Newspaper Page Text
Since Br'er Blackburn hat been
Blackballed, it is now supposed
that Madison will get a Furlow.
The Madisonian of Sunday stated
tha. Mutgan c mntv held an elec-
i • ie. O.dy Ibis and
no'ihi
Morgan
nc vot<
i hroniih
VICTORIA SCHILLINGS.
At K'ngst tn precinct,
‘.county, Ree-t- >n y g< t *
and tl> it .■ i n hi.n
sympathy l» v ' a C • '• «u
When - V/.-VT.U
jjfaiusi mm
t.i . county
beeutb to us
that the bent thing for him to do is
to quit the livid .in I hunt a hole.
One of Mr. neese s itieiuls. when
he heard the returns Irom Morgan,
said: “Morgan has gone Hack mf
her bay—rolled on her child, a:.d
overlaid her Inin !
Cap;. Cai lion sjie.i.uc.tiiy toh:
Sean. Reese in his Rutledge speech
that he (Carlton) was doing bettei
woik lor him in his absence than
Scab, had done lor himself since
his return.
'Tile cheekiest Hung we have \it
heard comes from Iseese’s Ogle
thorpe leaders. A hitch o: t ie
went over to help Scab, “carry
Morgan, and we learn that one
drummed the county lor him
They found there Capt. W. L>.
O'Fairell, who, as Capt. Carlton’s
Iriend, has accompanied him on all
of hi. rounds, and they at once
dubbed him “John Kelly” and tried
to enrage the good people of Mor
gan against that gentleman liy cry
ing “Athens clique” and "outside
interfcience.” 1 he ljir-inindeii
people of Morgan knew how to re
buke such inconsistency, and most
eflectuallv did it, too.
TAHI1T ltl'd'ullM.
Five Southern democrats in the
house voted with* Mr. Randall ir.
his secession from the party on the
Morrison land bill, four ol llies--
were Irom Louisiana aud one from
Alabama. Sugar and iron. A
narrow strip in Louisiana produces
sugar; a smelt district in Alabama
produces iron, i tiese s.-.^ar plans
ters and iron masters are lattening
on thetaiifi’an both these .articles,
but it is at the expense of all ot the
rest of us. livery mechanic in Ath
ens who bay's a pound of sugar pays
a duty on it for the benefit ot the
Louisiana sugar planter; every far
iner who buys a plowshare pays a
duty on it tor the benefit of tin- j
owners of the iron furnaces. It is
a tax on the million for the benefit
of a few favored classes. Mr. Mor
rison isrigli— it is unjust and ought
to be taken otV. The Democratic
party is pledged to a reduction o
taxation, and Mr. Morrison is ma
king an holiest ellort to redeem that
pledge.
As lor Mr. Randall, is recent at
tempt lo construct a tarill’ bill is a
deathblow to his reputation as a
statesman, llis measure if passed
would have the eifect to reduce the
ievenue and increase the burdens on
the people. A tax on imports
when raised so high as to approach
the line of prohibiting the intro
duction of the article, ceases to pro
duce any revenue, hut the burder.s
ot the people is increased.
As to his fairness, it is needless
for his friends ever to talk to south-
arn democrats, llis recent bill pro-
poses to increase the cost to the
cotton planter ol nearly everything
h ; uses. Notably, be raises the du
ly on iron lies, llis tax on these is
already abominable and comes right
out of the pocket of the southern
planter. Mr. Randall proposes to
increase this tax, which will re
dound to the benefit of the few
manufactures of iron ties and he
one more burden laid on the far
mer.
Blaine’s home rule speech has
been revised and published as a Re
publican campaign document. Of
course it was delivered as a Repub
lican campaign dodge, but the art
ful dodger has been pretty busily
engaged of late trying to dodge the
truth in relation to it.
Re (Sorts That The li Mot Osttlm float
Well With Her Cotohman Husband.
New York Correspond cnee.
I hear that the somewhat cele
brated love match between Victo
ria Schilling and her stable hus
band is not quite as rosy as it was
Indeed they do say tlivt the wed
ded life of the coachman and his
bride is rather more spirited than
fT-clionalc. Mrs. Schillings look'-
bin and anxious. She was plump
ind rather light-hearted when
-n-r runaway marriage oc-
•i r '•••! N * a* the gi'Js ai
the Casino are telling that she cries
in her dressing room between the
scenes on the st -ge nnd there a'r
.iim>rs that she is badly treated
tome. Her father. 1 understand,
would take her hack to his home if
be would yrt away from her hus
band; but she is not quite ready b
do that. She is, however, begin
nmg lo think that she has made i
great mistake in l.fe and t<
feel her humiliation very kcen-
Iv. But she is too full
of pluck to acknowledge the
on.,. publiclv, so she grow-
pale and thin and goes away l
herself to weep. She now gets jf6;>
• week at the Casino, and the peo
ple in tiie company like her ami
nave sympathy lor herappaient dis
tress. She will never he vety much
ot an actress, but she sings well
enough and lo >ks well em ugh t"
sure of earning a good living on the
stage as long ;t« she may choose to
stay there.
SAILING TIIK WHUll.ro li
the Attempt That Cost Capt. Webb His
Life Accomplished.
Bt i i ai.o. July 12.—To-day C.
D. (jiaham successfully accomplish
ed the lent of swimming the whirl
pool rapids at Niagara, in which
Captain Webb lost his life. The
rip was made in a peculiarly shap
ed cask mamitactiired hv Graham,
ind which was placed in the river
n the American side just lielow the
falls. When eveivthing was in
readiness Graham got into the bar
rel and closed the manhole at the
top from within. At this point ol
the river the current is very slight.
STARTING ON Ills Till I*.
A small boat towed the cask oil-
into the i iver to a point where the
current would catch it, and then
Graham was started on what might
i>e llis trip to eternity. The towing
process took only a lew minute-
and then the siieam caught the
ca-k anil started it on to the rapid-
ot the whirlpool. At first it moved
slowly aiong, then taster and faster
until the mad current dashed it oil
with its lull lotce. The cask
hounded up and down over the
great waves, and several times
turned a complete sr.mersault, but
genet ally speaking, the wider por
tion remained uppermost, although
t twirled around like a top.
M E TllltlUOIt THE Wll.lll.l'
CHEAP JEWELRY.
NINE-TENTHS OF THE WARE WORN
SAID TO BE NOT SOLID.
WORDS TO LITERARY A3PIRANT&
Brooklyn a* a 'Center for the Trade—
What la Claimed for the Triple«Plated
The Claaa Who liny the Bo glia—Mourn
ing liooda.
Cheap jewelry is widely worn. Brook
lyn contains a dozen or more stores in
which a large trade is done in all classes
of plated ware, from the 50-cent diamond
(?) pin to the elegantly engraved triple
plated bracelet. Some years ago bogus
jewelry was only affected by the lower
classes of colored people, but if a dealer
with whom a reporter talked recently is
to l»e believed nine-tenths of the jewelry
worn is not solid. The reporter’s inform
ant desired to impress him with the fact
that a vast difference existed between
plated and “snide” jewelry. “Snide jew
elry is sometimes called electro-plated
ware, and is what Ls generally supposed
to have been dipped in gold.
The dipping process is no longer in use.
