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FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
The Poetry of Corn Bread.
Two cups Indian, one cup wheat,
One cup sour milk, one cup sweet;
One good egg tlint you will beat.
Haifa cup molasses, too,
Half a cup of sugar add thereto ;
With one spoon of butter new.
Salt and soda each a spoon,
Mix up quickly and bake it soon;
Then you’ll have corn bread complete,
.Best of all corn bread you meet.
It will make your boy's eyes shine,
If lie is like that boy of mine ;
If you have a dozen boys
To increase your household joys,
Double, then, this rule I should,
And you'll have two corn cakes good.
"Wheu you've nothing nice for tea,
This the very thing will be.
All the men that 1 have seen
Say it is, of all cakes, queen;
Hood enough for any king
• That a husband home can bring;
Warming up the human stove.
Cheering up the heart you love ;
And only Tyndall can explain
The links between corn bread and brain.
(lets a husband what he likes.
And save a hundred household strikes.
Useful Recipes.
Coffee Cake. —Four eggs, two cups brown
sugar, one cup butter, one cup molasses, one
cup cold coffee, one-half pound raisins, one
half nutmeg, two teaspoons cloves, one tea
spoon soda, four cups flour.
Corn Cake. —One cupful of Indian meal,
one cupful flour, one teaspoonful crcam-tar
tar, one-half teaspoon ful saleratus, a piece of
butter the size of an egg, two eggs, one cup
ful of milk, and less than a cupful of sugar.
Boiled Brown Bread.— Two cups of meal,
one cup of flour, one teaspoon of salt, one
'caspoon of soda, two-thirds cup of molasses;
put it into a greased pudding-boiler or tin
pail; plunge into boiling water and boil three
hours.
A lady writes : “To wash quilts, comfor
tables, tickings, or sackings, soak in pure
cold water twenty-four hours or more. Then
rub through warn water with a little soap and
rinse well.” It is worth tiding.
Klnibnrb ought not to be stewed for pies,
but cut the sticks in small pieces; fill your
lislies, already filled with the lower crust,
md cover thick with sugar. After placing
on a thin lid, bake in a moderate oven.
Raised Muffins. —One quart milk, four
eggs, one small teacup yeast, butter size of
an egg, flour to make a thin batter; in the
morning add one-half teaspoon soda if the
dough is turned. This rule makes three dozen
mutlius.
Lemon .Tumbles. —One egg, one cup sugar,
one-half cup of butter, three teaspoonfuls of
milk, one-half teaspoon ful of soda, and one
of cream-tartar, juice of two small lemons,
and the grated rind of one; mix stiff.
Ginokii Snaps. —Take one pint of molas
ses, one teacup of butter, one spoonful of gin
ger, and one teaspoon ful of saleratus, and
boil all the ingredients thoroughly; when
nearly cold, add as much flour as can be
rolled into the mixture.
HUtter Pudding. —One pint of milk, four
well-beaten eggs, two cups of flour, one tea
spoonful of salt, and pinch of soda. Hake
three-quarters of an hour, or boil in a but
tered mold or floured bag two hours ; serve
with sauce and eat at once.
A thick flour bag, that will hold twenty-five
pounds of Hour, is excellent to put hams away
iu for the summer. Wrap the hams first in
brown paper, several thicknesses ; tie the bag
tightly and hang up. No flics will disturb the
lmms.
German Pukes.— Three beaten eggs, three
cups of milk, three teaspoon fuls of melted
butter, three cups of flour, a small spoonful
pf salt; pour into nine well buttered cups,
same size as used in measuring; bake to
a fine brown and cat as soon as done, with
sauce.
Graham Bread.— For two loaves of Gra
ham bread take two quarts of flour, a small
cupful of good yeast, two tablespoon fuls of
molasses (sweeten if you like), one teaspoon
of salt; wet up with warm water or milk,
have it about the consistency of brown bread.
Let it rise over night. In the morning have
your pans well buttered and pour in without
storing at all. Lei it rise again till it comes
up light; then bake in a moderate oven 1(
hour.
