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TAUMSOI, HOOOSOM 4 08.,
WHOLESALE
AGENTS FOR ORANGE RIFLE POWDER AND NEW ARROW COTTON TIE.
Bagging! Bagging! Bagging! Salt! Salt! Salt! Meat, Lard, Molasses, Syrup of all Grades, Staple Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, lower than anybody; and
all kinds of Farm Supplies. Wholesale and Retail Buyers. Give us a call when you are in Athens.
J. T. -WATERMAN,
PROPRIKIUn.
Athens, January 26, 1881.
Official Organ of (Me County and City of Athens,
Our Subscription Price.
Until farther notice, subscrip
tions will bo takon to the Weekly
Banner at One Dollar a year, in
advance. This applies Doth to
new subscribers and to old one’s
who renew. Those who owe back
subscriptions, however, mast pay
at the old rate. Wo cannot re
ceive back subscriptions at $1.00
per annum.
Richard A. Proctor wants to be
come a journalist. Whereupon the
New Orleans Picayune says he should
try his hand upon the Sun.
The first number of the Walton
News has an editorial on “ A word
about our jail expenses.’’ We are
sorry our lriends of the News have
had that trouble so early in their ca
reer.
The World’s Fair of 1884 will ask
no aid of the government.
John Kelly says he is out of poli
tics. It is hoped he tells the truth.
The prairies in Nebraska are cov
ered with frozen snow, and hundreds
of dead catt'eare to bo seen.
President Hayes says he has not
thought of going abroad after his term
of office expires.
It is said that a strong land reform
measure will receive abundant Bupport
in the English Cabinet.
The colored republicans of Tennes
see recommend John M. Langston for
a position in Garfield’s cabinet.
The report that Garfield proposes
to make Green B. Rnum, Secretary ol'
Treasury, causes general disgust.
Fair, the coming Senator from Ne
vada, is chunky, and weighs two hun*
dred and thirty pounds.
The Bernhardt draws like a blister.
The sale of seats in St. Louis amounts
ed to $9,750.
Gov. Plaisted, of Maine, it is said,
will soon wed a maiden of twenty
The governor is fifty-two.
Bernard McCane, who died at
Manayunk, Pa., last week, gave away
$200,000 to charitable objects while
living, and $300,000 mere by his will.
The democrats of Massachusetts
were bard up for material when they
nominated Ben Butler for the United
Slates senate. If that is the sort of
democrats they are, they deserve to be
in the minority.
The Advance demands, the recall
of Minister Christiancy, and says the
country ought not to be “represent-
ed ” by such a man. If the Advance
is going to df pose all the unsavory
fellows whom the republican party has
put into representative positions, it
has a life-time job.
Reports from all sections of South
Carolina indicate that great damage
lias beeu done to the cotton and rice
crops by the protracted wet weather
Of the cotton unpicked one-halt has
been lost and the remainder much
injured. On the sea islands the cotton
is rolliug in the fields. The rice har
vest is one of the most unfoi lunate on
record.
Ancordino to Bob Ingersoll, no
man ought to be President of the
Uuited States unless he has been mar
ried and raised a family. This does
require statesmanship, that’s a fact.
uenkral Garfield sends out an
average of one hnndred letters a day,
mos* of them in reply to persons who
have written him in regard to official
appointments.
The South Carolina railroad is one
of the oldest in the 'ebuntry. It is also
the safest. Since 1842 it has killed
but one passenger. It is a pity that
some of the others have not the same
record.
The Now York Sun says Georgia
has cade a mistake in making a cons
slitulional provision for biennial ses
sions of the legislature. Perhaps so ;
but if she has, the legislature is very
effectually correcting the mistake. For
our part, we cannot see the need of a
great deal of the legislation that Geor
gia has. It may be necessary, but we
have not yet been able to understaud
the necessity.
The Rev. Dr. McCosh, ol Prince
ton, takes a more hopeful view of
things than some of his brethren. He
is not alarmed by the presence of ag
nosticism, materialism, and pessimism
In a recent Monday lecture at Boston
he bade the doubting Down-East
saints take fresh courage. “The time
for reaction lias come,’’ he said. “We
are at the darkest hour. I am look
ing for the sun to rise.’’
BUSLVESS OlTLOUK.
Walt Whitman writes, in ttte
North American Review for Febru
ary, of “ The poetry of the future.’’