To the incxpcrienceil eye no difference is
to be found between an electro-plated
chain worth 75 cents nnd a solid gold
chain valued at $10. Both look alike, and
if the plated chain turns black in a few
days its npi>earanee when purchased is
quite as good, if not better, than that of
the real article. This city is becoming a
center for the cheap jewelry trade. Kast-
•rii manufacturers have for weeks been
-‘Xumining sites for the purpose of erectr
mg a mammoth factory in Brooklyn on
the river front. The industry is a large
one and employ s thousands of hands. In
■one the manufacturers mentioned above
•an find a favorable location, ground will
lie broken for the factory the coming fall.
WILL OUTWEAR SOLID JEWELUV.
It is claimed that ciieup or triple plated
jewelry will wear longer and give better
satisfaction than solid, and that it makes
a 1 letter appearance, and if lost or stolen
the loss is comparatively a small one.
Quartz stones, cut diamond shape, or with
thirty-five faces, are of recent date. They
are of a yellow color and unbacked. At
night the effect of a dozen or more of these
stones is dazzling. Quartz is found in
Brazil in large quantities and shipi>ed to
Holland for cutting, and from there trans
ported to this country. Diamonds have
often passed from the custom house offi
cials in New York aud elsewhere billed as
quartz.
Continued the reporter’s informant: “The
fraud is now something of a •chestnut/
but iuis been practiced with eutire suc
cess. K.iinc stones backed witu tin foil,
are much worn by young girls in their
hair, and by members of the theatrical
profession. Rhine stones are made of
gia>s and contain a small per rentage of
red lead. Formerly the manufacture of
Rhine stones was exclusively a French
industry, but of late yea-s many have
been made in New York. 1 sell a good
quality Rhine stone, nicely mounted In a
siud. for thirty-five cents Quartz dia
mond rings and pins in solid gold settings
can l»e bought from $4 to $10 each. Brace
lets of rolled gold warranted to \fear ten
years, bring $1 to $d each. '.Vatch chains
are worth irom 50 cents 'o $*J. A large
trade is done in gold ph led, nickel nnd
silver ore wa’ches. It is said that silver
ore will wear longer and not scratch so
easily us watch cases made of coin siver.
Ttiey are <>ik>-fifth cheaper. A watch with
a silver ore case can be bought for $4.
THE CLASS Wllo III'Y THE IRK.US.
lass buy plated wedding rings?”
All tb» Professions Hindered for Want ot ]
Men te Do the Work.
Literature, like the ministry, medicine, 1
the law and all other occupations, is*
cramped and hindered for want of men to a.
do the work, not want of work to do.
When people tell you the reverse they __
speak that which is not true. If you desire
to test this you need only hunt up a first- 5 * •
class editor, reporter, business manager, • ® ° 9
foreman of a shop, mechanic or artist in
any branch of industry and try to hire j X | a
him. You will find that he is already ~
hired. He le sober, industrious, capable
and reliable and always in demand. Ho
cannot get a day's holiday except by cour
tesy of his emyloyer, or of his city, or of
the great general public. But if you need
idlers, shirkers, half-instructed, unambiti
ous and comfort-seeking editors, report
ers, lawyers, doctors and mechanics, apply
anywhere. There are millions of them to
he had at the dropping of a handerchiet.
The young literary aspirant is a very,
very curious creature. He knows that if
he wished to become a tinner the master
CLINCNIAN’S
r OBACCC
remedies
THE CL1HGIAN TOBACCO OUTHEHT
Am HcBn^K »m ffS-sesFAMJ
Ring-
THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO CAKE
OWN IIKM EI)Y,. Carr* all
> master natouiw own kkmkpv. iyre»
smith woold require him to prove the poo- i Oa**-Sorjunj*. Eoaimm. god*,
sesion of a good character and would re- j N*ara]*to.RL«*imau>aTu
quire him to promise to stay in the shop ] BPSHK SEW?
three years—possibly four—and would, j of-inMct*. Ac. in fact aiiai* «u locar
Lition from uliatmT c
imatuan.
Bite*, bangs
_ Irritation and
Price Xdri*.
build fires all the first year, aud let him THE CLINQMAN TOBACCO PLASTER
* * if Prranrcd nccor din* lo Ike Most arienllSe
“ I nriurtplr*, of the iTKKMT SKIIATIVK
Of lM;|tKIHRNT>« corapoandvd with_the^par»st
raina whM*. from too dnlicat? a state of tbe system.
Hm* patient Is enable tolhew the stronger application
«Mf :he Tobacco Cake. Fie Headache or «*bt>r Aches
and Pains, it is invaluable. Price 1,. cl*.
A«ky.M»*dmgfi*t lot tine e remedies, or write to the
DURHAM. N- C.e U. S. A.
years—possibly
make him sweep out and bring water and
build fires all the first year, aud let 1
learn to black stoves in the intervals.
he wanted to become a mechanic .
any other kind he woold have to
undergo the same tedious, ill-paid appren- J «f irriUnt_or Whupmatary maladies^ Achee^and
ticeship. If he wanted to become a lawyer " *" •- * “
or a doctor, he would have fifty times
worse, for he would get nothing at all dur
ing his long apprenticeship, and In addi
tion would have to pay a large sum for tu
ition and have the privilege of hoarding
'Hid clothing himself. The literary as
pirant knows all this, and yet he has the
hardihood to present himself for reception
into the literary guild and ask to share its
high honors and emoluments without u-
single twelvemonth’s apprenticeship to
show in excuse for his presumption.
He would smile pleasuntly if he were
asked even to mnke so simple a thing as a
lu-cent tin dipper without previous in
struction in the art; but, all green and ig
norant, wordy, pompously assertive, uu-
grainmatical, aud with a vague, distorted
knowledge uf men and the world, ac
quired in a back couutry village, be will
serenely take up so dangerous a weapon
as a pen and attack the most formidable
subject that Uiiaucc, commerce, war or
|K>liticscnu furnish him withal. It would
be laughable if it wore not so sad and so
pitiable. The poor fellow would not in
trude upon the tin-shop without an ap
prenticeship, hut is wiliiug to seize and
wield with unpracticed hand an instru
ment which is able to overthrow dynas
ties, change religions aiul decree the weal
or woe of nations.—Mark Twain.
The cask kept pretty well in the ! weil-dre*
was asked.
“You would be surprised to see the men
who purchase liogu* engagement and
wedding rings. They do not appear as
though for $4 or $.’» would make any mate
rial difference to them. We sell platt-d
rings from 35 to '.m cents each. It is amus
ing to see the manner in which many
centre of the river till it reached the j jewelry. Uelore they aak u>- U>
1 shown goods they make the clerk under-
whirlpool, when it struck a
-tron^ side current and was carried
swiftly through, reaching the water
beyond in safety. From here the
jonrney was comparatively quiet.
The cask Boated on towards Lewis
ton right side up. a"d all danger was
passed. It was picked up at Lew
iston, about five miles below the
starting point, and Graham crawled
out of the barrel uninjured, with
the exception of a slight bruise on
one arm, which he received when
passing through the whirlpool. He
remarked: “When i struck the ed
dies it was one continuous round o!
erks, hut I am not hurt a hit.”
slNii V . . li AN ITAlTAfN
e RcnurkabJc Story ol an Atlanta P »lic2.mn
stand that tiie je
Man in mi Intelligence Office.
Of all places in which a man Is uncom
fortable, an iutelligence office is thu one
iu which he appears least at ease; but oc
casionally he rises superior to circum
stances and entertains his feminine fel
low sufferers by his rebellion against his
oppre>sors. Such a one sat in a South
Hud office the other day and ullowed him
self to Ik* catechised by some fifteen serv
ants, but the sixteenth found her match.
