The Athens weekly Georgian. (Athens, Ga.) 1875-1877, January 04, 1876, Image 2

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C|t Georgian. H. H. CARLTON, Editor. TUESDAY MORNING, JAR. 4, 1876. General Local and Traveling Agent, CAPT. J. E. BITCH. LOCAL AGENTS. Mr. Juris A. Maxlst, Toccoa City. Mr. F. C. Dlimww. Hut County. Mr. C. H. Audbiws, Fort Lamar. Mr. Faun Haaawoa, Ctordand. Mr. W. L. Daut, Danlelivtile. Mr. W. T. Ma»»i«u>, Windaor. Mr. J. Banks Brown, Hart Conniy. Mr. H. 8. Anderson, Farmington. To the Patrons and Friends of “^GEORGIAN," “A. New Y ear I GBUlftB RKADBR ! The Georgian /or 1876 must be paid for in advance. Subscribers outside of Clarke County, will please forward Post- office Order for two dollars and fifteen cents, the latter for postage. As we are compelled to prepay our printer* and our postage, a strict compliance with the above is imperatively demanded. SELF-SUSTA1MNG FARMS. THE MOTTO OF TDK SLABS COUNTY FARMEBS TOE 1876. “Hdgjand cotton. Let every farmer in Georgia fo lour dp example, an crops from which to realize their profits, whilst they now have but one—cotton. As a compliment to our farmer friends, we offer the following premiums for the best fanner in Clarke county, for 1876: One copy of the Georgian for 1877. “ w Southern Cultivator “ “ “ “ Georgia Grange “ “ “ “ Rural Carolinian “ “ “ “ Maryland Farmer “ “ “ American Agricnltnralist “ “ Free—postage pre-paid. A duplicate of the above will be given to the best farmer in Northeast Georgia. STATE HEWS. has steamboat races. . danced the old year out. fantasticated Ihr stmas. week. Nobody killed, that her banks are not *T Columbus oranges. 350 callers were out Yearisday.- , ; /. j; -■ ’ , Augusta don’t appreciate New Year's Day as formerly. ~ Id Augusta the Richmond Rifle Club tar. geted on the 1st. makes battle with rotten Atlanta New jA_ SHRINKAOB. Cablvlb boded in his generation that the signs of the times indicated a too great complexity of machinery, which clogged the wheels of advancement; and contended that the unnecessary elaborations of the day must bo abandoned. Caeltlk was, to a certain extent, right; but to-day, were the gloomy sage to emerge from his cloister, ho would undoubtedly mark the reverse of tho picture. Complexities are being aban doned, elaborations are falling away, leav ing the grim forms of .contraction and shrinkage alone and unadorned. The great sign of the times, then, is shrinkage. It is stamped across the lettcre 1876, it is borne upon tho sighing winds of the dying year, it is lisped upon the breezes of the new, it invades every branch of busi ness, rides upon the waves of commerce, permeates every avenue of industry and is t;;o great substratum of all natural and polit ical economy. Upon shrinkage in securi ties, we need not here dwell. With con traction in currency, every one is familiar. Business of every kind has been overdone, and the panic of ’73 was the signal for uni versal shrinkage. The great rushing tide of trade has rolled entirely from its legiti mate channel, swept over commercial planes, and the consequent fall of this raging Nile is now evident. Its course, say finan ciers, cauuot be checked by paper bull- rushes, but must be dammed up, so o speak, by the great specie bulwarks, and contraction is the cry. Hence, it seems that our heated inflation, in every form, is fast simmering down, and we are speedily condensing. But scientifiic investigations prove that this shrinkage in the commercial world is only a forerunner of the same, phenomenon in the physical. Prof. Proctor, an eminent English as tronomer, rises to cxplniu that the life of a planet depends upon the amount of heal it possesses. A large planet generates much heat by attracting smaller bodies, aud by virtue of its bulk parts with this heat slowly. Now, our