There are some who are unkind
enough to think that Walt has not
strnck the poetry of tfco present yet.
Gen. Edward C. Anderson, of
Savannah, is again mentioned by
Southern papers in connection with
the Navy portfolio. Gen. Anderson
would doubtless make an excellent
cabinet officer; but Garfield will
scarcely take a Southern man and a
democrat.
Disastrous snow slides arc report
ed from the Wabsatoh mountains,
Utah. The mining town of Alta is
threatened with destruction, and in
gress is now almost impossible. Severn
hotels and boarding houses have been
swept away by the avalanches, and
many lives wero lost
It is impossible for Garfield to make
up a oabiuet that will satisfy the re
publicans. That party is divided into
so many warring factions, bitterly
hating each other, that, whatever
selections Garfield , may make, curses
from the disappointed are sure to fall
thick and last upon his head.
In Cork county alone the sum ex
pended by masters of fox hounds ex
ceeds $100,000 a year, exdnsive of
that spent by those taking part in the
sport; bnt it is feared that Land
League obstruction may lead to packs
being given up. Mr. Stacpoole’a har
riers are advertised tor sale "in conses
quence of mpbs being seut to the meets
to prevent hunting.” , .
T1"’"TU 1
Thr cities of.the North—notably
Now Y ork and Brooklyn are aoourged,
at this time, with diphtheria. There
have keen, we understand, more fatal
within the past nx months, than
wore recorded from yellow fever dui*
Ing any epidemic nt Memphis or New
Orleans. The doctors appear to know;
very little about the’disorder, or they
have poor success in caring it.
Of like, there have been some
propbtsyiugs of a panjc, but ou what
ground is not known. Forebodings
are chronic with some people and they
arc certain to exaggerate any little
sign ol disturbance in business. Olli
ers make it a trade to get up sensa
tions. To add to the calamity, tlie
professional interviewer is the busiest
gossip alive and is ever stirring up
the sediments of discontent and strife
Hasty conjectures are paraded lietore
the public as opinions; opinions arc
maguihed into convictions; and so it
happens that loose after-dinner talks,
which have in them much more of the
gas of the stomach than the afflatus of
wisdom, are sent forth to disquiet the
nerves of sentitive persons.
Panics have generally several causes
which, if they happen to coalesce, pro
duce wide-spre-ad disaster. One- of
these is an excitable state of the pub
lic mind resulting from those political
dissensions that involve local interests.
Another is excessive indebtedness on
foreign account. And a third source
is wild speculation at home. But, at
present, not one of these exists in ant
grea. degree. In politics, the countiy
is more quiet than it has been for
twenty years. As to ihe balance of
trade, it is in our favor. We have a
better home market for gold aud sil
ver, than when the mines were pro
ducing much larger quantities of the
metals. Unfortunately for us, private
speculation still goes on, but its urea
has been much abridged aud is likely
to be reduced within a very narrow
eompass. Most industries are learning
to he content with smaller profits.
Best of all, the different departments
of trade and commerce are approach
ing a more equal standard of profit.
The gigantic evil in the countiy tor
years past, has been the inequality in
different sorts of business, and this
resulted in a few individuals growing
enormously rich while communities
became poorer. But this unnatural
state of th'mgs has had a check, aud
the snake is scotched if not killed. On
the whole, the outlook for 1881 is fa
vorable. When we say this, we mean
that the times are encouraging for
men of prudence and skill and energy.
There are no good times for reckless
men or for men lacking in ability to
do hard and honest work. Meantime,
do not indulge in miscellaneous ex
penses. Cut off your “ incidentals,"
they ore things that eat up your sub
stance. And remember that in every
human being, therefore two creatures
—one s tool and the other a man.
The man is never expensive, but the
fool is very costly and this self-same
fool is the father of all panics.
what a poor boy hade himself.
Just now, all the scholars and in
deed, all reading people are quite astir
over the most wonderful book of the
limes, the ‘Bios’ ofDr. Schlienann. It
is a narrative of his explorations at
Hissarlik to find the site of old Troy.
Digging down through the debris of
seven cities, each built on the ruins of
its predecessor, he laid bare the pave’
ments of a city older than the time of
Ilomer. Pottery in large quantities,
utensils of various kinds, marbles with
inscriptions, vases and ornaments, gold
and silver treasures were brought to
light. Nothing so important, nothing
on so vnst a scale in the interest of
antiquarian research has ever been
attempted. The results are immense.