To Curb a Felon. —Professor Ilutter, of
Berlin, cures bone felon or whitlow by first
probing the swelling of the finger, making a
small incision where the pain appears great
est. The pain of the operation may be less
ened by the local application of either or
inhalation of chloroform. The after treat
ment is equally simple. The small wound
is to be covered with lint and carbolic acid,
and bathed morning and evening with tepid
water. In a few days it is perfectly healed.
Koci Plant. —A kettle of boiling water, a
large spoonful of salt in it in which place as
many egg plants as you wisli for dinner; let
them boil a few minutes to take the acrid
taste from them, then cut, if small ones, in
halves ;if large ones, quarter them. Take
out all the inside seeds with it. leaving a thin
rind, which mix with bread crumbs, a small
piece of butter, egg, pepper and salt. Put
this mixture in the rind ; then put in a stove
pan : bake a nice brown.
Orange Custard. —Boil the rind of half
a good orange very tender, then beat it until
it is fine ; add to it a spoonful of the best
brandy, the juice of an orange, one-fourth of
a pound of loaf sugar, and the yelks of four
eggs; beat well for ten minutes, then pour in
by degrees, a pint of boiling cream; keep
beating as you pour into your cups. Set the
cups in an earthen dish of hot water; let them
stand still till they are set; then take them
out and spread preserved orange peel over
the top of each cup, and serve hot or cold ac
cording to taste.
Corn Starch Pudding. —One quart of
fresh milk, a pinch of salt, four tablespoons
of corn starch, the same of sugar. Dissolve
the corn starch in a little of the milk, stir the
sugar and salt in the remainder of the milk,
place it over the fire, let it come to a boil and
pour it on the dissolved starch ; place it over
the fire again and boil three minutes, stirring
constantly ; remove from the fire, let it stand
a moment or two, then flavor with vanilla or
lemon, and pour into cups to cool, having
first dipped the cups in cold water and al
lowed them to drain a moment.
RELIGIOUS.
Lebanon and Its Cedars.
13Y ELLEN BERTIIA BRADLEY.
One night the chat of the Sunday Club
turned upon those old monarchs of the for
est, the cedars of Lebanon, and the moun
tains upon which they grew. The chilliness
of the autumn evenings had, weeks before,
compelled our adjourning our meetings from
the piazza to the library, and Ned was sit
ting by the table, examining a map, when
our friend Mr. Fowler came in and went
directly to the fire.
“It is stinging cold,” said he, rubbing his
hands; “I am glad we are to have a trip to
a warmer clime.”
“Even if it be for the purpose of climbing
mountains,” said Ned. “The difference of
elevation will do much to make up for that of
latitude. You know the valleys of the Leba
non lie from two to three thousand feet above
the sea.”
“What arc you talking about, Uncle Ned ?”
asked Susie, who had come into the room in
time to hear his last words.
“A trip to the White Mountains,” was the
reply.
She know he was not exactly in earnest,
and tanked at the map with a puzzled face.
“There they are,” said lie, pointing to the
range of mountains parallel with the coast
of Syria.
“But those arc Lebanon,” she objected.
“Y r ery true,” said lie; “the range takes
its name from the Hebrew word Laban, which
means white; I only translated it. New
Hampshire has its White Mountains. Swit
zerland its Mt. Blanc, and Syria its Leba
non ; but in the language of the country to
which each belongs the name means the same.”
“Surely,” said mother, “the Lebanon are
not so called because they arc snow-capped.”
“The two highest peaks arc during most
of the year,” he replied. “One of them.
Jebcl Timarun, is stated, on good authority.
to be more than ten thousand five hundred
feet in height, and the average of the range
is seven thousand feet, an elevation greater
♦ , °
than that of our Mt. Washington.”
“Still,” said Mr. Fowler, "the mountains
do not take their name from the snow, blit
from the color of the limestone cliffs.”
“ You have been there, have you not ?”
asked Ned.