earth, though commonly con sidered a very enterprising planet, is, nev ertheless, (a small affair, and, judging from our extreme old age, we are fast losing our heat; consequently, our years are num bered. Our life, vitality and energy are indeed on the wane, and shrinkage |will properly be the watchword of the XXth Century. This great truth, then, forces it self upon us: Our globe being considerably past its prime, is fast cooling down. Our waters will be drawn up in their basins, the continents shrivel, and in tho course of some million or so years, as dead and cold as tho moon, we may be numbered among tho lifeless worlds, aud swing to and fro in our orbit, “ Drifting, drifting, drifting.” Liko the moon, we shall have no water, and fence, no atmosphere; no balloon as censions and no twilight for lovers to watch the retreating day and await the twiukling of the stars. Smoke from volcanic erup tions would roll down the mountain sides like attenuated lava, and oratorical gas, which now in such large quantities escapes in the tipper regions of the atmosphere, would fall as weighty matter and offer fine inducements to political satraps. However, wo diRTW. The time u, of course, far distant; but this, says Prof. Proctor, is our tendency. The speculative mind, then, without beiug considered cynical, may inquire-whether the phj^oal and mental ^fabric of nuui is subject to the same shrinkage 7 Does the continual loss of force in the outer world affect the powers of man 7 Evidently, ac cording to Prof Proctor, we are all degen erating, and the question of superiority of former generations is settled at last. In physical strength we are inferior, and why not in moral force? Truth, virtue, piety, faith and charity, must'all be at a corres ponding discount, and nothing short of a torch-light procession of magnesium lights conld find an honest man. * u ;" f Christianity, of course, suffers from this shrinkage* and Moodt and Sahkby are but flickering embers of by-gone th—ai r «, Crime of sll loads will eventually be on the universal , rampage, and the question, ** Whither are we drifting 7” will be echoed op and down the dark corridors of vico until its hollow sound will die out only in a dismal eternity. Is there such a shrinkage in truth, honesty, virtue and morality? We leave it for others to determine. W* hope not. Certainly, we do not think that even Prof. Proctor would like to admit it. This state of thjhgs will not come to pm* TURN LOO.'B TUB Q RE BN BA Ch S. In order to relieve the present financial pressure .and make money easy in our midst, we', appeal to every one, no matter of what vocation, to make it a religious and a patriotic dnty to pay out every dol lar within their control in settling ffceir in debtedness. Nay, more—we suggest to those who have their .moneys locked up in strong boxes to loan the same (with good security) to those who are in nee . of a few greenbacks to balance their accounts for 1875, or push forward their business for 1876. “ Looked up,” your money can be of no service to yourselves, or assistance to your friends or our conimuuity. -The Expositor, like true *T.J.VtionH believe .in half sheets. • Some old codger, in Cartersville, tried to commit suicide, out failed. u • - “ <'*•.