The Northeast Georgian. (Athens, Ga.) 1872-1875, April 04, 1873, Image 2
foriH-fasi 4 corguut, PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDJIV JtrORJYIJVG, BY T. W, & T. L. GANTT, — AT — S*2 PER ANNUM UKOUGIA ITEMS. The meuingitis b raging in Cedar Town. Georgia Press Association. The annual meeting of the Associa tion will lie hold nt Americus on Wednesday, May 16th. The elec tion for officers will take place at this meeting. By order of J. H. Estit.i., President W. G. Whiihjy, Secretary. GEN. tiOKDON PKESlMXfl OVER THE SENATE. THE NEWS IN A NET SHELL. The fact that Vice President Wil ton called General Gordon, of Georgia, to the Chair, on Tuesday, to preside over the Senate for a few moments, was made the occasion of a telegraphic item by the press reporter at Washing ton City, the dispatch adding.: “This is the first time an cx-Confed- oratehas liecn called to preside over the Senate." This was perhaps intended as a com pliment to a new member. We were not, however, aware before that there was any special honor for the Presiding Officer of either House of Congress to mil any member to the Chair, and we fail to recognise any distinguished mark of favor to the South in that Gen. Gordon occupied for a short time ihe seat lately made vacant bv .Schuy ler Colfax, and which is r.ow the post of Henry Wilson. The idea of an ex-Confwleratc Gen eral presiding even temporarily over the Senate of the-United States may strike some minds nt the North as an evidence of an advanced state of re- ‘oontruction ; but if there lias Ireen any honor conferred in this case, it is the Senate uj the United State* that has been hoiiorqt, in having iu the Chair ns Presiding Officer a gentleman of the accomplishments, worth, gallantry, in tegrity and high character of J. B. Gordon. In calling Gen. Gordon to preside over the Senate for n short while, Vice- President Wilson may have inter.de to compliment the South, and to show that he is willing to treat with decent respect a true representative from our section, but such a spirit of courtesy is / due to each member of that body, re gardless of his locality. l T pou thefloor, each Senator is a peer with the rest, and entitled tc impartial consideration nnd courtesy at the hands of the Pres ident of the Senate. During the short time Gen. Gor don presided on Tuesday, there was certainly an honest inan and gentle man in the Chair, and the Senate of the United States deserves to be con gratulated that the place was so ably and honorably filled for the time be- Ww From th« RtrnweU Sentinel. A SINGULAR COINCIDENCE. Bast Sunday we mot in the Lord’s Iioii-e for worship with sad hearts, for disastrous accounts ot the c'cction had S hed us, and wc feared the ^ result, box from “Tutt <& Wilson’s” Id be the Blucbcr to deride our tcrioo.tiind eagerly were the tid- ings-cxpected. Just as the choir rose fusing the opening hymn, the tidings that we had gained the day, were whispered from one to another. With liearts full of gratitude to the Almighty Disposer of Events, we sung the fol- lowing hvinn, which had been selected , Pastor, without any reference whatever to the agitating question ; by •nbstitnting the word Barnwell for £ion, it would seem as if the words Wrc written for the occasion, as a song oftriumph. Each one felt its appro priateness and threw their whole soul into the music. It was, indeed, a bitift fjf triumph which none could understand but those who had been humiliated so sorely. ‘•Tripuplwnt Zion, lift thy bead, ’jepwu dust, nnd darkness, nnd the dead. Though i‘tinUt'1 hnf. awake nt length. And gir:l thee with thy Saviours i ‘strength. /row on hhjh hem heard thy prayer. Hi* hand, ruin* rhall