“No, but I studied up for the journey and
was unexpectedly prevented from taking it.”
“Wliatdoyou mean by studying up for
the journey ?” asked Harry.
“I tried to find out all I could about the
countries I was to visit, so as to get all the
good possible from the trip.”
“Tell us some of the things you learned
about these mountains,” Ned requested.
“With pleasure,’’ was the reply ; “but.
first let, us be sure that we know exactly
where the}' are.”
He left the fire, and, coming to the table,
took the scat that Ned offered him before the
open atlas; and we all gathered around him.
“You see how the ranges run,'’ said he,
pointing to them : “their course is a little
east of north and nearly parallel with the
coast. The one nearest the sea is the Leba
non of the Scriptures; the other, or more
eastern range, being the Anti-Lebanon.”
“Or * Lebanon toward the sun-rising,’ as
it is called in the only allusion made to it in
the Bible.” mother remarked.
“llow the poetic nature of the Hebrews
showed itself in trifles,” said he; “we should
never find such a graceful touch as that in a
catalogue of western lands.”
“It occurs, I believe,” said Ned, “in the
list of countries to be distributed to tlie chil
dren of Israel.”
“Yes.” said Mr. Fowler, “but it was to
be conquered before it was possessed, and
consequently it was never theirs. It was
many of the good things that they lost
through neglecting to keep themselves sepa
rate from the heathen nations around them,
as God had commanded.”
“ It would have been a beautiful possession,”
said Ned.
“Indeed, it would,” was the reply. “The
valleys and lower parts of the mountains are
under marvellous cultivation, and travellers
are eloquent over their beaut3'. Fig-trees
cling to seemingly naked cliffs; vineyards
are trained along narrow ledges, and the
houses of villages porch like swallows’ nests
among the rocks ; lower arc groves of olives
and other fruits, and forests of oak and pine,
to say nothing of the famous cedars.”
“ I thought those last were becoming very
scarce,” said I.
“The old ones are.” was the reply, “but
there is a younger growth more abudant.”
“An American missionary,” said Ned.
“speaks of only eleven groups of the old
giants, five in Northern and six in Southern
Lebanon.”
“ One of these groups,” said Mr. Fowler,
“covers a piece of ground measuring some
thing like three-quarters of an acre in circum
ference. There are about four hunered trees
in it wnicli are supposed to vary in age from
two to eight hundred years, and are, of course,
regarded as mere infants.”
“Why so? Are there any older?” asked
Susie, with widely-opened eyes.
“Yes, a few,” he answered; “and these
upstarts are by some set down as not even
belonging to the same species as the dozen or
so genuine old giants.”
“How old may they be?” asked Susie.
“Do they date back to Solomon’s temple?”
“Hardly,” was the reply; “that was built
twenty-nine hundred years ago. and the best
judges think these trees not more than two
thousand years old.”
“Can't they count the rings and find out ?”
asked Annie.
“ No,” he answered with a shake of the
head; “their stems have ceased to grow in
regular rings, aud there is no way of deter
mining their age. Besides, the trees would
have to be cut down in order to count them,
and that would never be allowed by the
Arabs, who call them saints and believe that
some great evil would befall an}' one who
injured them.”
“ They must be enormously large,” said
mother.
“They are in girth, but not in height,” he
answered; “ the tallest of them is not more
than fifty feet high, while one measures sixty
three feet around the trunk, and another for
ty-nine.”
“ That was not at all my idea of them,” I
remarked.
“ Nor mine,” said mother ; “ I have always
thought of them as towering majestically
above the other trees of the forest.”
“ lain sorry to dispel the illusion,” said
Mr. Fowler, smiling; “but facts are stub
born. The trees are short and stubbed, with
gnarled and knotty branches starting from
low on the trunk ; the leaves are dark green,
and united in clusters of from twenty to
thirty.”
“ I saw one of the cones once,” said moth
er ; “it was about four inches in length and
three in diameter; the ends were broadly
rounded, and the scales large and closely
crowded together.”