If tlie objects found during the exca
vations are collected iu a Museum, it
is scarcely possible that the relics ol
old Rome as seen in the Vatican, or
of Pompeii as seen iu Naples, will ap
proach them in value, in interest, aud
iu.iniportance.
This man, Dr. Sclilienann, has had
a history that will thrill any reader
who has a soul in him. A poor Ger
man boy, the son of a Protestant Min
ister, he lidd a very limited education
and even the little learning he had
acquired was afterwards lost. At four
teen years of age, he was apprenticed
to a grocer .and a sad life he bad to
live iu that grocer’s store in contact
with a miseiable class of people. But
he dreamed of Troy and Homer’s
warriors, aud to use his own words:
* I never ceased to pray God, that by
his grace, I might yet have the happi
ness of learning Greek.’ By over
exertion in the store, he broke a blood
vessel and so had to seek other em
ployment. Ready to do any thing for
an honest living, he became a cabin
boy on the Brig Dorothea but the ves
sel was wiecked in a few days. By
a marvelous providence, he escaped to
land. Then he was a clerk at Amster
dam. And now his career begins;
and there he is in the office of Mr.
Quien, hard at work stamping bills ol
exchange and carrying letters to and
from the post-office. And yonder he
is too in that wretched garret without
a fire, shivering in the cold, and ab
sorbed in studying the modern lan
guages. Breakfast is on oat-meal
porridge; dinner costs two pence.
But the porridge and the two pence
dining made noble blood to feed such
a brain and such a set of nerves, for
every thing that a real man eats turns
to man in him. English, French,
Dutch, Spanish, Italian, Portugese,
were soon mastered, so that he cculd
write or speak these languages fluent
ly. And the porridge and the cheap
dinner helped him yet more. Step by-
step, he advanced in business—quick,
export, sagacious—a perfect Napoleon
in the tactics of trade and commerce.
And then wealth came and the wealth
grew to a large fortune. About fifty
years old was he now. But Troy and
Ilomer were mighty in him yet and
mightier than before. And so he went
to the plains of Troy, and for some
four years- often at an expense of
$100 per day—used his income in be
half of science and art in excavating
the wonders of class antiquity. A
glorious instance is this of a noble use
of money. Yea more ; a glorious in
stance of the nse of one’s own self.
Ye who linger on the threshold of
life, doubting which path to choose,
remember that when years shall have
passed away, and you havn trod the
dark path, you will cry bitterly, O
give me back my early days that I
may choose and tread the path of vir
tue and industry, and the one that
leads to Skiff, the Jeweler and Optis
oian. Sign red watch. Athens.
Rev. Mr. Innocent, a Chinese
missionary, reports two noteworthy
facts in connection with one branch of
his mission operations, which, he says,
attest the genuineness of the conver
sion of the people from heathenism.
First, every family in the village has
given np idolatry and attends Chris
tian worship; secondly, the village
temple has, by the free consent and
action of the people themselves, been
destroyed, the idols decently buried
and the material of the temple used
in building a larger temple for the
worship of God.
The Charleston News and Cornier
says: Let ns embalm his name. It is
Eckley B. Coxc. He lives in Luzerne
county, Pennsylvania. He was elect
ed to the Senate of Pennsylvania. He
read the oath to be taken by Senators
wherein he saw that he mnst swear
that none of bis money had been used
in his election “for purposes not ox-
pressly authorized by law." He bad
not knowingly spent money for such
purposes—but he said some might
have been used. He thereupon re-
TIIE BAX FROM GADDISTOWX, AND HIS DIS
LIKE FOR SWALLOW-TAILS.
They never wore swallow tails in
Gaddistown, and the oldest inhabitant
could not recollect a ball or even a
reception. The people of Gaddistown
were eminently practical, and their
whole attention was absorbed in the
advantages a bob-tailed bull bad
over a long-tailed bull for plow
ing purposes. They were not a
vision ary or imaginative race—
those Gaddistown people, and not one
of them ever thought one of their
number would one day sit in the sen
ate ot the United States; therefore it
is easy to see how this simple and
practical people never allowed their
minds vo run against ‘swallow-tails’
and ‘state receptions.’ If they were
simple and practical, the Gaddistown
people were very observing, tor they
stared amazingly at objects which ex
cited even no comment in the little
village of Dalton.