She made the usual inquiries in order to
assure herself that his home contained all
the luxuries to which she hod been accus
tomed, and which her delicate health re
quired, and at last said: “1 shan’t come.”
“1 was afraid you wouldn’t,” he answered
pensively, “but you ought. This house
isn’t much, 1 know; but I’m building one
that’s to iiuve set tubs, aud bells, aud an
elevator, aud un electric light, aud a
piano, and a set of parlor furniture in the
kitchen, and it would he like your child-
hull's home to you, an i—I’ll let you keep
a pig in it.
She walked out of the otlice, and the
other girls were decently respectful for a
1 ami resj»ectable people buy i few minutes; but a fresh arrival, quite
unaware of his possibilities, soon attacked
him. He answered her also with civility
fry which it is their i until her question became impertinent.
to purchase is not desired for J and when she said, “Well, I guess I’ll
’hire’ you. How many have ye in family?”
he answered "Eighteen.” “Eighteen!” she
gasped. “And what do ye bes paying a
them, it is usually bought for servants
or children, they say. Children can not
wear large plated bracelets or brooches,
neither d.. they were heavily plated watch j week?” “$1.50.” “Indeed, aud I’ll not go.
Many jieople’s pride will not ni- i said she; aud she also departed, for every-
AURANTII
Mn«t of the diaea*e* which afflict mankind are origin
ally caused by a div irdered condition uf tbe LIVER.
For all cumolainta of tliia kind, euch aa Torpidity of
tbe Liver. liiliousneM. Nervous Dyspepsia, Induce**
lion. Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation, Flatu
lency. Eructations nnd Barninjt of the Stoma, h
aomettmw* called Heartburn!. Miaama, Mnaria,
Moody Flux. Chill* and Fever, Breakbone Fever.
Irrecularitiea incidental to Female*. Bearinx*down
SfcSfcSTADIGEB’S ftURftHTII
ia Invaluable. It to not» panacea for alldiananeii,
boiPIlDC all diseases of the LIVER,
•ill yUNt STOMACH and BOWELS.
V chan*** the complexion from a waxy, yellow
tinge, to « ruddy, healthy color, it entirely removes
low. gloomy spirit*. It to oue of the BEST AL“
TERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE
BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC.
STADICER’S AURANTII
Fob tale by all Drugctot*. Price SI.00 per bottle.
C. F.STADICER, Proprietor,
Uo so. front ST.« Philadelphia, Pa.
r APITV. PRIZE, *7b,U0U
The Development of a Chick.
•Dici you ever see an egg hatch? I don’t
mean- looking si the egg as it lies in the
nest and just seeing the shell, hut I mean
seeing the inside ot It and watching the
gradual development of a chick from a
globule of egg* yolk tp a’lively, downy,
chirping fowl, ready to go out aud forage
for worms. It was over at Tubigen uni
versity, Germany, that 1 saw it. Great
fellows for research, those German pro
fessors. This one was Dr. Geriach, who
seems to have given himself up to invest!*
gating the growth of life. And now he’s
sitting up night£ watching eggs turn into
chickens. How does he do it? I’ll tell
you. He takes a fresh egg and cuts a bit
of shell out of the little end. He chooses
that end so as not to disturb the ' air bub
ble at the big end. The hit of shell he
cats out is as big as a nickel, and he takes
it out just as a surgeon would trepan a
cracked sknlL Then he can see the inside
of the egg just as plain as can be. He
takes a little of the white out, just enough
to turn the yolk around so the genn is
where he can see it. Then he puts the
white back very gently and seals it up.
“He has a little glass saucer, very thin,
big over as your thumb nail and curved
just like tbe bit of shell he out out. He
puts-this over the hole, being careful to
let uo air remain under It, and seals it on
tight with collodion. And there you are.
You can see everything inside the egg
shell as plain as in a tea cup. Put it in
incubator with a glass side, and you can
watch the whole process of the growth
of the chick until lie picks his way out of
the shell. You can take it out ot the in
cubator,now and then and examine it a?
closely as you please. Aud I believe Dr.
Geriach is now preparing a set of photo
graphs of the interior of the egg,
taken every hour from the putting of the
egg in the incubator to the hopping out of
the hatched chick. Now talk about hearing
daisies grow!—Cor. New York Tribune.
A Sign of Inward Nobility.
A quaint physician was wont to say
that he knew a gentleman or lady after
he had dined with them. Speaking-of a
new comer with whom ho was not favora
bly impressed, he said: “I must have
been mistaken. 1 have seen him dine, and
l respect him.” It might not be a good
plan to trust a man who knows bow to
eat, without more tangible recommenda
tion, but there is certainly an outward
sign of inward nobility in the table com
panion who kuows how to handle his
Knife and fork so deftly that you most
need your eyes to know that those arti
cles are a part of the table furnishings; he
pours cream and drops sugar into his
coffee in a quiet manner; lie dines
throughout in a way that may not inspire
confidence, although it wins admiration.
Do you say there is nothing in it? Here
is such a diner’s opposite. He is not down
in his chair till the hall Is aware of his
presence; he spreads out his napkin osten
tatiously; he thrusts his elbows at right
auglcs; he lieats a tattoo with his knife
and fork while waiting for Ms course; he
takes his glass of waie«* at one gulp; he
peppers and salts everything before him,
and wonders why the neighbors sneeze; he
comments oil the victuals; he smack his
lips; he tells where he was yesterday and
where he is going to-morrow, and why.
It takes iron nerves and a strong constitu
tion to contoniplate the possibility of his
presence at a table three times a day for
two weeks.—Kansas City Journal.
'.EGAL NOTICES—CfAKKE COU
PKOhoT* ci Attic*• CbUNTT.-Whe.va* Jam®
Ul \\xiw admlnlnlstrjtor of the eviate of John
&v«u ao | tsblcountj, dicwii'U, dm anplled to
ine i n of th* Ww f .r * *! ch*m« w »*«.!
•^■inlitrttio These are th r f *»e to cue »n 1
■d m oni«b A‘I ooocvrutd toi u» (DOS® ®1 tho. «tf
a M term of lb v ourt ox .atniry of »»1d eon. o
,.AL i n iti n th* flist Worthy In November rex’
Shy »*W dUchatf® should not be fronted. Given
ai . i my nsuo .ua n tlic at alouuiuic «t oil.ee,
Ly .«J»*». V p Hnlr c cc .
T - '* 4 ‘ v i- -
t k.fc. Mi|«r*«r unit,- i lit 'niL >tt
t , «*riug to the court by ta!U*au.t*>y tvklenc®,
•tlh* delenuaiii L, *. Vu.non utide* without
ibe limit* ol the sute, I. is u.eieui «,u . a«»eu by
tnecourt that me DcIt&dkUl at the uxi
tertuoi this Courtvu the -M *>.uu. .y n. Octotei
uext, uj U.5U service ot this • ult-r o* pe.iccted
upou the Delemlaot by ). utmcaiiou ineieot once
a u uuiti l«r lour mouths in the Baiibei-Wau-b*
man Newspaper, prim to the next term ol thu
Court. In «>o*n Cb *rt. April 23<1 <e*6.
N. L. HUTCHINS. Judge, • C.W.C.
L.AH. CURB, Fuiaiiib attorney.