“ Yes,” said Mr. Fowler, “ and they arc so
firmly fixed in their places that the cones may
hang upon the trees for years without their
loosening, although, in course of time, they
will come off and the seeds be set free. They
are always two years in reaching maturity.”
“ What has caused the disappearance of the
trees ?” asked mother.
“Their great destruction for building pur
poses, for one tiling,” answered Mr. Fowler.
“ I know,'’ said she, “ that Solomon had
eighty thousand hewers cutting timber for the
temple.”
“ Yes,” he replied, “ cedar was much prized
in those days for its fragrance and durability.
No costly building was complete that was
partly made of it. It is less valued now be
cause of its liability to crack in drying ; but
it is just as well, for the wood could not be
obtained if it were desired.”
“ I hope a few of the trees will last till I
have seen them,” said Susie.
“Probably they will,” said Mr. Fowler;
“but if they should not, you will find enough
i that is interesting in the wonderful moun
tains, in the caves of which Jews and Cliris
| tians have alike found refuge from their op
pressors.”
“Their history is almost as remarkable as
their scenery,” Ned remarked,
“Indeed it is,” was the answer, “and to
! many other sacred associations it adds that
of being the birthplace of the Jordan.”
“ A stream that will furnish a theme for
some Sunday night, I hope,” said Ned ; “but
there goes tiie stroke that ends our chat.”
As he spoke, the cluck chimed the hour of
nine, and our little party began to disperse.—
New York Observer.
Wit and Humor.
A little deaf-mute boy was asked to show
his skill in the use of the English language
| on his slate, and he wrote ; “A man ran from
a cow. He is a coward."
“Dad, have yon ever been to the museum ?”
said a ten-year-old. “No, my son. ’ “Well,
go and mention my name to the keeper and
lie’ll take you around and show you every
thing.”
“Didn't you guarantee that that horse
wouldn't shy before the discharge of a can
non ?” said a cavalry officer to a horse-deal
er. "Yes, 1 did, and I’ll.stick to it,” replied
| the dealer, “lie never shies until after the
i cannon is fired.”
“ Beggars can't be choosers,” says an old
adage. We take notice that a beggar got
into the hallway the other da\ r , and chose from
the hat rack forthwith—three hats, one um
brella, acd our best sealskin overcoat. This
knocks the sawdust out of that adage.
Time makes all things even. For twent} 7 -
seven years a New Hampshire husband kept
taunting his wife witli the fact that her broth
er was once in jail. Last week his mother
was arrested for setting a barn on fire, and
the wife sniffs and sa}*s : “Nice family 3*oll
sprung from !”
“Here's m3’ wife and I.” said a husband
with much complacency, to his silver wedding
guests, “ who have been married five and
twenty years, and all that time haven’t had a
single unkind word with each other.” “By
Jove !” exclaimed one of the guests, “ what a
stupid time 3*oll must have had of it.”
He was an entire stranger to the girls pres
ent. and the boys w*ere mean and would not
introduce him. lle'finall3’ plucked up cour
age, and stopping up to a 3 T oung lad3*, re
quested her company for the next dance.—
She looked at him in surprise, and informed
him that she had not the pleasure of his ac
quaintance. “Well,” remarked Cazenovia.
“3’ou don’t take aii3 r more chances than I
do.”
A little girl had a representation of “Moses j
in the Bulrushes” in her picture book.—l
“Here, grandma,” said she. “is
a picture of Jesns in the huckleberry bushes.”
The other da3’ a teacher asked an unregen
erate pupil what the gender of a certain noun
was. The pupil quickl3’ replied :“ I think it is
neuter, sir. At an3* rate it is neuter-me.”
The orphan boy has one advantage over
the lad who is blessed with a full complement
of parents. His mother can’t make him a
new pair of trousers out of his father’s old
coat.
“ What is wisdom ?” asked a teacher of a
class of small girls. A bright-eyed little
creature rose and answered, “Information
of the brain.”