It so happened that one day a Gads
distown boy took his bull from the
plow, and borrowing a neighbor’s
cart, loaied it with coilards and set
out for Dalton. In due time he ar
rived ; and while he was negotiating
for their sale, a young man passed by
dressed in a ‘swallow-tail.’ The Gad
distown boy was a lad of keen percep
tions and good judgment, aud as he
surveyed the article which adorned
the person of the passer-by, ho men-
tally’resolved never to wear a ‘swallow
tail.’ Whether the person who wore
the coat inspired him with contempt,
or what not, from that day he took a
strange dislike to ‘swallow tails.’
Strange thiugs happen some times,
and certainly it was strange for a boy
who gave no promise of a brilliant fu
ture to become the governor of a great
state. When the day of inauguration
came, no ‘ swallow-tail’ adorned the
body of the magistrate-elect, aud even
on those days when the hospitality of
an executive mansion was dispensed,
no ‘swallow-tail’ graced the festive
board. Early impressions are the
strongest, and the first sight of a
dress-coat had been too mnch for the
future statesman
Another great day came, and when
he took the oath that placed him at
the head of a state’s judiciary, the
chief-justice was not robed iu the style
he so much detested. A greate- day
still was coming ou, and when he faced
the beauty and chivalry of the state’s
capital to inform them ot bis singular
qualities aud explain to them the ways
that are dark and niystei ious, the
‘swallow-tail’ that had been the object
of maoy dreams was still not Recn.
Dress-coats and using a pitcher as a
drinking glass would have beeu a
startling combination.
When the eyes of a country’s senate
was turned upon the ‘new senator as
he marched down the aisle to the
president’s desk to take the oath, the
keenest orb of vision tailed to detect
any sign ot a ‘ swallow-tail.’ Wash
ington society is accustomed to pecu
liarities of dress, for Tom Oohiltrec
has paraded the avenue for some time;
but Washington society would have
been rocked to its centre, if a senator
had appeared at a white house recep
tion lacking the requisite ’swallow
tail.’ The reputation of a state was in
danger; the brother senator took all
in at a glance ; and mildly suggested
to the man from Gaddistown that a
swallow tail’ was needed.
‘What, senator, wear one of those
things!’
He was assured that such was meant,
that the article was in fact indispensa
ble, and all the eloquence that an ora
tor could bring into play was brought
to bear on the man from Gaddistown.
‘Senator, in my judgment, broad
doth is too thin for this severe weath
er, and you know, I am suffering with
my chesL’
A compromise was offered, the coat
was to be made of thicker cloth ; it
was finally accepted; and the tailor
ordered to have it in quick time. It
arrived, he took it np as one would
handle a snake, shivering all over.
He hung it on the back of the chair
and surveyed it from afar. He looked
at it in all possible light, bat it did not
please him. He could not tell why—
only; he never liked swallow tails. He
tamed down the gas and put it on,
and gradnally turned np the light;
even then'the apparition was too great
He rnshed for the principles of pure
democracy as contained in the edition
of ’63, corroborated by the words ‘old
rye.”' His short communion with past
doctrines seemed to revive him, aud
ho surveyed his person in the mirror
He sallied forth for the scene of the
evening’s festivities, and was the ad
mired of all who saw him. He passed
a group of correspondents, and the
wires that night carried the news of a
startling occurrence. A senator whoeo
views on an important question were
not known did not attract as modi
B-JCoxe! Go np head.
cause be wore a swallow-tail, that the
eyes of all were turned upon him ; but
it was on account of the appearance of
his ‘swallow-tail.’ It looked as if the
‘swallows would homeward fly,’ for the
tails of that garment bad the appear
ance of out-spread wings; and the
noise they made as they fell and rose
resembled the flapping sound of a fly
ing bird. His colleague approached,
the following ensued:
‘Senator, how does she look—natur
al, I suppose ?’
H<uvas^ased, when he was assured
hd would T>aas mdSter, though the
brother senator thought some altera
tions could be made with effect. The
man from Gaddistown said he liked
the customs of the day so much, that
he intended to have a coat of arms,
aud had decided to adopt that ot a
bull rampant dressed in a swallow
tail, with the words: ‘Gaddistown—
Fame—Swallow-tails.’ Theon.
E. VAN WINKLE.
"XV. WALT .ACE ii() Y 1
Merchants, look to your interest.