A* true extract from the minutes of ularke
Superior Court, April Term, 16J6.
luma a. Davis vs. cha.-
Tj Divorce in t larke superior Co*r., April
term. It appearing t^ the four. l*y **<•>-
factuiy evideuce Uiat tne dtleudaut, t, vv i/a»i>
cmucs viiihoti tne limits ol the Mule; it
heieupon erdereo by tne Court that tne de
fendant ap|»t ar at the uext term ol mis com t, ou
u zd Monday in UeiotKr next, auu mat se< \ .co
Lertecicd upon the defeuuani by pui. iixtiou
ereot. once auionm lor tour uiouihs m u.e
inner-Vaichuian Newspajer prior to m*. icxt
rm of tnis court, luopcii Court April *zzu,
1£S6. . ,
y. L. UUrCHlNF, Juilgc. >. C.
GEO DUDLEY THOM.48, F.alntiff- .u.o.nty
A true extract irom the minutes o.
peri-ir t oua, April lerm la>6
_priU.w-4ui.
N otice t<» debtors and cked«tomh.-
All petsona having dt-niatiosaKaii
Hiatit-»n M. Hill, lute o Clarke
‘cot"!, aie htrt ny i.oulie i to ruu'l« >
letuaml> me ui.dt rslgued sccordi
xn<i ull io '«>ns iudebt*«i ui said
require to .nuke immciiiAl payment
JOHN k. e K.
A'lin’r. Dcbonib Non of Bi
June lw fit.
Isnt
diNiikhip in tcriiiN of the li
f ire lod e atnl aiiiiioni>h a-, couc. rtu*. ...
cause at tne lenu »r u rrr. of the Court ot oi-
dinsry of said county to i.e he cl c»u the tiist Ron
day i
N"
*u»«
The Second Maryland (Confe-d
erate) regiment has been refused
permission to erect a regimental
monument at Gettysburg. The re
fusal is said to have been based on
the claim that the Marylanders
wanted to build the monument in
side Union lines at the farthest
point leached during the advance.
Thete is a genuine love of law —
lynch law especially—in Illinois.
The Chicago News says: “Down
in Tuscola, in this state the people
are doing theia level best to bring
Henry Williams back to life so that
they can have the pleasure of
lynching him for cutting hi. wife’s
throat and then his own. Hut they
are afraid they cannot save his life
long enough for them to add their
proposed crime to his.”
A Q(JES1 JON siliGUT
Browns Iron
Bitters
ANSWERED.
Th* qosation ha* ershahly tom «*k«g ttnuMnOi
jf thuM. “Hour OU Brrwrn’a I mo Btibrs cm»wo7-
•htucP* W«U. M dMat. Bo*. ittf'NMc-nrsxnvdtMwM
far «Uick • rsjmUhto pbym.ian onold prvorfiho IDt*»
PkfMcuM luofsiw too u tho twvO wtnntlrt
•cons kuowo to tlio yff—lnn. and Inqoiry ol say
UMUnai ctookal Una viO mhounttoto Usmurkni
UuU Umwo xio B4«o prspsrsllno* of tmo thou of say
oltor ntotonm awl in otdidio Thto itotn cm-
clooivoi uu* ino M MknooUiirsd to bo tho n»*
uupiolrtt frl-rtu r-ir-r*nfnlmriii Til|mirt1i f It Ir,
Dmosot. o romartahlo foot.thatprvo to tho dtooov-
•a^RllOWN’S IKOS) niTTERNiH.^rlK'S
posttofsftMfy toon dwahiostiaa hod ovor booo foaod.
BROWN’S IRON BinERSSrJSSUE
hoxtorho, or praha ena^pottoo-otll other Irca
airglleJnrodo. HROW.VN IKON RITTERS
rare® f udl*e*t loa, Bllioanaroo, U'raknrM,
I>> «prpola« Malaria* Chill* and Pevm,
Fired Krellaa.f-rnrral Debility,Pain h tbs
•J^Caekorldaib^ntmdarheMdNearal*
dla-lor oil Umoo xiharau Ivua to proscrOioA dxUy.
BROWN'S IROH ElTTERS.t3r=S'¥-
SjESssfssassa
Knw.lk,ahctk.
TS. m> bremat ntw.
gM»Sa»OSI.Y Ira. KTlicta, auSMI.
•kr Omta, Sm Tnd, lluk ud ovwl nd Um
TtKK V- OTHFBL.
"LUOY OOBB INSTITUTE,
ATHENS, UEORG1A.
T IIEraneurxrfthla Soho»t .111 be >«.*
Wtdae^ur.8»unb.r»«b,lSM AUkttera
MIU M. UUTHEBFOBD, Principal.
C. B. YEKONEE.
3ity Plumber.
la lU it® bMccbta, andQa
.
' boprnoo*. tho bnwoto aro actfvo
TithoodocttooooallymnmrspMMdmark*/.
Itriffht*n; th* si in ctoa.f
C.apt. \V. 1*. Manly.
Faptaiii W. 1*. Manly. whr.up picture
lieatln tlii* article, is a well-known inennl
l>.?r of Atlanta’s excrellent police f»»rc-*
Atlanta in noted for the dircipline and
efficiency of it* corps of police and tie
standard of its rank and the is very high.
Captain Manly is a fair specimen «!’ the
intelligence and piiysieal jierfeciioi*
which is required of its officials. Soup
vears ago tin- Captsin unfortunately ac
quired a blood poison, which for years
gave him more or less trouble, and
threatened to undermine and totallv
destroy his enliie physical system, lie
is a magnificent fqn-ciiiitn oi inanhtHid
with a constitution like iron, but thi k
insidious dhcase gave him
I XMlKTAh AHI.K WARNING
that it was safiping and mining
at ihe foundations of his constitution.
The Captain slid in conversation lrM
week:
“ Yes, sir, about two years ago I was
afflicted with :• badt*4seof nlood poison,
and after Irving various Mood remedies
in large quantities without doing me
die slightest good, I was induced to tit
Hnpnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure, anil aftei
using three bottles a completely cute 1
Mam now in perfect health and a
tribute my present condition to this
wonderful medicine. I cheerfully* re
commend it to all who aie suffering with
any blood disorder.’
The cheapness of this wonderful
remedv. (its price being only $1 a bottle)
should place it within reach of all ami
no better cleanser and blond cure wa»,
ever made. 1 know, for I tried Vm all.*
This medicine Manufactured by J. M.
Iliinnicutt A Co., Atlanta, Ga.is for
sale hr all druggist.
low them to acknowledge that they
purchase bogus jewelry for their own
wear.’’
Cheap jewelry is rarely woru by women
in mourning. An entire set of cheap
mourning goods composed of imitation jut
can he purchased for $1. Of late years
the dry goods houses have added cheap
jewelry department®, and the busiuess
d«»ue in this line is large. The lirst-elass
jewelry stores, too, have been compelled
io acknowledge the importance of th*
cheap trade, and sell plated ware. One
dealer informed the reporter that the
profit on cheap jewelry was small—only
75 j>er cent, being realized. —Brooklyu
Eagle.
hotly laughed. “And after all,’’ said
lady who had seen the whole, “ne fyuud
and engaged a nice girl. If a woman*had
said half as much she would have been
mobbed.”—Boston Transcript.
Languuge Is is Slippery Thing.
Iginguage is a slippery thing to deal
wiih, as some may find when selecting
their similes. Says a writer: “Speak of a
" ml, ’ s n» r We brow aad he will jtluw with Train , .topped 'berV ^any yearV before
.iwctotis jirule; but allu.le to bi» woo<leu
He Thought lie Knew Better.