re/nir. Nor will thy watchful monarch ciaso To guard thee in itcmal peace.” w Yos! y.'j felt it was, indeed, answer to priycr, for earnest .Ayer had been daily ascending, that _I»wh»rules the world would make right triumph over might, and restore to our people that of which we had been so wyiutly deprive!, nnd now us the booming of cannon announces our victory,“we feel from our inmost souls, intense thankfulness nnd grat itude to the Giver of all good. M. G. *TI. THENEW STATE DONDS. It, fi? Thomasvillc luxuriates on green peas and soda water. Hancock farmers have invested very largely in guano. ! The young Spartans are going to | marry much this spring. The crop prospects of Hancock coun ty arc somewhat encouraging. Sentence of death was passed upon three persons nt Webster Court, last week. Jordan F. Outlaw, clerk of the Superior Court of Hancock county, is dead. --Telegraphic communication will be established between Savannah and Tyhec. Lee Smith will he hung on Friday the 22d of this month in Webster county. A negro .woman is now iu jail in Cedar Town lbr burning her infant to death. Griffin has sold forty-five hundred tons of guano this season, and still the demand is unabated. Savannah will soon establish a man ufactory for the purpose of making paper of rice straw. Col. Win. Barton, of Carroll coun ty. died recently, aged one hundred and fourteen years. A tiger has been found in Columbia county. A force will soou be organ ized to capture him. Timothy Farcll, of Favounan, at tempted last week to commit suicide by taking laudanum. A young lady was fined $15 and costs in Augusta for plucking a few flowers from the cemetery. Elijah Fleming, an old man resid ing in Gwinnett county, hung himself with a trace chain iu his stable last Saturday. Only one-half mile of grading is ne cessary to finish the Savannah, Griffi: and North Alabama railroad to Car rollton. In 1872 ti ere were 46 fires and 14 false alarms in Atlanta. The loss was $72,400, on which there was an insur ance of $40,850. Four little negroes in Putnam conn ty recently found a dead rabbit and ate it. They are now as dead as the rabbit was. The Macon Guards had a rousing meeting on the 28th. Nearly all the remaining war members and a large number of now ones were present. On Thursday, 20th instant, the dwelling of Major J. T. Broyles, of Ringgold, together with the kitchen and smoke house, was consumed by fire. Tyler Southall, a gentleman who was very well known in Macon, died on Friday night alter a protracted illness, of erysipelas. Mr. Southall was an active fireman. Some 350 estimates have been sub mitted in the Augusta cotton pool to determine the crop* of 1872-3. The estimates vary from 3,350,000 to 4,- 100,000. Dr. James Dixon, of Augusta, Georgia, will deliver the address be fore the literary societies of Mercer University at the approching com mencement. E. F. Spann, the wife murderer, has been sentenced to be hung in Web ster county, on the 11th of April, an 1 Susan Eberhart, his paramour, and accomplice, ou the 2nd of May. Fashion hath declared a new statue that veils this spring shall only be worn by the homely. The only exception to the law is the bridal veil. No other sort is now worn in Atlanta. Mr. Daniel Gaddick, of Harris county, died on the 15th, aged 85 years, lie has been a Methodist 63 years, never*had a difficulty or a law suit. Accidents on the State Road seems to be of daily occurrence, the last was the running off of two freight and one passenger train, damaging considera bly some box ears. More than 2,6u0 tickets have been sold at the Atlanta office alone tj emigrants going West over the Mem phis and Charleston Railroad. They