* ■ i Atlanta fizzled aronnd in fire-works to the amount of |i,820, Christmas. Watch-night was celebrated’at Dr. Harri- son’s church, in Atlanta, Dec. 81st. Martha, of the .Constitutionalist, gives rather a gloomy account of Macon. j Fisher has been appointed receiver of the Air-Line Railroad. Vice, Col. Buford. The average Georgia editor now has something to say on the duel question. Harris, of the News, sap that egg- COTTON IS NOT KI,) G. To those of our farmers who are sick of raising cotton at 12 cents per pound, we clcs, in Athens, for the past year. m BUSHEL. f 1.25 atkragk. IM 8.00 to 10.00 per bhl. nogg in the mails accounts for scarcity of news last week. Trion Factory, Chattooga county, Ga., is ready for business again. Cost of recon struction, $190,000. Maj. W. A. Wilkins has purchased the Waynesbotw Expositor, and Mr. W. S. Hub bard becomes its editor. Clisby of the Telegraph and. Messenger, sucks theluscious banana and moralizes about the “tidal wave of c loric.” LONGS & 'A lot If. PURE DRUQ& X' A * PATENT MEDICINES, : / CHEMI<ALS, DYE STUFFS, GLASS AND PUTTY, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, PAINT <6 VARNISH BRUSHES, WHITEWASH BRUSUESi rf -Vi ANILINES, • . : ' }T | ^"WHOLESALE AND fJ . i • >. A'6.0I¥AlKJ( DRUGGISTS A«D SUE MISTS. CT'dbalebs .GRASS AND GARDEN SEED, FINE TOLLED SOAPS, ENGLISH HAIR, NAIL ds TOOTH ■: •' wi/v-V ENGLISH FRENCH A AMERICAN V HAXDKERC&&F EXTRACTS, HARD RUBBER TRUSSES, LONDON SUPPORTERS, FLAVORING EXTRACTS, ,fiODA, '. j if •«/, QELLATINEin -’o'.***-. FINE WINES, WHISKIES AND BRANDIES, for Medicinal Purpose». " n ■: (din’i A Columbus girl wrote a composition on bread. It had to go all the way to the N. Y. Tribune before it could be appreciated. Macon is healthy, only one interment in ten days and that bring a stillborn child, no particular fault can be found with the cli mate. 1 ' * - i . Mr. R. M. Orn e, of Milledgeville, is mov ing his printing material to Savannah wnere give the retail prices of the following arti-. ho will start a daily paper under the name Lard~__. Bulled Chicken*........ 11 to 18lo 25 to 20 to 15 to How to G. t llicu.—Through self-sus taining farms. Ouc-fourlh in cotton and th rce-fourths in grain. The great race of the Pacific Jockey Club will take place in San Francisco, 22d February. Commodore Vanderbilt lias made an ad ditional donation of ouc hundred thousand dollars to the Vanderbilt University, mak ing seven hundred thousand dollars. Let our Legislature see that hundred thousand, and go an hundred thousand bet ter. UNIVERSITY XOIES. Gen. William M. Urowue. Professor of His tory and Political Science. William Montague Browne, was born Jn Ireland A. D. 1823. He was educated at Rugby, under the famous Doctor Arnold, and at Trinity College, Dublin, whence lie graduated with first honors in classics and menial philosophy. Having spent umiiy years in foreign travel he came to the United States about twenty- six years ago, and soon thereafter became prominently connected with tbo press o» one of the editors of the “ .Veto ForJfc Journal nf Commerce.” Having taken a leading part, both as apolitical writer and speaker in the presidential campaign of 1856, taking sides with the Southern States Rights Democracy of the straitest sect, ho was invited in 1857 by President Buchanan to assume the Chief Editorship of the “ Constitution,” the Wash ington organ of his administration, which position Gen. B. filled till the beginning of 1861, when he discontinued the publication of his paper aud came to Athens, Georgia, where he had previously established his home. At the formation of the Government of the Confederate Elates, he was appointed Assistant Secretary of State, but after a few months’ service, he resigned the civil appointment, and entered the Confederate Slates Army and was assigned to the enm- ’ mand of the troops for the defence of Rich mond, being also au Aid de Camp on the Staff of President Davis. In 1864, Gen. Browne was assigned to duty in Georgia, when, towards the end of tho year, he was promoted to the command of a brigade in the corps of Gen. W. J. Hardee. « After the surrender, Gen. B. returned to Athens and devoted himself to agricultu ral and literary pursuits. In 1874, he was e ecled to the Chair of History and Political Science in the Univer sity of Georgia, which was created some years before, Hon. Alex. H. Stephens having