Many staple articles in crockery,
glassware, lamps &c.. have greatly
declined. McBride & Co., have by
all odds the best and cheapest stock
ever brought to the State. Their
stock is crammed with novel fast sel
ling staple goods of their own direct
importation. Hold your orders, come
and select iu ;>erson. McBride & Co .
guarantee to save all freight aud
breakage and delay, and to not put a
single piece of unsalable slock on you.
ocl!9w
Cotton Market Report.
By Moss & Tliomas, Cotton Storage and
Commission Merchants, Clayton Street, Athens,
Georgia.
To-day’s quotations are
Stains and Tinned
Ordinary 7 a 8
Good Ordinary 8 1-2 u 9
Low Middlings 10 n 10 1-2
Middlings io 3-4 a 11
Good Middlings 11 1-4 all 1-2
Middling Fair..:. HS-4a
fair 12 a
Market—Dull.
January 25. 1881.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
$25,00 RSWAHD
A BSCONDED from the Clarke County Con
vict Farm, ou Monday, the 24th of January
1831 Alford Robinson, (alias George Robinson)
a colored convict, he is 83 years of age, about 6
feet 2 inches high, will weigh 180 pounds, rather
dark, and aullin iu disposition, The left side of
his head and face was shaved perfectly smooth
with a razor when he left. He also h*as a scar.-
just above the pit of his atomaci. about 2 inches
m leogth; also has old shackle scars above
both ankles. He is extensively known in Jef
ferson, McDuffie and Columbia counties, and as
I understand has this year been in the employ
of Cob Fulton. The above reward will be paid
for his apprehension and lodgment in any safe
jail so 1 can get him.
J. R. TUCK,
Snperintendant Clarke County Convicts.
jan.25.d&wt£
fused to take the oath and the seat,
and anew election is ordered. Eckley- attention as the man from Gaddistown
with a swallow-tail. It was not be-
Noticc to Passengers.
C OMMENCING February 1st, 1S81, and until
further notice, the Passenger F re over the
Georgia Railroad, Main Line aud Branches, will
be as follows;
Agent’s Rate Three (3) Cents per Mile
Train Rate Four (4) Cents per Mile
Children between 5 and 12 years, nuif the
above rates.
Minimum Rate, for any Distance, Five [5)
Cents.
Passengers are hereby notified that if they
fail to purchase Ticket^ from the Station
Agents, they will be charged the Train Kate.
Conductors are not Ticket Sellers, and are not
allowed to accept less than the Train Rate of
Four Cents per mile. Therefore, to secure the
advantage ot the reduced rate, purchase your
tickets before entering the train.
The Company reserves the right to change, or
entirely abrogate these rates, at pleasure and
without notice.
E. R. DORSEY,
jan.20* General Passenger Agent.
E. VAN "WINKLE & CO.,
M-A-KPO FACTU-REHS OP
, i 'M ..i i " ■ft -. w' !
v- v- ~ ■ ; .. . . ■;:».
'l L.S '-Li 1 l - -
all sizes, tvrrn simultaneous lever-iiead blocks, ou screw.
Ill kinds of Mill Work, Castings, Cotton Gins, Feeders, Condedsers, Cotton Presses & General Iron Works,
SEND FOR CATALOGUE AND PRICES. P. O. BOX 83, ATLANTA, GA.
jan.2oth.1881.
'#>
P keep constantly on baud
« good stock of
SAW MILLS
Both Screw and Ratchet Hoad
Blocks, snited to LIGHT or
HEAVY l'owera. Alao
PORTABLE E1IS
Up to FIFTEEN HORSE
POWER, aud can furnish
Larger Sizes on ahort no’iec.
CIRCULAR SAWS,
Both solid blades and insert
ed Teeth constantly in stock at
Lowest Prices.
I handle NOTHING but tho
Best ol Machinery
Yet my PRICES ARE LuW.
tST Don’t buy MACHINERY of ANY KIND
jan25 (P. O. Box 45)
. rsssttis.
until yon writo me for PRICES and TERMS.