A citizen walked up the depot platform
yesterday afternoon anil gazed for two or
three minutes at the new train signals re
cently erected on the south side of the shed
roof. Then he turned to Officer McElwee
and asked:
“Wlmt’s them thiugs for?”
“What things?”
“Why, that jigamerig on top o’ that ere
roof.”
“O, that’s to stop trains,” replied the
officer.
A look of incredulity came into the
man’s face and he said:
’t fool me, mister, with such trash.
Louanaisi State Lottery Company
•*W® do hereby certify that wo supervise
a***n***inen»* i*»r all the Monthly and Quart
Drawings of the Louisiana Stale Lottery Com-
S Lny,audlu person manage ami control the Draw.
ga themselves, and that the same are condu.ted
#ua buBtsty, fairness, and in good faith toward
*11 paiiies, aud wo authorise the Company to use
thu certificate, with f&c-simlles of our signatures
attached.iu its advertisements.”*
head, and hu s mad in u minute.” The
young lecturer’s “similes were gathered in
a heap” when he expressed the whole hotly
of his argument on deceit in tne follow
ing: “Oh, my brethren, tiie snowiest
shirt front may conceal an aching Imisoiii,
and the si iffust of all collars encircle a
throat that has many a bitter pill to swal
low.”—Chambers’ Journal.
Way
Canvas
i Sliml to tin* Sea !
sho
sirabi
chain
es for seaside wear seem to
liiiar forms, but are in new and
■ color*. The moccasin-shaped
shoe has also Millet ed “a sea
am! can now be obtained of can
vas, llaiinel or duck, in all colors, to
match bathing suits. A thin and light
but firm sole of cork is stitche.l securely
to a thin layer of leatner, uinl thus affords
p'Tfec; protection to tiie feet irom sharp
rocks and other “dangers of the deep” sea
tail lung.—Boston (ilohe.
ID-muIm of * Ilruggiftt** Mistake.
As corn will soon be large enough for
the coons to bother it, and as you fre
quently give information gratis, 1 write
this for t he benefit of my brother farmers.
1 .ast year I went to a drug store to buy
strychnine for use to kill coons in the
field, but the druggist made a mistake
and put up morphine, all of which 1 did
not know until 1 got ready to use: so I
used it, and the next morning the field
was full of coons, all fast asleep.—Arkau-
sas Cor. G.obe- Democrat.
A G«mm! IVreentage T.lv«*«l Through.
“Are }*»u afraid of .-carlet fever among
your children. Mrs. W.?”
“Oh, no,” replied Mrs. W., “not very. It
rati through my sister s family of six chil
dren and she only lost two.”—New York
Sua.
afterward.
HOW LOST HOW RISTOP.FD
I UT published, anew edition of Dr. fill***?*
well’s Celebrated Emav on the radical cute
ol >|»ermat/*rih«i a or Seminal Weakness, Inrol
usury -cntlnxl Losaea Imnoiency, Meutsl and
Physical Incapacity, Impediment* to Maniare
etc.; alao ConMiaiptlon, >|» lrpsy mjd ht<,
induced by aelf-indalgencc, or sexual extrava-
fitnre, etc.
The celebrated author In this admirable essay,
cleariv demonstrates from a thirty year-.’ suc
re* sfjl practice the'- the alarming consequence*
•i srlf ahnse may l*e radhally cur*d; i.omnnc
outs mode of cure at onto simple, ceitaln. aid
cff. ctual. by mesa* of which every suilerer.no
matter what hla condition may he, uuy ture
himself cheaply, privately and radically.
This lecture should lie iu the nanda of every
youth and every man Iu the land.
^entaa«Ki »cal In a plain envelope, to any
address, post paid, an tereipi ol lour ceata or two
postage aiampa. Address,
TIIK CULVKKWEJ.L NEnfraL CO.,
I Ann Pt„ Mew Yerk, N. Y.; Post Oflice l Box,«$•
june17wly.
THE SOUTHER N
MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.,
Athens, Georgia. >
YOUNG L. 3. HARR!9, Pxxainijn
8TEVKN8 THOMAS, Skcbitabt.
Resident Directors :
Yobko L. G. IUrris, Stbvkns Tbomas,
Oil H. NaWTOX, J. S. HiMItTOI,
FXRDINAV9 PHI5IXT, MaRCXLLUSSTXMLKT.
Ob. E, S. LTMDoit, Job* W. NicaoLaoa.
L, U. Cbaaa »bibb, J.*i? Hokbicttt
TO RENT.
To Rant Chaap—All Na*
A. A. McDuffie
“Will yon love me then, at now?”
Sift the whtojier came from you.
When we plighted mutual vow,
Breathing of affection true.
“Will you love me then, as now?”
Picturing year* of toil between.
Wrinkles written on euch brow,
Tifwcs turned to silvery sheen.
“Will you love me then, ns now?”
An i my answer pleased you well.
While I fancied thul—somehow—
All thing* brightened ’neutli joy’s spelt
“Will you love me then, as now?”
’ J’vvas a fallacy I tqioke;
See, like culprit, here I bow,
From my soul those wonls revoke.
Start not, darling; then, as now.
Surely I could not have told
With what measnre to allow
For love’s growth an hundred font
—Mrs. Addle li. Billington.
Kitting « Sermon and a Miracle.
Every one who eats Ida matutinal egg
eafs a sermon and a miracle. Inside of
that smooth, symmetrical, beautiful shell
lurks a question which has been the Troy
town for all the philosophers and scien
tists since Adam. Armed with the eugines
of war—the miscrosfcope, the scales, the
offensive weapons of chemistry and reason
—they have probed and weighed and ex
perimented; and still the question is un
solved, the citadel unsacked. Professor
liokomy can tell you that albumen Is com-
jMtscd 80 many molecules of carbon and
nitrogen aud hydrogeu, and can persuade
you of the difference between active and
pussive albumen, aud can show by wonder
fully delicate experiments what the alde
hydes have to do in the separation of gold
from his complicated solutions; but he
can’t tell you why from one egg comes a
“little rid hin,” and from another a
bantam.
You leave your little silver spoon an
hour in your egg-cup., and it is waded with
a compound of sulphur. Why is that sol*
phur there? Wonderful, that evolution
should provide for the bones of the future
hen! There is phosphorus alao In that
little microcosm; and the oxygen of the
air, passing through the shell, unites with
it, and the acid dissolves the shell, ^hus
making good atrong bones for the chick*
and at the same time thinning the prim
walL—Professor Matthew-Williams.
Cattlemen m western lua* nara organ
ized on association for the «mvtng of an
extenslTe system of wells for the watering
Melt tilings came urouuil. No mail could
stop a train with a piece of board ’way up
there. Stop a train! Hear him talk!’’
And the citizen enjoyed a good laugii and
then coining to the subject again he asked.
But, mister, what is Lnem thiugs for, any-
vay. You might as well give it away.”
“They are to stop trains with, 1 tell
yon.” reiterated the policeman.
“Do you mean to tell tne that a yard-
long piece of wood can reach ’way cross
the track nnd stop a locomoky? Wacher
givin’ me!”
“It catches on the smoke-stack and puts
on the air brakes,” explained a passenger;
“It’s a new fangled invention for stopping
the engiue right away.”
“I’ve lived around Che-tter these fifteen
year-*,” soliloquized the citizen os he gazed
with wonder at the shingle, “and I've
never seen ’em obliged to stop trains that
air way."—Chester Times.
As Known Among His Neighbors.
“The R. B. Hayes known in these
parts,” said one of the citizens Fremont.