been elected to till it, but obliged to resign in consequence of ill health. of the tree Press. A Ccntennarian died in Augusta, last Tuesday. He went his Centennial and one year better, was born in South Carolina, and never drank whisky, nirqj • Miss Maggie H. Davis, daughter of Jetlerson Davis, was married las week, in Memphis, to J. Addison Hayes, Cashier iu the State National Bank. Victor Hugo Sturm, who roamed Mrs. Eppie Bowdre Castlen, of Macon, and about whom there were so many scandalous report*, lias moved to San Francisco. A horse and a freight train un the Central Railroad'collided last week. Tiie engine was pitched off the track and the eugineer killed. Bring in another horse. Waynesboro also sjsirts :i colored cen- ten naiian who rolled G W. around in baby carriage. Send him to Philadelphia to roll U S. G. around in a tar-bucket. Dr. Andrews, of the Washington Gazette, is a business man. Besides being an editor he runs a pill shop, a general news agency, a ststi iuary shoo, and, in off hours, acts as agent for The Eureka Guano Company.— Chronicle and Sentinel. Mr. Stephens —We regret to learn that the health o Hon. Alexander Stephens, in stead of improving, as we had hoped, is growing worse. A gentleman just from Liberty Hall informs us that he is confined to his bed and threatened with pueumonin. We sincerely trust that these apprehensions may not be realized, aud that Mr. Stephens may be spared for many years to bis State and Country SEbbchakts akd Physicians < Will find it to their advantage to ‘ ' 1 * ’ . f ,i i* ’' GIVE US A CALL BEFORE PURCHASING ELSEWHERE! We buy direct from the manufactories, and thus we are enabled to sell very low. v V- .... ,;1 J! • djii { jan4-tf A SPECIALTY! itrfttt Satisfaction ©naranittHi. ALL JOB WOBK DELIVERED 0S TIME! G*UAKO.' : GirMOl' OBER'S SUPERPHOSPHATE OF LIME. OR DISSOLVED BONE. vpiIE BEST IN THE MARKET. FARMERS, LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST, and call And sec me before bavins?. COTTON OPTION ALLOWED. and call and see me before baying. jan4-2m COTTON OPTION ALLOWED. Ni E. RHODES, Agent. REPORT OF THE CONDITION 1 of rnE i-ATiOHAL BANK OF ATHENS, ATAEVS, IV THE STATE 01 GEORGIA. At tho Close of Business, Dec. 17th 1875. RESOURCES. Loan* and Discounts United dutes Bonds to secure circulation —. Other Stocks and Bonds .......~... Due from other National Banks Due froui State llauks and Banker* ......... IU-al i state, Furniture and Fixtures Current Kxpeusesaud Taxes laid ... Checks and other Cash Items Bill* of other National Banks...... - — Fraction 1 Currency (including Sickles).. Legal Tender Note* —— .... Redemption laud with U. 8. Treasurer, 5 per cent of Circulation — - ~ .... Due from U. 8. Treasurer other than 5 per cent Redemption Fund .................. f 186, *4? 77 . 1 to,000 00 22,200 00 153 67 . 18,584 93 5,000 00 3,604 28 . 6.G89 59 . 20,800 0* . 1,509 80 . 18,908 00 18,000 00 4,500 00 1,000 00 Total * LIABILITIES. Capital Stuck paid !n-.~~~ «... Surplus Fund .... . Other undivided profits — Rjtmual Bank Notes outstanding Individual Deposits subject to Check...... Time Certificates of Deposit .... Due to other National Hanks ..—. Total 8407,658 04 STATE UF GEORGIA, COUNTY OF CLARKE.—I, Jamks White, Cashier of the above named Bank, do solemnly .-wear that the above statement is true, twthe best of nay knowledge and belief JAMES WHITE, Cashier. Sworn to and subscribed before me this 3rd day of Jan. 1876. J AS. A? CARLTON, Notary Public. Corrat. Attest. ' JNO. JGStTE, -) A.KCU1LD8, y Directors. R. L. MUNi, J jjw4.lt. his people The country needs his true heart and vigorous brain in tb»oouneilir of -lM*iaaslaJiirt»—I Nto the ualion, and we trust that the threatened blow tnay be averted —Chron. A Sent. Medical and Surgical Memoirs is a work containing investigations on the geographical distribution, causes, nature, relations aud treatment of various diseases from 1855 to 1876, by Josenh Junes, M. D., Professor of Chemistry and Clinical Medicine, Medical Department University of Louisiana, Hon orary rio . berof the Medical Society of Vir ginia, and formerly Surgeon in the Provisional Army of the Confederate States, etc. Dr. nones was once Professor of Chemistry aud Nat. Philosophy in University of Georgia and also a Professor of* Chemistry in Medical College of Georgia at Augusla. 