for said in Macon or adjoining counties, should correspond with us, as we are advertising quite extensively, and have superior fa cilities for handling real estate. tW For circulars describing Highlands and vicinity, descriptive pride lists, &c; call on or address J S. T. KELSEY Highlands, Macon County, N. C tfi H. DURGlNi rinimAnlAw nvi lB-m-.Z1 J VttAl,C1AtCA i611U' HIGHLANDS. Feed and Livery Stable; Sylva; JacksonCounty, N. C. First-class Transportation to nil Points of Interest REGULAR HACK, LINE FIIOM WEB&'tfiiR YLVA. A: M. PARKER, Proprietor' RIDEOUT & CO; jn Hifflilands,!7..0orner of MAIN AND FOURTH STREETS, HEAD-aUARTERS For lints,' Georgia Checks,' Jeans, Besides, constantly on hand, a general line or , dRY GOODS, Boots and Shoes. and the best of GROCERIES: We have just Received-fjrorii Richmond "IT Ttf 3 11T Ji 1 m ' a iuii r au ana. ,w mrersuppiy or tne , Bfet Boots and Shoes Tii.iii.ft.-i.ii.A 11 o TitiSiiii n. t- - 1 -ifi ' -i -r BrOatb CttlcC JS (JUpOlCOTl BOOV ALL AT LOWEST PRICES ! riVo flatter what others offer, you-- riidy miss it by buying before -examining . ine uirgesi --and Finest $t0ek of iGQb&i. . in, this . Section of WSsthn mm CaHUjia' 4 r -f