were nearly, if not all, negroes. Mr. M. A. Cohen, of Rome, had a i old English Bible over one hundred and twenty years old, and which has been in possession ofhis relatives since, we believe, 1752. \ countryman deposited last week one thousand and five hundred dollars in gold and silver in the savings de partment of the Eagle and Phoenix Manufacturing Company of Colum bus The citizens of Jefferson voted on the pro]K>sition of the Town Council to subscribe $40,000 by the corpora tion to the stock of the Gainesville and Jefferson Rnilroad, which proposition was indorsed by a unanimous vote. The Ilawkinsville Dispatch is in formed that on the place ofMr. Owen Minchcw, of Wilcox county, recently, a calf was born with too beads, four eves, two tongues, and in other rc- spects, was completely malformed by nature. Fifteen women have been qualified as electors by the Selectmen of Wind ham, Connecticut. A baby, six weeks old, nnd weigh ing less than three pound--, is an object oi interest at Macomb, Ill. The story that the Natural bridge of Virginia is in danger of destruction by fire, proves to be a college hoax. Three children were burned to d jath near Read’s Landing, Minnesota. They were caught by a prairie fire. The widow of Foster, handed in New York on Friday last, is utterly prostrated and is not expected to live. The Marr heirs met and formed an association to prosecute their claims to the estate of Marr, in Scotlaud, worth ixty millions. A poor woman in New York, afflict ed with cataract of the eye, committed suicide because the boys jeered her whenever she appeared on the streets. A new horse disease has appeared in Portland, Me. It affects the legs, making them so weak thbt it is difficult for the animals to stand. No fatal cases. T,hc Atlanta Herald states that last week fifty thousand dollars’ worth of bonds were sold, and up to date eight- * imisnnd covers the amount dispos- [f. With nearly lullf of the above Si uld bunds were bougnt in. All K-lmig at par, and not.the slightest fctifei is raised by the purchasers, o jMirticuInr preference seems to lie given to the bonds maturing early. In fact, as the great majority of the bonds sold have- been bought by guardians, they give the preference to those not to mature until the time when their wards a e of age. It is simply a matter of vidua) choice which remffates the sale of the bonds; all are accounted equally valuable. A num ber of parties throughout the State are negotiating for theso bonds, and just podbon as the people generally learn that they arc on the market, they will go off rapidly. Gieene couaty has Jed the van in i State’s credit, and El- liert bears on her flanks. We learn tnat the Boiitbern counties are send ing their representative men to nego tiate with O loftel Nuttin*, at Macon, wlio is authorized to dispose of the bonds. . In 1872 the Langley Manufactur ing Company consumed 1,741,244 |Hiundsof cotton, nnd made 1,489,414 pounds or 4,586,485 yards of goods which sold for $355,787 05. The net earnings were $52,233 30. A small child of Mr. K. W. Gold en, of the 26th District, Eearly coun ty, lieing left in a room but for a short time, had its clothes to take fire, and was so badly burned that it died in a short time. From the records in the Ordinary’s office we learn there have lieen 5,408 marriages in Muscogee county since November, 1838. The books before that date were accidentally burned Since last January 124 licenses hav been issued. We arc reliably informed, says the Chronicle and Sentinel, that the tiger, which for the past ten days has cx cited so much terror in Columbia coun ty, was observed near the Augusta Canal. In the field of a farmer