1 A Washington dispatch to ifie N. Y. Herald soys: The Mississippi troubles do not cease- As soon as Congress reassembles Senator Morton expects to push through his resolution for an investigating orimmittee to go down to Mis sissippi, and the outrage mill has been set going already. Meantime the democrats will irobably attempt to onst the colored Senator 3ruce on a charge that he obtained his elec tion by wholesale bribery of the Legislature, which consisted largely of colored members. Evidence has been preparing for this case for some time, and it will be brought out very soon after the Senate assembles. . 4100,000 00 ... 83,000 U0 - 25,670 SO _ 90,000 00 99,792 45 _ ,12 00 .. 4,723 10 UI4U 10 Infrilce. The following is the plot of the story, m criticism of which appears upon our first P»ge: In Infelice the 6th work of Mia. Evans Wilson, we have again portrayed one of the peculiar, yet common episode* ot human life. Tha* authoress takes aa the heroiue of “ Infelice,” Minnie Merle, of humble birth aod fortune. In the little village of V., the seat of a college of learning, we find her aa if by dint of accident, while carrying the clothes of the young men of the school, which her grand mother waa accustomed to wash, falling in* love with Cuthbeit Laurence, a student.from one of the middle states of high family prestige. As time wore on, Minnie and Cuthbert are clandestinely married by one Dr. Hart grove. The young man’s father hearing of the marriage,* becomes indignant and takes his son from school and uses all means to destroy all record of the marriage and t> the fair and horable name of Minnie Merle in dishonor. He even sold bftfkti' immense possessions in America and moved to Kris, and in comae ot time, married his son to tho daughter uf a wealthy banker of that city. .< lame, in coarse nf time, has a daughter, as fruit of this uia.riage, and be coming indignant yt the < iLfa e c practiced upon her, determines to estatyah her;mar riage, obtain the name of Laurence for her child and ^‘jh*IfW|Wce tnis, abe fits bemrif for tha stua ahdm; comes the actress nf the times, sll the time educating and bringing up Regina, -bar daughter, as she should. Bhe becomes tiie Ci, Ceutramal jar. It is also tha year in which an OppasiOcn Uonsc ot WapraacptsUraa, tha first sinoa tha war,.will be power at Washington; and the jeer ‘of the tweutj -thiru election of a President of the United States. All of these ascot, are ante to be of gnat in- tarot end importanoa, especially tha two latter; and all h = wwai. « felice, and plays itroh the stage in Paris, she brought vividly to the miml we will not live to see it. Certainly, sev eral Centennials will have been ©debrste.l ere* then {''third terms may bo doubled and quadrupled, terms lengthened into yean and years, transmitted to families anu pos terities in royal succession, and every vestige of the “greatest government the world ever asw” may havs been effaced ere cur earth aad all thereupon may be “ drifting on the ,Lifting current of reautleMfmain.'' Cuthbert and Rene Laurence hii former We iad 'thfti hpanarwl i h had been done her. This conquered aud‘exposed them. , aud elided up in the old man’s dying and C bcri’s losing his wife and cliild on the aud when Regina, who now was a beautifu 1 and accomplished you * lady, was to many the first lawyer of New: York city, Cuthbert makes his appearance on the * here she stops. > • > Blasting and Digging Wells! ^ ITU AN EXPERIENCE OF TWENTY National Bank of Athens. A thens, ga, leu. soth, ms.