A young blade of her acquaintance had
passed without acknowledging her how—her
eyes flashed like swords, for wasn’t she a
cutlass ?
The phonograph is like the small brother
of a young lady. It will repeat everything
said in its presence without regard to blushes.
In what two cases are precisely the same
means used for directly opposite purposes ?
Why, to be sure. The3' are put on bank
windows to keep thieves out, and on jail win- j
dows to keep them in.
fhofessiaudf & (Business (Ennis.
Dr. W. S. Alexander,
SURGEON DENTIST,
Harmony Grove, Jackson Cos., Ga.
Y\J ILL be at Jefferson on the first Monday and
u Tuesday in each month, and will continue
his stay from time to time as circumstances may
justify. Terms LOW, FOR CASH, and work
done in a superior manner.
July 10th, 1873.
WILL. I. PIKE. W. S. M’CARTY.
P 11*11 A JIeCARTV,
Attorneys at I-nw,
JEFFERSON, JACKSON CO., GA.
Will give prompt, aiul thorough attention to all
kinds of legal business in Jackson and adjoining
counties. One or both. always in the office, ex
cept when professionally absent. fcl>2
WII. SIJIPKINS,
• Attorney at Law,
Associated with J. B. SILMAN, Esq., Jeffer
son, (la.
BfjjtT'Special attention given to the collection ol
claims. January sth, 187S.
EMORY SPEER, I W. S- MORRIS.
Athens, Ga. | Jefferson, Ga.
SPEER & MORRIS.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW ,
•YcflcrMon, CJa., will practice in Superior,
Ordinary's and Justices’ Courts. B£g“'Office in
building with C6l. Silinan, UP-STAIRS, aug2s
1 > F. WOFFORD, Alt orncy-a t-1 .a .
A). Harmony Grove, Jackson Cos., Ga.
Will practice in all the adjoining counties, and
give prompt attention to all business entrusted to
his care. Collecting claims a specialty.
March .Id, 1877.
WILEY C. HOWARD. ROB*T S. HOW ARIA.
W. C. A 11. S. HOWARD,
ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT
LA IF,
f~2l Jefferson. Ga.
I. J. I'TjOYD, I J. R. SILMAN,
Covington, Ga. | Jefferson, Ga.
IM.OVD A 511,.11A.A,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
Will practice together in the Superior Courts oi
the counties of Jackson and Walton.
junel2—ly
Dll. C. 11. GILES
OFFERS his professional services to the citizens
of-Jefferson and vicinity. Can be found at
the office recently occupied by Col. Mahaffey.
Jan. 22, 187 t
Dr. J. mFbURNS
HAYING resumed - the practice of Medicine,
offers his professional services to the public,
Thankful for all past patronage, he solicits a lib
eral share in the future. The Dr. can be found at
his residence, three miles cast of Jefferson, when
not professionally engaged.
Aug 11 JOHN M. BURNS, M. 1).
JOHN J. KEYTTT,
ARCHITECT,
Savannah, Georgia.
PLANS and Specifications prepared for Dwell
ings. Stores, Churches, and other public
buildings. Old buildings remoddcled and newly
designed. March 23 *
Warm Springs, Ga.
Situated on a spur of Pine Mountain, 1,800 feet
above sea level. A fountain gushing forth 1,400
gallons of water per minute. 'Temperature 1)0°
Fahrenheit. Is one of-the greatest wonders in the
country. 'The bathing houses are line, and every
arrangement is made to accommodate visitors.
BOARD:
Per Day, $2 : per Week, $lO ; per Month, S3O.
Children under 12 years and colored servants
half price.
Conveyance to Springs to be had on arrival of
trains at Geneva, Kingsboro, I.aGrange and 11 o
gunsville.
For further, information, address
•B. 1,. IH’STIA.\, I'roprieior.