near the point indicated the remains of four or five valuable Cashmere goats were found slaughtered. Mrs. Eliza Hearn, wife of Jason J. Hearn, living near Rock Mills, in Heard county, had a rno-t singular attack, which came very near ending her days. It is stated that she sneezed several hundred times until she be came so weak that the mere effort to sneeze was the only evidence tliat the attack was still unchecked. On the loth instant the citizens of St. Augustiuc formed a charitable so ciety, to be known as the “ Catholic Benevolent Society.” A. D. Rogers was elected President. The list of oppropriations made dur- the last session of Congress show the heavy aggregate of $195,510,839, over $54,000,000 more than the amount ap propriated last year. Uncle Sam must be careful. Miss Hannah Jane Duke, weighin; 500 pounds, obtained a verdict of $400 in a Kentucky court, recently, against the manager of a circus sideshow foi breach of contract. The lady shed tears and occupied two chairs (luring the trial. A colored man in Gadsden county Florida, who had no money, no mule and no plow, rented a piece of land made with his hoe, one hale of cotton one hundred bushels of corn, three hundred bushels of potatoes and three barrels of syrup. It is stated that the old hand presses on whieh so many fine books have lieen printed, are again coming into use in France. It is found that in small editions, requiring muen care, these presses are much batter than those working by machinery. It would seem that the essentially democratic administration of Victor Emanuel has not been able to concil iate all the radicals iu Italy. Several hot-blooded patriots have just been lodged in St. Angelo. Mazzini is dead ; Garbaldi is stagnant; but their principles still find champious. Mrs. Gangero. wire walker of the Yeddo Japanese Troupe, whilst at Oil City, Kansas, gave birth to a child re cently at one o’clock in the afternoon. The same evening she made her ap pearance, and went through her usual performances upon the wire. Busi ness must lie ntteneded to, babies or no babies. Masquerade weddings are the latest feature of connubial fun in Indiana. The minister is masked, the bride is masked, ditto the groom, attendants and guests. The groom trusts to luck, and sometimes finds that he is married to the wrong woman, hut such trivial occurrences do not make sadness that State. The#e are indications of a widening of the breach between the Weslevans . and the Establishment. Several Meth- j odist laymen are now advocating the disestablishment of the church, on the ground that it can no longer fairly claim to exist as a bulwark of Protest antism and the notion that Methodist ministers will submit to reordination order to gain admission to the church or that they will accept the position of lay readers, is ridiculed. On only two measures did the Forty econd Congress display a willing ener gy of action—the increase of a salary bill which puts $1,600,000 into the members’ [rockets, nnd the, appropria tion bill was needed to draw the mon ey from the Treasury. Both these were fought through the confusion and disorder of the close of the session with a persistence which showed how faith ful the members of the late Congress could be to their own interests, even when they were unfaithful to the country’s The primitive mode of counting and weighing nails has left some reminders of itself in our modern nomenclature. We say four-penny, ten-penny nails, ml so on. Nails used to be counted by the 1.000; and when they were of such a size that 1,000 of them weighed four pounds, they were called four >ound nails and similarly six-pound 'and ten-pound nails, nnA’in rapid speak