—a meeting of 111. Stiareliolaere of Uiia Baufc wiU be kola ai Ui« Baukmgtlouso onTuisdaj, tkclltuUayof J«nuur> next, at leu unlock a. h., for tbo purpose of elect mg uirectors lor the euamuir year. jw4.xt. JAMES WHITE, Cashier. POPE BARROW, ATTO'RJVAT ATHAVT, ATHENS, GA. Office in Mr. J. H. Newton’s new building. j*n*.ty. If you wish to grew Vegetables foe sale. Gardening for Profit! If yon wlah to become aOunmceclal Florlit, Practical Floriculture! If jou Wiib to Garden for Ahmm for Home Uaaoolr. read Gardening for Pleasure! r . *AI1A ST « Peter Henderson, Price $1^0 each, post-paid, by mail. Oar Combined Catalogue for 1878, of EVER jrXHINO GARDEN! #*nt Frea to all Applicants. ■a^&gsiaaaateraae gjfiSSiSggaSs.’Ss Scat to all other, on receiptof 50 86 Gortlandt Street, NEW YORK. M. G. & Jf COHEN ' r,a wif.r. ’■.!.* ? l ^ W : ' 5 ' il O- " ~ ' • W ILL OFFER FOR THE NEXT THIRTY DAYS THE ENTIRE BAlAXCl of their WINTER STOCK, consisting of 4 »a i»: • Tii • DRESS GOODS, SHAWLS, FLANNELS, FURS, BOULEVARD GENTS’ CLOTHING AND FURNISHING GOODS, BOOTS, SHOES, .HATS, ETC,, AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. -ALSO, A LARGE STOCK OF- Youths’ and Boys’ Clothing 1 dcekl-U. Al 2ho™®- Ageot. wanted. Outfit and ten JantSf" * Co., Auguita, Maine. m Week guaranteed to Male and Female Agents, In their locality. Coals Nothing tutryit. Particular. Free P. o. VlcKE- KY A CO., Augu,ta, Me. jau4-R. jlS tn Per day at hum*, oami.les worth St fine. ■yu IU W-WsriNSON A oo , Porliaad, Maiue. JanMt nation, Soul Chaming, Mesmerism, Slid Marriage Guide, showing how either aex may fiMcinate and gain the lore end affection of any penton they choose in stantly. 4u0 pages. By mail 50 cts. Ilcxn&Ct S. 7thSt, Philo. SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS OFFERED TO GRANGERS. i Cull early, tvhil tho selection is largo and the Stock complete, at Wo. 5 SB ISO.ID STREET, ATHENS. GAi, VHE subscribers have removed to No. 12, FRANKLI N HOUSE RANGE, Broad Street, where they.ktep < stuntly on hand a large aud well selected stock of OF EVERY DESCRIPTION & t o., IS juu4.K. . THE GREATEST CHANCE OF THE age. Address with stamp, National Copying Co., Atlanta, Ga. . janAR FIR^ITVRE To which they invito the attention of the public, and which will be sold “tv, lit PER DAY. Business ltonorable and HptP J ’ " lucrative. Agents wanted. Address Marion Supply Co., Marion, Ohio. Jan4.B ■iSTY YEARS, 1 hereby tender ml services to the citizen, of Athens ud vicinity. First class work guaranteed. • between tha upper Residence at the Tsimadn House, bridge and Check Facttwy. AU wUtS EDWIN W. PORTER. Awarded the Highest Medal at Vienna. E. & H. T. ANTHONY & CO., 591 Broadway, Neto York. (Upp. Metropolitan Hotel.) MANUFACTURERS, IMPORTERS dc DEALERS IN CHROMOS AND FRAMES, STEREOSCOPES and VIEWS, Albums, Grap/ioscopes, and Suitable Vicxcs AGENTS WANTED! CHINESE SUGAR CANE! 1 HAVE a pure article of Chinme Sugar Cane Seed, which I will sell at 25 cents per package pre-paid mail. These seeds are not mixed, and make extra fins Syrup, Address, W. 8. TIPTON, Cleveland, Tenn. ilia. THE WEEKLY SUN. NEW YORK. : |jVlQHTEEN HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-SIX Jii nf thtm ^.fW» *1“ ** illy and freshly reported and expounded in The Sod. The Opposition Utread of'Representatives, taking up . , . " e,wJl niisdiwd^GreuSadS^^Knpmd^^uS^S I fw a a»jrtftbattar period- ■■Ml Inn Sun will con OfjOU . thepre- ■^ly^droSworthy ixiormation uJ Iporsticns for it, will bel lOrenVa yai*MkHMtftr s lUidfn of^H ■Wtftjrvvjat&’sSS Icandidate. Concerning all these a bject*, thoJaBM read Ti>e