S. P. T3 I-. j TC TTVTjCZ
34 West Mitchell Street, Atlanta, Geogia.
TJTjVT T) Yourselves by making money
|1 PJ § j j when a golden chance is offered,
thereby always keeping poverty
from your door. Those who always take ad
vantage of the good chances for making money
that are offered, generally become wealthy,
while those who do not improve such chat.ces
remain in poverty. We want many men, wo
men, boys and girls to work for us right in
their own localities. The business wDl pay
more than ten times ordinary wages, we
furnish an expensive outfit aud all that yon
need, free. No ouc who engages fails to make
money very rapidly. You can devote your
whole time to the work, or only your spare
moments. Full information and* all that is
needed scut free. Address Stinson & Co.,
Portland, Muine. dtc.21
MONARCH GUANO,
SOLUBLEJPACIFIC!
MAGNOLIA ACID
Always Good,
Always Reliable,
ALWYS CHEAP 48 THE CHEAPEST!
FOR SALE BY
ORR & HUNTER.
jan25
NOTICE TO FARMERS.
THE UNDERSIGNED IIAS HIS WELL KNO WN
FERTILIZERS,
Nov ready for delivery; their oondition ia exoellent, being soluble and dry, and guaranteed to be of
STANDARD QUALITY,
As will more Billy appear by their analysis. Having my Gnano and my Chemicals manufactured
by the best and most skilled manutaeturere of the United States, and having them made under a
written contract, thereby allowing no opportunity of having a spurious article made, aa they con
tract in addition, that tho
Guano and Chemicals
Shall come np fully, and even above the requirements of the state, I fear no adulteration. Those
wanting a
RELIABLE GUANO
Can get it by calling on the undersigned. Gnano delivered at any of the stations on the North
eastern and Georgia Railroads to planters free of fteight. Cotton received also at nearest depot,
when shipped to me in payment of Gnano free of freight.
COTTON OPTION
Allowed at 15 eente per pound on bosis of middling.
S« O. DOBBS, Athens, Ga.
Dealer in Ammoniated Guano and Chemicals for Composting,
*> !: jen.2*4m. /
THEI.LL
THE ONLY MATTRESS FACTORY IN THE STATE
The Highest Cash Price Paid for Shucks and Straw.
or. yp.
Send for Price List. ' 1A , \ "10 I-2RortkBr<*d Street, >
nov30
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
Kendrick, Carter £ Eckford,
DEALERS IN
CARPETS!
COMPRISING ALL THE NOVELTIES AND NEW DESIGNS IN
Body Brussels, Tapestry Brussels
—and—
EXTRA SUPER INGRAINS
NEW AND ORIGINAL DESIGNS-PRIVATE PATTERNS.
OUR DRAPERY DEPARTMENT
Contains everything Tsew and Artistic in Lambrequins, Lace Curtains, Cornices and Window
■ H.i. '**’ Shades,
FLOOR OIL CLOTHS,
(all widtl-s and prices), Cocoa and Napier Mattings—for offices, hotels, etc.—all grades. Wall
Pspor trom the cheapest to the moet elaborate Fresco designs. Ornamental Ceilings, Dado
Panels, etc. Our Goods Warranted.
KENDRICK, CARTER & ECKFORD, 50 Whitehall St., Atlanta. Ga.
jan.25.I881. • ’
C. MORRIS,
In order to incrense my stock of MILLINERY and FANCY DRY GOODS, I have
moved to the store formerly occupied by Snead & Cot v
5 BROAD STREET,
Where I keep a full line of DRY GOODS, SHOES, NOTIONS, etc.
MILLINERY A SPECIALTY
Including the latest styles and novelties. Thanking my customers kindly for their
past patronage, and solicit a continuance of the same, I am, most respectfully,
GASPER MORRIS.
TO THE LADIES.—My entire Stock of Millinery AT COST, to mnke room for my
new stock.
Don’t make a mistake. I have moved from No. 13 to No. S Broad street, jnnll
CASSt Will!
$20.000 Worth of all Kinds of
Furniture, Mattresses,&e
ICHEAP FCR CASIi.j
Don’t be! induced to fparchasegany whore before you? see my* enormous- ■Lock. Satisfaction
* , Guaranteed.
JOXHT ID- [STOCZER.185 WSaitolaall Street.
Jan.25th.188I. \ ■' '■ * ". '
STILSOH,
'nt ti*a m
4 flLARGE assortment of the latest designs in Jevslry and Silverware jnat received. Alao the
AbLABGEST STUCK of QUICKS in the Slate., Prices lower than ever. "We WILL, NOT
BK-UNDEKSOLD..
“T . nyyiltoehai.1. btkeet,
GEORGIA