ing the “[round” liecame corrupted to ‘penny,” which is more easily uttered by the organs, as any one will see who will try it for himself. Thus the cur rent designation of size depended origi nally upon weights. The lumber trade of Michigan is at- aining colossal proportions, the total production for the year 1872 being esti mated at 792,000,000 feet, represent a val.rc of over $4,000,009. la the Saginaw Valley district, including Saginaw and Bay counties, 72,000,000 shingles were manufactured in the year 1872; also 17,000,000 hoops, 4,000,- 000 headings and 14,000,000 staves. These staves arc mostly sent to New York city, where tliev are either made into barrels and hogsheads or shipped iu thorough to foreign ports. They bring on an average eighty dollars per thousand delivered on board of the vessels in Michigan ports. Two inquisitive fellows of our town, on Thursday night of last week, were caught eaves-dropping on the stairway leading to the Masonic Hall, where the fraternity at the time were holding a business meeting. Being caught iu this predicament, they were asked if they would like to join the lodge. This they assented to, and were usher ed into the ante-room, where, accord ing to the rules, they would lie requir ed .to take the fir. t degree, in order to enter the lodge. Having consented, it is said it was taken in a very heroic manner. The first degree in Masonry, esjr-xflnfly tire one administered ujron this occasion, is one not desired by many to be tuken upon a cold night— a cold-water bath. After taking the preparatory degree, they were told that, by the jiayiuent of $20, they would Ire allowed to enter. Not hav ing this amount convenient, they quickly retired, being cautioned not to rovcr.1 any of the secrets of the fra ternity. —Falmouth, Ky., Independent. Athens’ Retail Prices Current Corrected by England & Orr, Gen eral Commission Merchants, Broad Street, Athens Georgia. Cotton.-. per. lb. Ute Prorhdoax.—Flour, Fancy, perbhl.. 13 Ul Extra Family,....... IS UU Family, 11 Do ■Superfine 10 (XI Cora per bush. 90 to 1 1(1 j l’i »» « 1 00 to 1 i!5 | Meul « 1 |o Wheat •« SI (Mo 2 50 Bacon sides, per pound 10 to 11 “ shoulders, “ g. to 9 “ bums, “ 12. ifp is *swd — “ Ug to. Irish Potatoes, country, prtnuh, 1 (XI to 2 00 “ “ Northern, 11 2 30 to — Sweet Potatoes, •* so 16 120 )'-Sg*i - .per dor. Vl% to 15 Chictev. grown, 30ct Frying 25 to 30 Butter -peril). I> to 20 tlntfcries.—Sugar, Crushed per lb. IS to 1C “ A.. •• 14 to 15 " B “ C r 11 . Ilcmarara, CoS'ec, Rio “ Laguiru, “ .lava Tea, Ily.cn “ Gunpowder, “ llbick.—. 0ui <»'s, perbusb.l 00 to 1,50 Syrup, Sorghum, per gat. “ Cauo «* Cubs Molasses..— 11 Candles, sperm... per lb. 40 to 50 I “ Ailamau, •* 20 to 25 | “ Tallow, Cheese, State NEW si 3) YE2ZTISEMENTS. u to to 1 50 2 00 1 50 to 1 00 SMALL POX IN ATHENS KUHtlMIT II THE MUTER STOIE! „ r nHE PEOPLE ARE COMING FROM EVERY DIRECTION TO JL get NEW GOODS from • ~ J. H. BOCHUMSt WHERE THERE IS NO DANGER OF CATCHING ___ rMOj&ansBi sumc^XaI^ lie has the Largest Stock of CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, KERO SENE and MACHINE OIL, LAMPS and LAMP GOODS ever broiurlit to Athens. He has the best assortment of BRIDLES and I SADDLES, COLLARS, BACKBANDS, HAMES, BIIADES’ HOES, Pocket and Table CUTLERY ererjjejqsp purchased. His stock of MEW SPUING- GOODS Is enormons, consisting in part of CO bags of RIO COFFEE, MOCHA, LAGUY11A and JAVA COFFEE, A., B. and C. SUGAR, DEMA- RARA, CRUSHED and POWDERED SUGAR, several car loads of CORN and FLOUR, BACON, LARD, MOLASSES, RICE, SALT, TOBACCO. VINEGAR, SYRUPS, HATS, SHOES. LEATHER, CABLE SCREW WIRE SHOES, FINE BUTTON and LACE GAITERS, CHILDREN’S COPPER-TIPPED