Sou will have the cousunt means ot thoroughly well informed. Too Weekly Sun, which i s Tue Weekly Son, which lias attained a ciroalaUon of ’otdr eighty tboarimd oaphs, already lias iu readers in .ML WEE newspaper. All the general nawaof tbWlSM'lM in it, coudeused when uuim- BfiaawpjgArsrj.’aia ateM. • * Tai * T&iti '.r <T’> t n oar «it» to.bbaLii the Weekly Sun tb« Ast family ogrioulturat infcrmatwn, ftr whkfc wa^ffmit able to Jfeht-pagw, witlf i eigut columns, gi Subserintion. not year. . Bondsy ed nu iraretiug Photographic Materials We are Headquarters for every thing in the way of Siereopiicons and Magic Lanterns, Being Manufiwtnreis of the . ' • MICRO-SCIENTIFIC LANTERN, STEREO-PANO PTICON, UNIVERSITY STKKKOPTICON, AD VERTISER’S STEREOPriCON, ARTOFTI- CON, SCHOOL LANTERN, FAMILY LANTERN, PEOPLE’S LANTERN. . Each style being the beat of iu dans in the market. j Catalogues of lanterns and Slides with direction* for using sent an application.- . - - jan4.4m. ~~rf~ HAVE YOU A DOLLAR? roa on dollab w» wiu. (IXD, remoa-rajp, i THE WEEKIlY W08LD ONE YEAS. I. IT CONTAINS ALL THE NEW8 OF THE PAST ■j. Its Agricuitur..! Department contains the I tiona of voidable and iutaraating articles called, is a future which am be (hand in another paper AU tha Tgeoaroea at the metropolitan daily newspaper are employe of m ADVERTISING IN Religious and Agricultural WEEKLIES, H al'f-P ri c e. also furoiah. within the city. SEND FOR OUR CATALOGUE, ON THE-LIST PLAN.: For iufurmotion, address , Geo. P. Rowell & Co., 41 Park Row, jani.R it NEW YORK. I ■ ADVERTISING IN Canadian Newspapers $1 For 2Bets. ON Send for our Catalogue. THE LIST PLAN; Por information, address Geo. P. Rowell <6 Co., 41 Park Row txiv ,sa n jun4.K NEW YORK.; 1-n'i — C .ci I Athens Female A elide my 1 ! BOARDING AND DAY 80E00L. ■blic nWED-ll Mntell*, i that thia s«li<totwUl ba aj'tead *0 WJ NESDAY, Junuary Oth, 1875. Ternii. rear unable. . |]|>p7.5t *- I-njWhatKO.ve! dec7*5t - r ^TT WRJUh^a, vvasaiii . xuu. v mu* ’ r j» :: t- HE SUBSCBlBEKSfWISHlNG TO I I wind un iMiilGHihiwJixwi kMPnilttnH to them to .The of all Who Ssr(mshWbe0toia.iil-tbe an mwt tot collection. 3 *»A woMtntSe wise lasntbcienC’'- ,... •, . •; ;’>biforf>'» devjil.-lpi. MlfiffBS.A ' COFFINS AND BURIAL CASKS Furnished AS LOW OR LOWER than by any other establishment in the city, so furoisb, WITHOUT ADDITION A LCHaHGE, icr oiaiamucu. .... v.... V, lien furnished by UJ, V( onr handsome HEARSE, with horses and driver, lor tocim J. F. WILSON A CO. Athena, Ga., 8ept. 8—45-tm. FOR THE CAMPAIGN OF 1876 the Augusta Constitutionalist. Jfien I 1 HE PROPRIETORS WOULD AN- _ noonee that tha AoansTa CoxsmraoBatjn *dH ^ Machin i S ts\ L States. In Georgia a GovsMor and other State i, members of Congress and members of the Foundry ATHENS and Machine Athens, Geokgia, take a leading part iu the coming Presidential ..nd Gubernatorial Campaigns of 1919. Nextyear an election WiU he bald Ait President and Vice-President of the United I " --- officers, - - - p* Legislature are to M cboeeh. It is already known that the Presidential contest will be the most exciting, and certainly the most importan which has occurredsince 18*0. Upon a truthful pres • the people must almost wholly rely for accurate infor- ziHi, in order to act intelligently and in eonoert. To our immediate section, it is at the first importance that its voice sbonld be beard by the country at lam, its necessities known and the legislation it needs in Con gress, end the future policy of the Government, th rough ns Executive, made perfectly dear. The CoremruTUKiauiT has a strong corps of editors and correspondents employed, and. will devote a large amount ot its space to the Presidential and the State campaign.. now, publish each morning in itt Daily, even other day in its Tri-Weekly, ahd-HaXlVaekly, the very latest news to tuna o’clock on tha mooting of publi- s will include talegnphio dispatenes from all uortioua of the United States, dispatenes by cable from the Old World, the markets ut home and from Europe, a doily resume of Georgia and booth Carolina i local news, the decisions of the Supreme Court of '' Georgia, and, lastly, the local news of the'dty of Augusta. . , . gtaiifi w.gpsaamraMw. ,, Daily—one year'... •. o-wK-'M % - ’•ifS six mouths. o 00 . _ '«• three months. 