Ohio, recently, “is a benevolent, cultured
aud courteous gentlemun, heartily in
sympathy with his neighbors, instantly
ready with purse and voice to forward
every wise scheme for advancing the ma
terial Interests of the town.”
Those Who Leave the Sanctuaries.
A test of the religion of those who leave
the sanctuaries behind them is furnished
by the help they give to the efforts to
make the hot weather bearable to the
sick, the poor and the children who cun
not get away.—Boston Herald.
The artesian wells, it is believed, will
some day convert the arid-slaked plains of
Texas iuto a fruitful region.
Leopold von Kanke had a library con
taining .’tO.OUO volumes.
ot all work, brain wore is tne most
healthful, aud conduces most to longev
ity.—Dio Lewis.
FROM CAPTAIN THE HONORABLE
ALISTAIR HAY,
Tlllftit itATTAI.LIOV’ BLACK WATCH
ROYAL HIGHLANDERS
(SEJtJND SON OF THEISARLOKIKINNOUI.i..
Duppllo Cast'®, Terth, Scotland.
• 11'VfCoB
vr de • Illy.
Ol ^ ... dys
cated with aid cjr ... ..
attendant directed we to Ukt jronr fi-comoa-alile
Cos* B«*i Ionic. U* effect waa timplv msrvel
ou*. The novel of dijo-slibn *as quickly restor
ed the ktdner Irrllatlon vesisbud end rapid
rostorstloa to health followed.
'•Other pieiM*rations of Coca h d been Irkd
without the alislitett effcft”
. Prof, Chs, Ludwig Von Berger,
Profe**oi of Medicine atiheRo ai University.
Knight of ihe Royal Au 'ria* Order ot tne Ron
8 revn: Knigi.tCommamlci of tho Koyal >i*-uis
nlerof Isabella; Knight of t e Royal Prnssiao
rderof the Bed Ea<le: Cneraller eg the Legion
Honor, etc. etc., •*.»*:
"Liebig Co.'e Coca Beef Tonic should
et be c-nwended .with th« bord> of irath7
u recalls. It la hi no sens# of the word a pateat
omedy. Jam thoroughly conversant wtih Ha
Set w of preparation and know It lo he not only
opomltiaate pharmaceutical pioduct, but also
oanejhf ottko high * eommendaUo».i it baa re
reived In all pens of the world. It oseuiaa
aaespce of Beef. Cbca. Quinine,Iron and Callsa} a,
which are dissolved la pore genmlhe Spanish Im
perial Crown Sherry.”
Invaluable te all who are Rnn Down, Nervous.
Dyspeptic, BIlUous. Malarious or sflllnted with
weak kidneys. Be ware of balletoes.
Her ■gjegty's ^Favorite Cosmetto Glycerine
Used by her Reval High oes* the t Prfi
Wales and the nnnlUty. Fee tbe tfkfh, Omaplex-
lon. Eruptions, Chapping, Kooghnese. ILOk
L&Bia CO.*8 Genuiae Syrup of Bareapariffa
^s raarantced as the best harsxpaxiUa lu the
OiaaiMlonsi
We,the undersigned Bauksand Bin •
k**r», will pay all Prizes drawn in The
Louisiana .State Lotteries which may bt*
preeonted at our counters.
J. H. QOLESBY,
Prce. Louisiana National Bank.
J. W. KILHHKTH,
Pier. State National Bank.
a.Baldwin,
Pr s. New Orleans National Rank.
with a capita) 01 $1,000,000—to which a reserve
fund of over fMO.noo has since been added.
By an overwhelming popular vote Its franehlar
was made a pan ol the present State Constitution
adopted December id A. D„ 1879.
1 he only Lottery ever voted on anil eudorsed
fiy th«* people of auy State. It never scales or
jKi-tpoue .
UsOrand Single Number Drawings
ake place ir.otiihly, ana tee Extraordinary
•ra-inirs repu srly every three months instead
S- mi-Anuuauv as baretofore, beginning
March IM6
A (tpieodid opportunity
Seventh Gnu d Drawiug.Cu
to wiu a fortune.
sG.in 1 ho Academy
of Mu* o New Orleans, Tuesday,‘August,
IO, 188<5.-l!rith Monthly Drawing.
CAPITAL PRIZE. 175,000
100,000 T ckets at Five Dollars Each. Fractions
iu Filths in proportion.
Liar OF PRIZES.
Capital Prise
do do
loo do do
*0 do do
t*>
100
so
« 7 V»
$5,000
10,000
12,000
10,000
10.000
10.001
20.000
80,000
*25,000
25,000
Experience with *'l'mlding Glace.
Not long ago a certain well-known lady,
who had come into a higher circle of so
ciety by tho acquisition of an unexpected
fortune, gave a dinner party to a coterie
of her new associates. Desiring to add a
few extra delicacies to the feast, she or
dered a number of dishes from a popular
caterer. One of them was a pudding
glace, and u few minutes prior to serving
the dessert she caused it to l»e placed in
the oven to warm. A few minutes later
she opeued the oven door, and discovered
that tiie translucent solid, with its im
bedded fruits, had been reduced to a
liquid, and tbe fruits floated serenely on
the top. In other words, it had melted.—
The Argonaut
Teniperuiuent sf Young Californians.
There are not materiaLs at hand to form
precise opinions in relatiou to the effect
which environment hus produced 011 the
Californians of the first generation. That
it has caused some modifications cun not
be dbuhted. Observation tends to estab
lish that the young Californian is of a
lighter temperament thau his eastern
cousins. Tliut he is more temperate and
at the same time more fuu-lovitig is )>e-
yond question. The predecessors of the
pioneers iu California were the most ab
stemious of the human race. But most
marked characteristics will be developed
in the second generation of Californians
that is now slowly coming up.—San Frau-
cisco Alta.
herebv notiritid i » remler
the un«ier»iitJH'4t accord!' 1
•» Irdeb eu to saitl estate
Asa M.J
\KI\P. SHERIFF 5
C I.AP.KK SIH
the ti st 1 *1
New Feat of Feminine Audacity, r
The uuassailable girls of Fifth avenue
have u new feat of audacity iu promenade
manners. They whistle for their dogs.
The fashion was to lead their pets by
fanciful strings, or tie led by them, but
now the belle who desires to keep a little
aheAd of the general procession in stylish
ness lets her dog go loose. Then if he
wanders off she stops still, lifts her pretty
head high, purses her lips l»e\vitchingly
and emits a clear, musical whistle. Each
girl has a special call, understood by her
do£, aiul this amounts in some instances
to a bar of music from some opera.—
“Uncle Bill’s letter.”
510 dc do
1UU0 do do
AFTBOXaMATIOM FBI SIS
9 Approximation Prises of 9750 $ 6.750
t» do ^ do 500.... 4,500
'* do do *50.... 2,250
• * « Frires. amounting to * 1205.500
ApplirsMon for rates to clabe should be made
aulY to the office of the Company In New Orleans
I-or further in formation write dearly, giving
aUl address. POSTAL NOTES, Express Money
Orders, or New York Exchange In ordinary let
ter. * urrenoy by Express at our expense. Ad-
ressed
M. A. DAUPHIN,
or M. A. PAUrillH, Wa.hl«»T’
Make P. O. Money Orders payable and addrr is
B gi*tercd Letters to
*EW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK.
Maw Orleans, La.
Alan of Grief!
LIKE LAZARUS!
Hi : s Relief anil Joyl
The doctor says: When Mr. James Edwards.