SHOES, OSNA- BURGS, SHIRTINGS, CALICO, NOTIONS. HOSIERY, &c., &c. Don’t forget the place to buy goods cheap. Call on © HU&SttiS, 41 Eng. Dairy, *• Crackers, soda,... ** f butter/ •* r 41 sngai, 41 44 cream, 44 Candy, plain per lb. * 4 fancy 44 Soda 44 Black Pepper 14 Ginger * 4 Starch 44 Tallow 4 \ Dried Peaches, pealed, 44 44 44 unpealed, 44 Dried Apples - 44 20 25 15 h * ar Planter’s Store, Broad Street, Athens, Ga., of lb 20 Which i.s one mile from that case danger of catching it. SMALL POX, and where there is no apr4-tf Mackerel, kits, 44 bid Sardines, per box, Salt per sack, Factor} Goods.—Cotton Yanis Osnaburgs, per yd. Y* Shirtiug, 44 1-4 44 44 Dry Goods..—Prints, 14 Delaines, 44 lil’ehed Shirting, 44 Bed Ticking, 44 Peach Brandy, good 44 44 mediant, 1 44 common, Apple 44 tF'od, ‘ 44 44 medium, * 44 44 common, * Trench *• Holland Gin American Gin ‘ Jamaica Hum * American Burn * Bourbon Whiskey - * W inem ....... Tobareo— Common, per lb Medium 44 Fine. 44 Smoking, 44 50 to 60 | 35 to 40 *i 25 to 3 b0 10 U0 to 12 00 13 TJ Y YOU ±3 PIANOS ORGANS AT HOME AND SAVE FREIGHT. THE UNDERSIGNED IS PREPARED TO FURNISH AND— tFrf* 10 to 23 20 to 5(1 | 4 00 3 00 ( 2 00 t 4 (10 1 , S (JO ( 2 23 .1 4 09 to 10 (JO 5 04 to 8 00 3 09. to 6 00 5 04 to 8 00 3 0* to C 00 2 00 to 4 (XI 3 00 to 10 (JO 50 to .... so to 73 I .. 1 (JO to 1 50 .. Bfl to 1 00 OF THE At Factory Prices, I.G.& J, COM Have Now on Exhibition the < F MOST APPROVED MAKES, Delivered in Athens.’ or LL-cwh-re iu ri-c- FREE OF FREIGHT. Every Instrument Sold by Me is Fully Warranted FOR FIVE YEARS! I will furnish ANY PIANO MADE IN THE UNITED STATES at as low a price as the same can lie bought any where else. Give me vour orders, aud I v, ill sell vou a PIANO that will .»ive satisfaction or refund the Money Please remember that I cannot be undersold. T. A. BURKE , ATHENS, GA. GREAT RUSH New Advertisements. F. W, LUCAS & CO'S 1 LARGE STOCK OF TO MAKE PURCHASES FROM THAT MAGNIFICENT STOCK OF A-,, if* JUST OPENED AT THE STORE OF SHOES, T S-, PERSONS FROM THE COUN- J_ TRY and those from a distance are iuvited to inspect our LARGE & ELEGANT STOCK which we guarantee to cpial any in the State in Quality and in Low Prices lairge Stock of l^idies* and Children's DRESS GOODS COUNTRY PRODUCE HUNTER & BETJS8E, Corner Broad and Tlioma'* Sts, in IJeupree Building, [ To which they invite the attention of the publ c generally. Their Stock embraces a large invoice of Staple Dry Goods, Saddlery, Boots, Shoes, Western Produce, ALSO HAY, LIME & CEMENT. And, indeed, EVERYTHING usually kept in first-class establishments. THEIR STOCK IS ALL FRESH, AM) PRICES AS LOW AS THE LOWEST. Give them a call, and they will be sure to please you. The Highest Market Prices paid, iu Goods or Cash, for all kinds of Ever Brought to this Market And which they Offer to their Numerous Customers at OF ALL QUALITIES AND KINDS, •U1 ‘ Large Stork of Gentlemen and Boy's Goods, i the Lowest to the Highest Prices, which cau be CUT AND MADE TO OUDEU, by a First-Class Tailor & Cutter I Who Does Not Like to See and Make Purchases of a Large and Well-Selected Stock of Goods, show ing Splendid Taste and Great Variety ? A TTENTION is respectfully called to my very large and carefully selected X.L Stock of SOMETHING WORTH REMEMBERING. Umbrellas and Parasols, Window Shades, Straw Matting, Hoop Skirts, Cambric Skirts, Shawls, Lace Points, Scarls, Thread Lace Collars, Embroideries, Gloves, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, Tuckiugs, Trimmings, Parly and Wedding Dress Goods, Iu Silks, Grenadines aud Muslins. Elegant Black Silks, And Summer Silks. Call aud see the Goods and Trices. F.W. LUCAS&CO apr4-.5m