2 5o Ut KLLAC. GOLBERT'BESPECT- * <» lVJr iutly autuim.ee* to bar JHcuiM' 'find tha jpublic PATTERN WORK, SMITHING AND REPAIRING Having an extensive collection of Patterns, Mami(*«’-' ! Iron and Brass Castings, MILL AND GIN GEARING MINING ds MILL MACHINSK- Steam Engines, Saw Mills, ShafimgJ^ leys, Mill Spindles, Hoisting Sera* Lighter Screws, Rattle Slap. NiU ( ranks, Hors e-P owtrs, Threshers, Fan Mills, Sugar Mills, Bark Mills, Stamping -» Cotton Seed Crushers, etc., etc., etc. ’> T*xihouth*.....J.....l 00 Biugla,**^ bet*. _■ Tonuwsdwiar*, 2,J,t* cu, Sub- senpttoni must in all oases be paid tu advance. T.ie paper will be 'dlshontinned at the ex{ar4tiuu or the time paid for.- «• fit fir <} ':euxi ‘I IpVo^Metore. GEO. T. JACKSON,. ) >■£ r ’j1i - A, KEW- booi ''CrtGNA'Onida’s last, - - ^ <>' ^ Three Feet here, by Wat BMk) fil.ua «*— hv Blackwowt Tfie!' fl ^' , '*' i V'lrt'P'* niter’s Word, by James Payne,'SOe.* ladp) __ tedion, and th* result Is a peg* eaeir week where the I . Forteit at ° " !i - ;d V™ 1 >ers may find acompktt record of tha wwrk ofth* | ' Jnna 98. »MB BURKE’SRnefi Btore, in ih For Sale or Rent. OR RENT A GDDD eight room*, out liouaea, with a good garden fitUcbed, cvbhlnMlWta. JAS.lt. HUGGINS. i > fvfSWr Tl(j •] •j*ii iu) I- • ■ - . • • State.**TMs*depsrtrnent i ( J^ NlOjlT MI DEC.^ u^er the chwgo of oue of tho acUve members of the [ J5Si< less thanmie huiSrel abort t&»by the best wtitt» of i, i by the best wtit r* of - down to t’-e hboV . f jah4.lt. - : vi:i t>?- w reported Hmu? mien VI •object in t!io United h&J&. beet antkority'npon"ffiit FJJW # IIEBIWEATHER. nodSi ^J««^Tm^kare^^f.^W?rid»^Siri^S- TTflLL FEW? AND WrESLfeY MERiWfiATIlER, ; * (‘ The World is not only the bcrt bnt tho cheapest j»ut-5t. aaw.oa- , : Specimen eopits *4nt nponappHc»tioui:.}j,; rj.-vjq ssxMssim *, New Y*dt asp. H* jon4>K. of , and nt reasonable charges They have the beet workmen and nee nothing but th. best material. Carriage*'work, plantation work, horse •ao’WzJ-'-e ftl ■. ■ . 1876* thipm.. 40*0» dad Female Colleges; bat ithtnaodffied for time who m to.mym .fcr .bailngfil w egricaitqr<n^Oar ^PmSheq/lre^bd teete’aWIen axtamiwewixpk .wnTTbc ««»i3 .board aad tnitimt peg annnm, lor six *nd - od: ' wiojwt For Sale or Rent.. f PHEHOU8EAND LOTFORMERLY X owned by Capt. J. E: Wteh, bpfoaita Mr. Jo*. 8. El ^ l “cOBB 1 ERWrtN*S > <?0ra, Attorneys atiaw. daelMk Manufacture, and are Agents for. ti e ,n< l t Tarbine Water Wheels, Brooks’ P»“ n t volving snd Colt’s celebrated Colton 1 .. Fencing, Grave Enclosures, Balconies, * ■> Address, R. NICKERSON, Agent Pindtnirfi furnUhfid fit MffilluftiClurer P Mill Findings furnished At Manufacturer p dec7.5t CIGARS; Wo have now on bond 2i0,00* Choicest __ Cigars, which we offer at Gbsatcy Kxoecr® ^ re Also a targe stock of Smoking aud Cbe "“’*A | i Suiiff, Genuine Meenhaom Pipes, and *11» tide*. , . , ,v.w, W-t I XST A liberal discount allowed to Jobw” largely. Come one! Come all l. ivbLPS. £ Aug. 5. A. R. ROBERTSON’S -» jr. T . ,,, lt e ^j 0 Dealer in and manufacturer Hj^Tombe h-fotStdnre, Marble and Grande Bor ft die Tomb*. All work cominced » well to examine my draign*, IBaC . _ tiiey are d4alilig with a fair Slid squ*" 0 ™- ft., Athens, Go., Sept. *», 18T*. .— r ^f0 v mdHbOflEnt^ranDana ties to all nointsinTanasssej, Si* t W.L.DANLEl^iV 1 *?>1 A fflsssjra?®" novfoti.