May 15, 1878.
i *>ll II Hi llMilihl'F i'll
PIANOS. ORGANS
A'ew, 7 Oct. SIS. I Aew, D Stops,
>cw, 7\ Oct. | A'ew, la Sit op*, ijS7?S
“Magnificent,” “ bran new,” “ lowest prices
ever given.” Oh how this “cruel war” rages,
but Ladden .V States still bold the field and
rain hot shot into the bogus manufacturers who
deceive the public with Humbug Grand Offers on
SSioßdy Instruments. Send for Special Offers,
and circular exposing frauds of Piano and Organ
Trade, lagildcu dates. Wholesale Piano
and Organ Dealers. Savannah. Ga.
sweet m^smnu
Tobacco
Awarfle'-l hijhest prize nt Centennial Exposition fo
fine chewi '/ qtahtien un i excellence and lading char
acter cf r'cr.etc dug and flavoring. The best tobacco
ever marie. As our bine strip trade-mark is closely
imitated tvi inferior poods, see that Jnrkton’i lied is
on every plop. Soi l by rll dealers. Send for sample,
tree, to C. A. Jj.csso:i Cos., >lfrs., l'ctersburg, Va.
PIANO J*f autiful Concert Grand ORGAN
eiiiwi-Pianos, cost Sl,;oo, .
ly Superb (irand Square Pianos, cost sl,-
100, only $255. Elegant Upright Pianos, cost SBOO,
only $153. New Style Upright Pianos, $112.50.
Organs $35. Organs, 12 stops. $72.50. Church
Organs, 16 stops, cost S6OO, only slls. Elegant
$375 Mirror Top Organs only $lO5. Tremendous
sacrifice to close out present stock. New Steam
Factory soon to be erected. Newspaper with
much information about cost of Pianos ami Or
gans SENT FKEI3. Please address DANIEL F. BEAT
TY, \N asmngton, N. J.
W A DAY to Agents canvassing for the fl’ir<
side Visiter. Terms and Outfit Free.
Address P. 0. \ ICKEUY. Augusta, Maine.
$lO. S2O. 3C)O. $ KKK
Invested judiciously in Stocks (Options or Privi- I
leges), is a sure road to rapid fortune. Full de- I
tails and Official Stock Exchange Reports free.!
Address T. POTT Kit 1\ [OUT’ & CO., Bankers,
35 TV all Street, New York.
- The Remedy of (he lPlh Ontnrj.
Barham ’s Infallible
W] PILE CURE.
\ if Manufactured by the
> SsaHBF / BarbanPiie Cur* Cos., Durham, N. C.
It eTer fell, to enre ll.norrhnld,
or Pile*, when a eure U poMible.
Prlee Met and bona fide tceUmonUla
furnished on mpplieatioa
Ucan make rcone}’ faster at work for us than
at anything else. Capital not required ; we
will start you. sl2 per day at home made by the
industrious. Men. women, boys and girls want
ed cverj’where to work for us. ’ Now is the time.
Costly outfit and terms free. Address True &
Cos.. Augusta, Maine. March 30’78
For Sale!
A GOOD, serviceable One Horse Wagon, and
aaL pair new Harness and Traces. A good Sad
dle. An excellent new Feed Cutter. Simple,
and docs its work well. All will be sold at a bar
gain, for Cash. Apply to
apl27 M. STAFFORD.
Warning to Trespassers.
AKK PERSONS arc hereby warned not to
Hunt, rish or otherwise Trespass upon
the lands of the undersigned, trader full penalty
of the laic.
junc22—tf SARAH A. TURNER.
LOOK OUT!!
FOR ONE MONTH OA7j ,
hhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
WILL BE SOLD FROM
Up" 4 $9 to S3O,
EACH, at A. K. CHILDS <fc Co.’s
NORTHEAST GEORGIA STOYE ANI) TINAVAIiI;
Opposite Reaves & Aicliolsou'*,
JLFJEaJ£t%J JL , amikns,
SIGN OF THE BIG STO YE!
W. 11. JONES, Superintendent. Nov'r 10th 187"
PENDERGRASS, SON k Ca.