.Seoia, Ga., be*aft to take* 4 Guluu*s Pioneer Rlood
Renewer.” Is whim. He was covered, body and
extremities.with a characteristic syphillitic erup
Uon that set tut d to have baffled allxrcattueul. I
•aw him actln in about ten days, when he was so
chan ed in sppeannee by having the scales
removed and the eruption h?alcd, that I barely
knew him, and In a remarkably abort time he was
relieved of all appearances of the disease.
N. B. DUE WRY. M. D.
Spaulding county, Oa.
A CERTAIN CURE FOR CATARRH!
A SUPERB •
FLESH PRODUCER AND TONIC!
Guian’i Pioneer Blood Renewer,
Cures all Rlood and Skin Diseases, RenmaMsm,
Scoiula, Old >ores. * perfect Spring Medicine.
If not lit your market it will be forwarded on
MACON MEDICINE COMPANY, Macon. Qm
R. T. BKrMBY A CO.. Acral, tor N, E. Oa.
★ ^ *
A FRIEND IN NEED
DR SWEETifi
INFALLIBLE -LINIMENT.
/
Two Ways of Looking at It.
“Yea,” said a physician, “poor Smith is
dead. 1 did all that medical science could
do, but nature had to takc«her course, lu
sickness nature is all powerful; tho phy-
sii iau can only assist and direct.”
“Well, how is Brown?”
“Brown is all right again, but his was
one of tiie worst cases 1 ever had to con
tend with. Nothing but the most skill
ful treatment saved him from tho grave.”
—New York Times.
A Coat of Many Colors.
Tho appearauce of shirts of gorgeous
color and tho advent of the racing season
are simultaneous this year. It is a curi
ous freak which, makes the most ex
travagant combinations admissible os tar
os the shirt bosom and cuffs are con
cerned, but rigidly prescribes a tvhitc col
lar. Of all the fashions that have
afflicted the town this is by long odds the
moat absurd. ^Blakely Hall in Brooklyn
Eagle.
The Masleml Perch of the Ohio.
Speaking of the musical perch of the
Ohio river, W. H.' W. says: “The hum
ming or singing is produced by two corru
gated bones in the mouth or throat, which
they rub together, aud the sound is on the
priucile of the violin or musical glasses.—
Scientific American.
He was not very well read, and there
fore had no second-hand information te
distribute.—Professor Arthur S. Hardy.
pucovprjr ot "Gelatine * Dynamite.
Mr. Alfred .Nobel, the inventor of dyna
mite and blasting gelatine, has recently
introduced what he terms gelatine dyna-
mite; which combines and gives effect to
the qualities of the two great explosives
that go to form its name. It has goue lit
tle further than the teat stage as yet; hut
accounts of its use in mines, limestone
aud granite quarries, tunnels, and col-
leries show that It has advantages that
the intelligent workman appreciates;
that it does the workof dynamite in places
that cannot be well ventilated, and that it
leaves so little of an* offensive smell that
miners can go in almost Immediately,
feel no bad effects, and go on with their
work. •
Trees Transformed Into House Plants.
A very pretty ornamefft for the house or
lawn is a dwarfed white oak, Home enthu
siast making veritable pets of these min
iature lords of the forest These plants
are readily raised in (lower pots from
the ncorns, mid require no attention ex
cept watering. The dwarfing of the tree
is effected by the cutting off the tap root
every spring for u few yean, this process
keeping th. tree of diminutive size while
it does not prevent ordinary develop
ment of new branches.—Arkansaw Trav
eler.
Cwrefol Gradations la England.
The occupants of the . softest cushions
are treated with the softest manners—tho
occupants of the hardest with an appro
priate asperity. “Tickets, gentlemen, if
y{m please,” is tbe form In which first-class
passengers are addressed; this becomes. In
the cate of the second-class passengers,
“Tickets, please;” and when the collector
pnts his head into the thinl-class compart
ment his manner is shorn of all civility,
and he brusquely cries, “Tickets!”—W. H.
Hldeing in Brooklyn Magazine.
Whan dn-riKH Wen Vied.
Fire-places cam# Into general use in
country halls in the sixteenth century.
In earlier halls the hearth was in tbe mid
dle ot the room, and the smoke found Its
way to the Umber roof, which it black
ened, and then through the lantern In the
center to the open air. The more refined,
habits of Ut, sixteenth century led to a
better arrangement, and the fire-place was
universally constructed In the wall, and
the smoke escaped up a chimney.—Oe-
oaoraafs MwitWv
A Maw Kind tl "J.w.Urs.”
The prominent hotels and restaurants of
Paris sell their broken meat to contrac
tors, who arec ailed “jewelers.” Some ot
these contractors have mads fortunes in
the hnslneaa.—PhlladelphlaCall.
b 'V
li
lulreu io lu&ist i
Fxetutorsof John W. Mi
iuu«tw3m.
d 1 LOftUlA i'LARKK tOONTY."—Wat
VTM. Herienton hj»plle> to we for leu,
ministration «>n the octette of Lucy
co mt y tloc* a*e«!. Tuexe arc th*
te and adn.ouish all concerned to shot
he »cpn !xrtri-mo»the (’our
heal iu tue* lor fttid c» uni> on the liibt 'tomlnx
InScj teniber next, why *ai<1 ieitets shou.tl not
be e ranted. Given under my haud at < thev this
.y >i day of June
Ju y 6 w lm As-a M.J «'KS X.Ordinary
Will be *u
in August next htf»i
cou t house door iu i Lo city«I At inn-, «
county, Georgia, oeimcen t:*e legal noun »
alt that lo jr imrcvl o: lau 1 lyiu* an-1 b
said county in e*si aihcus co.uinin. one acCc
in, re or less and bouuded tts follows, 10 wit: un
the south aiitl w est by lands of alias Florid* v.arr
ta> t by laud of Mrs. Rebecca L’ulp, ai<u tin the
iiiioo of Hruadsireei. Said
the i»rojKiiy of John Hub-
he Jnsln
i Tor of Mis
Levy rustic
h ’by tin
proj»erty lev _ ,
issued ir«:
Court oi ihe rtsth district G. M , :n
A. a. Kobit.sou vs. John Robins ai
bv fc. W. l’ortcr L. C., aud turned <
•dvertiseiitcu; Mild sale. Wrutou nolica serret
on t.-nnut iu bOSSvSsion. TMs June .tolb, iMf>.
Juiirv W. W1ER, Sheriff
Ciurice County, Ga.
LKliAl, .Ntfilt E>—liA.NKJv tOL.\T\
Libel of Total
Aarch Tcra 1»6 — !t (•earing irom me return
of the abend that the dcicndwat. i.t the above
Stated case d<cs not reside iu ihe coumy, and ii
luriher ap|»estring troin thu evidence that the
l reside Iti this stale. It is
. ...... that service be ja-rlicted
above stated case by publication of this
ord. r occe a mouth for Rur roonths iu the Ran-
. paper publshed iu
Athens. Ga., this March 17th lbHJ
J. 15. l.jjTES, J.S. 0.
H. L. BROCK, Libelant Attorney.
Georgia Ba>kk County.—I hereby
liia> tne above order u a true extract iroto tne
minutes ol Ranks superior Court, this May 3d,
N TURK, C. 8. C„ B. C.