SPECIALITIES. In All the New and Desirable Shades. JfMen's, Youth!s% Roy's CTolhi«i Ot Various Kinds, at Low Prices. Ml if UBS 0F €ASStlft£flES For Men and Boys. ns mm LIST GENTS 5 Shirts, Neck-Ties. S. A X TJ otj u-.i; FURNISHING ...GOOD- A LARGE AND DESIRABLE- LINE Oi- FERTILIZERS. P LANTERS CAN BE FUR-1 KISHKD with mil tho FKKTIUZEKS they day <ta,r ** **** Dexl NdCp— READY- M A DE C1 ,O r i ’ HIN < l, HATS, BOOTS. SHOES, HOSIERY, NOTIONS. &<-. Candies, Pickles, t? tinned- S'suit, Crockery. Old Govcrument, Java, Laguyra, Mocha and host Rid COFFEES. 16,000 pounds of SUGARS, wonderful for variety and cheapness. FLOUR, ot all grades. Sugar-Cured HAMS, LA COS, LARD. New Orleans SYRUPS aud MOLASSES. SADDLES and LHIDLES, all styles aud varieties. V And almost everything to supply the elm lurebusitig elsewhere, aud I will save you i ice and fancy,cf On* most ’astid*. us. Give me; «iuipt paying customer. Croquet, Croquet - A FULL SUPPLY Iwatitifitl Gfibit, at prim ransii _ to SO'. For sale by 11 L UKE & HODGSON. OF THIS ■>g Irrtm $S DANIEL’S MAG-IC OIL. npHIS 1* to certify that I bare used DANIEL’S I X MAGIC OIL. and I ran raeomuieod it for I Tr<«t Bit., Chilblain, Sprains aud Bruises. I am I satisfied that uo one would regret trying it. M. P. DAVIS, Chief Mice, Athens, Ga. WALL PAPER! Eook Out for the “ Buck Horn*’ Store »Vo. 10 IS road Street, Athens, Ga* l Us m. isinf ©rii*! j&Mf @ WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Staple Rry Goods, Clothing, Hats, Shoes, FARIIElt’S SUPPLIES, Tobacco, Crockery, Guns, Saddlery, &c., &c., &e., All of which they have a large and well-selected Stock. We are now ready to sell anybody ANYTHING they want, at prioes u’t be beat iu Athens. Call and see us, and you will find us all clt TUST RECEIVED, a large tl newest and nraat bcautiftil atylca. For sale by that can lot of I fi 1,e ‘l 0 . 0 ki n g nien. mh28 BURKE & HODGSON. OLD BONES NEW SPRING GOODS. KM T WILL PAY ONE CENT PER TT AS JUST RETURNED.FROM NEW YORK, WITH THE FINEST -L POUND for all BONES delivered tome. 1 -*—L Stocks of SPl-ISG GOODS ever brought to this etty. Haring arrived in tho Metropolis early mlhW-tf J. Ji. HUGGINS, Athens. BONES i - . ra. r - — Metropolis early In the season, he had the opportunity ef selecting from the.market its choicest article*. At his Store will be (bund something to suit every one.... Every corner It full of the best goods made. TO GENTLEMEN, A full Uno of GENTLEMEN'S FURNISHING GOODS, consist lug of SPRING 'SUITS of every kind, at (lie lowest prices; also, HATS, BOOTS, SHOES, and everything needed by them. He <*.il« The particular attention wf Country Merchants to his stock, who can be supplied by him as cheap they can purchase soy where In the State. Hla entire stock Is fresh, Just bom the Manufactories. WILL PAY ONE GENT PERI * MRS- MYERS, Pound for all OLD BONES, of I In persou, selected a beautiful assortment of HILIJKEBT GOODS, including Hata and Bonneta of the 1 latest atyle, Ribbons,'Flowers, Laces, and every thing needed by the Ladies. Give me a call, every one, aud examlnauty superb stock mod low prices, before buying elswheero. Uih-l-aw M. MYERS, College Avenue, Athens, Ga. any kind, delivered to me. A. S. DORSEY, mb2Mm Broad (Street, Athens, Ga. arfel 1 Cocoa & Canton MATTING! At Less than Former Prices. THE MOST EXTENSIVE ASSORTMENT AND WHITE GOODS THE LATTER COMPRISING Saiin & Leno Striped Victoria Lawns» Plain Victoria and Bishop Lawns; Striped & Figured Piques, Tucking**) Plain & Striped Swiss & Organdie, & c ‘ Besides the above, a Full Assortment of E* c O ^ j usually found in a FIRST-CLASS DRYGOODS M. G. & J. COHEN- . JYo. 5 Broad 8** Athens, Ga., March 28tb, 1873, stob£