Corner of Sycamore S' Walker Streets ,
Have just received a large stock of
SPRING and SUMMER PRINTS,
PDINTED LAWNS AM) PIQUES. CHEAP;
SWISS AND JACKONET MUSLINS. SHEETINGS.
SHIRTINGS, CHECKS AND COTTON A DES. LA DIES' NECK WEAR
SILK HA NDKER CD I EES, Etc.', Etc.
Ladies’ Hats, Ribbons and Artificial Flowers,
MENS’ AND BOYS’ STRAW ANJ) FUR RATS
GLASSWARE, CROCKERY and TINWARE,
SIIO YEL FLO WS, SCOOTERS , TURNERS S’ S WEEPS
Scovil’s, Braid’s and Planters’ Handled Hoes,
School Books, Foolscap & Letter Paper,
A BEAUTIFUL LOT OF DOX NOTE PAPER,
READY-MADE CLOTHING!
They keep many other goods that have not been mentioned.
CALL -A.TST3Z) SEE WHAT THEY HAVE GOT.
They bought their stock since the
RECENT DECLINE IN PRICES,
And will sell them as CHEAP as Anybody.
April 27th. &m.
Conies to the Front with a Full Line of
S fill.SO i SUMMER HOODS,
Which they are Ottering at
Reduced Prices!!!
Their stock, at present, consisting of
DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, HARDWARE, SHOES,
LADIES* and GENTLEMENS’ IIATS. SUGAR and COFFEE,
DRUGS, NEW ORLEANS SYRUP, BACON, LARD, FLOUR,
TOBACCO, and man}’ other things usually kept in a retail Store.
ifltf We hope, by close application to business to share a portion of the public patronage.
Call and Examine our Stock.
Jefferson, Ga.. April Gth, 1878.
Something; New!!
Dr. J. B. PENDERGRASS’
NEW DRUG STORE,
Jetterson, Ga.
r pilE undersigned has just opened, in his office.
X up-stairs, over Pendergrass, Son & Co.’s
Store, a Drug Store, where he has, and will keep
constantly on hand
ALL KINDS
OF DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS,
OILS. VARNISII, <s•<?.
PATENT MEDICINES, FRESH PER
FUMERY, HAIR OILS, PAINT
BRUSHES, &c„ &c.
In short, everything usnally found in a
FIRST CLASS DR UG Store,
May be found at this establishment.
and prescriptions filled for Physi
cians and others, by the proprietor, or in his ab
sence. professionally, customers will be served by
a competent Druggist and Chemist.
Prices to Suit the Times !
February 23, 1878.
££££ a week in your own town, $5 Outfit
free. No risk. Reader, if you want a
business at which persons of either sex can make
great pay all the time they work, write for partic.
ulars to 11. Hai.TjEtt & Cos., Portland, Maine.
March 30, 1878.
COOKING
STOYES
hhhh
NEW FURNITURE
ESTABLISHMENT.
J. F. WILSON,
UP-STAIRS, over Reaves & Ncholson's,hroal
street. Athens, Ga., has established a nci'j
business in his line, and is prepared to furnish *'
kinds of
FURNITURE. \
COFFINS. i
BURIAL CASKS.
At reasonable prices.
Repairing all kinds of Furniture a special*?-
and satisfaction guaranteed. ...
Having a supply of Mouldings on hand, lie
also frame pictures at short notice, in super' 0 *
style.
UPS" Call and examine his stock and prices.
January sth, 1878. 3mpu
TO MAKE MONEY
Pleasantly and fast. Agents should address
FINLEY, HARVEY & CO.,
june 8 Atlanta, o**
/“2WtchMf3to|7. Revolvers——-stfSL.
WfK 12.50. Over 100 latest Novelties.
Ag'u wanted. So.Bappl/Co.XaahvUle.TeiUk V v
Legal Blanks!
A FULL supply of J. W. Burke & Co.’s H?)
Blanks, the best in use, always on nan<
Price reduced to 75 cents per quire, at
BURKE’S BOOK STORE.
apl27 College Avenue, Newton House Bl** '