G KO
may couce
applied t
will pa>» upon saul application on the first Mo
day in Julv, ir.-b. luacu under my uautlau
thcial signature. May ksth. 1M®.
jnneswr-lt. T K. HILL,Ordinary •
*1 Tuesday iu August next at the Cour.-
tn said county «i Mu tiie ic<ai hours o
sale to the highest bidder lor cash the folio ting
ropcriy tow.i: One tiact ol laud containing
ixty-iwo acies more or iess lyingin itauae coun
ty on the waters ol grove river adjoining lauus ol
J. M. Brooks, L. Border^ aud the estate
1 Mire the plaec known as the liAout
place whereon F ry Riel House tenant in poa>e**i'
now resides, lend ou as the property 01 lu
Martin, to satisfy two ti fas. issued irom tho Jus
tices court of the -IChii District G. M. ol Bank?
county in lavor of l*. F. M Furr against
Tube Martin levy made and returned to mi
J. K. stepneus n. C. Notice given to tenant
po*sesM«m as required by law this* 1st uay o
julj L. l». oWb.N, abend. B. C.
LEGAL NOTlCth—0C0WEE COUNTY
may concern, Lindsay W. Downs, Kxocutoro
Leroy fluff deceased, has iu due form ol law apt
plied to me lor letters of ulsunssion Irom said
r.xeciitorsbip, and I wtll pass upon said applica
tion on the nrat Monday in August l»&6. W itness
my hand and official signature, May 2d 188G.
iuay4w.hu. li. E. THRAbUEa, Ordinary
nhuKWAUCOStK COUNTY.—* r o all whom
\J To all whom it may concern. Gcorgo \\.
Colley Adm’r. ot Margaret Colley deceased, has
indue form of law applied to me for letteis ol
dismission front said administration, and i will
pass upon the same un the first Monday in Sep-
ember lSfMl. Wliuesa my baud and official sig
nature, Juue 7lh,
June*warn B. K. THRASHER, Ordinary.
U tuitu a OCu>th COUNTY—lo all who it
may concern the widow ot John.il. C. Malcom
deceased has applied to me to have a years sup
port set aside to her from the Estate of the said
deceased. This is therefore to cite and aumon
ish all concerned io show cause it any they have,
at my office on the first Monday in August next
when said application shall not be granted and
die years support allowed as fixed by the return
of the appraised for that puqmse July 3id )mo
B. E.'lHRAsllhK, oidtnary -
rveo'N EE 8AK RIFFS a ALE—Will be sold __
U the first Tuesday in August next before tbe
court bouse door in tiie county of Oconee and
Mate of Georgia within the legal hours ot sale t
tiie highest bidder for cash the following do
err .ed personal property, to wit: Una sixty saw
f ii. o: the Winsbop make, oue Colt press tor ba.-
ng '-otton, one Hay scales, and oue Ten hoise
power steam engine aud boiler of the Watertown
make ai. levied on aad to be sold aw the property
of Janies W.Watson bald County, of Ocouve to
satiety a moitage fi. la. given by Jao.es W. Wato-
son to David H. Malcon, on fourth day of De-
c ember aud which mortgage was transferred
by said David U. Malcom to the riatertowu 8tcam
Engine companvon the 15th day of Feburary
188*. This l!»th usy of July 18&6. '
, B. E. OVEBY.
Miervit ». j
may concern, James W Daniel, Adm’r ol
John HU Maicom, deceased, has ma ie applica
tion la terms of the law for leave to sell the lsuds
belonging to the estate ot said deceased, and J
will pass upon said application on the fiistSon
day iu August, 18sG
uneMfffit R. K. THRAf-HER. O r<*'* - •«
HELP FOR WOMAN
THE GERMAN AND AMERICAN
DISPENSARY AND
FEMALE INFIRMARY,
MISS B0SA FKKUDF.XTHAL, M. D.,
Proprietor.
ALL DISEASES PECIUAR TO THE SE3
Tit FATED.
This Dispensary anil Infirmary has
all the advuutaKcs and fncllitieg found
in such Institutions In Europe. Every
department is perfect within iuclf.
Uterine diseases; a diseases of the
bladder and bowels; of the skin; piles,
wens, tumor, nervous diseases, etc.,
especially provided to- and eared gently
and quickly. Special apartments for
ladies who may desire to remain in the
city for treatment. A remedies and
appliances superior; correspondence
Strictly confidential. Write lull history
of your ease, and direct to myself at
ho Dispensary.
ROSA FltEUDKNTHAL. M. D
NATURE'S PERFECT HEALTH
\ ImPoMible trth, disc.
CURE FOR 1 tion I, Impaired tbe
CONSTIPATION,
Tarrant’s Euervescen
SELTZER APERIENT _
wlllcure constlpstion.sick
hesdsrhe end Dvspeptia.
t regelate, tbe bo* e i |
tod ellBbiCS tlhsitf/eb »
dlSMUon to .ojoy ui./i
food. It radUHa ferrr
coola tbe blood. Uifelf:
^^ «uableln piles and tnfl,ia.
SWeadachBi&i^S* 1 '
^HetUble, Klegaul. '
.botild be bust In ... ^
Soid
* oy
beie
DYSPEPSIA. W**.
arrant and Co^New York.
DIGKEY’8
PAINLESS EYE WATER
S EUEVE8 atoace. Cures ir flamed and week
Ryes In a few hours. Give® no pain. The
i remedy In the world for gnulelated lids.
Price tf coots a bottle. Ask for it. flavooo
other,
B YSPKPaiA.mv remedy sent tree to any ad
dress, being tho result of actual experience
>Py,|l *SS&NH. NoaLVIN. Lowell. Mam.
PRICE OF
BURNHAM'S
IMPROVED
STANDARD TURBINE
1, cori of Maanhctaring and AdvccUilng.
mphtet with New Price List lent tree by 8
r RVKNHAM BROS., YorkPa
ill GoodsWarranted as rirst-C’ass orManey HefuM
BALDWIN & FLEMING,
BOOTS AND SHOES,
CHILDS NICK
- for the I’hatujoon-
REAPERS and
Sulky Hay Rakes, Grain Cradles, Cultivators. Cotton
Harrows, Gullets Gills, Feeders and Condensers,
Lawn Mowers, Lawn Sprinklers, Rubber Hose,
and Hose Reels and the latest improved
FLY FANS.
South-west Corner Broad and Thomas Streets.
A - - Georgia .
HODGSON BROS.
Desire to call attention to their large assortment of
TOBACOS.
THE CELEBRATED
PLANE ROAD
Is justly popular.
We chain there is no better for the
money. Try it.
CEDAR GROVE
Also some of onr Favorite Brands ior which we
are Sole agents. Give us a call and be Convinced.
NOT AT HODGSONS’ SHOP
Bntet the stand occupied by me for the put three years-
On Spring Street, near J. H. Reaves’ Livery Stable and Reaves & Niehoisoi.’- Warehouse.
The public afcnrespcctfully Invited to call and examine my
Buggies, Phaetons and Wagon
Now onnandb?f >rc purchasing elsewhere. Kepfiirtng of ell kinds a srecla!ty. For
sec all my customer* and my work
P. BENSON
"THEO. MARKWALTER S
STEAM
M A.RBLE&GRANITE WORKS’
BROAD STREET, Near Lower Market, A JGUSTA, GA.
MARBLE WORK. DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED, AT LOW PM cES
Georgia A South Carolina'Granite Monument* made a Specialty-
A lug. selection of Maiblo and Granite Work always on band, ready forleUerie*»» lwa
Parties desiring monuments or work appl/ to Aeo
At th e Athens cemetery,
,