Newspaper Page Text
V ' " •<**. * ’ ■?
Guaranteed as Re
r.
cordift'ly ifiV1 ^ you *° toake our ® tor2 y° ur Headquarters when in our City. Always a Pine and Pull Stock’d Best Gtoeertes and Provisions. Best Goods, Best Prices and ie;™
— — — — ■— — tsttaaa— I - — s
ATHENS, GEORGIA,
i CfcHs, PT5S., Janes White, Ca$Aj r
‘ ' cA rir.vt. loo.ooo.oo. ^
surplus. 100,00000.
Wishfl-u ISOO’jetnR «>ver twen-
.y« r# *" riunkinK business torn*.
A*’'”?' ,.,,f Hanks, Bsnk'rs,
Ati- ^ ”,,1 Individuals Solid-
entinnah* to oollec-
|A ">*”!,} of the ITn ited States a ml
^hrSulUed on day of payment
ur««»™!‘, We also have a Safe
l 11 .far the safe keeping of vnlua-
.“. i kin Is entirely under the,
«f K J. owner. l>oth fire and
ATHENS, GEORGIA., TUESDAY, .1 A2s
OUR OCONEE COUNTY EDITION.
(Successor to W. A. Talmadge,) dealer in
Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry,
Plated Ware,
China, &o.
JE W ELUY
iREUF-A-IlRrllTO
Ji. SPECIilLTT.
Corner of Broad and Wall Streets,
at hews, Georgia.
(MAX JOSEPH’S OLD STAND.)
C, K. COLLINS, A Merry Christmas and a Happy Hew Year
ft ' - -> .*• '* -. i nSCi* C .-tCr-'yJL *7 V-*. it iHIK* :‘A JH J
■‘Eplirnnu iny son, mind what yourfad-
r s ;i) s: Bars no use talkin’, dem
Boots aM Shoes
Branded
-V
*
THE FINEST STOCK OF
h o-m
TO ALL OF OUR OCONEE COUNTY EMENDS.
We are at our old stand on College Avenue, and would like for one and all to call on us and see our stock.
We have 4 stores adjoining, stocked with complete lines of
Divsr GOODS & CLOTHISTG,
PM8f 88000 AttS *f©*4GK»
r .
Also, the OVLY CARPET STORE Of ATHENS.
We Have a Beautiful Line of Christmas and Holiday Goods.
Our Goods are o± the Best, and Brices to Suit the Times.
Zfcs/C- dC CO.
The New County of Old Memo
ries and Fine Stork.
•
FLEMING
THE STOKES AND THE PROSPECTS
OF THE PEOPLE.
lie in
M'n* v
.I in do wori\ I kuoze what I’se
on am true. ALWAYS BUY BE
him all de outside brans, and
m i; ile wo f of your money slior’s you
SALSWIN & FLEMING,
Athens, Georgia.
. 3. Long.
M. Taylor.
ImiSGISTS AND SEEDSMEN.
ATHENS, SEOESIA. •
Ir-A-ITCST RETICLES.
>, Brushes, Combs, Mirrors, Cologne Bottles, etc
SEEDS.
ful of the raw wintry day, Nathan Cook
placed his chair beside mine on the
ground sad talked as lively as a boy at
picnic in the spring. He was in his
eighty-lourth year, and his father, Zad-
0ck Cook, had died at 93, after represent
ing his county at Milledgeville and his
district at Washington for several ses
sions.
“I can well remember," said ha, “when
the elder Stevens Thomas kept the first
store in Athens. It was a woeden build
ing and his was a general country busi
ness. Then Joe Moss set up the first
store in Watkinsville. The college, the
court house and two good springs were ^ Thrasher U an oM college
he mam possessions of the towns. By of min6i whcui j always like to
the way, I see you say in your paper -- ■ ' ‘ “
that there had never been a bar-room on
the south side of Broad street in Athens.
I can well remember when Wm. Yar
borough had a bar room on that side.”
“Have times and people changed
ndquvrters on Buists Feeds,
snd be convinced.
Gives us a call
much, Mr.Cook?” B. Lyle will take hold of the Watkins
“Yes, earth and men have boto chang- „„ „ ml w ;n rBV ; v(
ST. LOUIS LEAD.
IH1MTS. HUS AMD WINDOW GLASS..
■O
Land of Hambletonian Horses aod
Jersey Cows.
his second term as a failure. Jackson
made himself unpopular by bursting up
the United States bank. Andrew Jack-
son and Mr. Cook’s mother were school
mates in North Carolina.
Mr. Cock will live to seo the railroad
traverse the old paths where his father's
gig made its frequent travels.
“Tell Larry Gantt,” said ho, “that I am
■oming to see him once more. I march
ed with my torch in the Cleveland pro
cession last year. I think Gantt has
done more for Athens than any man who
has moved there in ten years.”
TALK WITH BOOTH BUOTHEBS.
The house of Thomas and Robert
Booth is the largest business firm in
Watkinsville. These old gentlemen are
shrewd, wealthy and easy going, and are
assisted by Clem and Wood Ashford—
taro enterprising young men, thorough
going and well to do. This house does a
business of $30,0)0 a year. Cotton is
not bought in Watkinsville, but it is
taken as collateral, and is shipped to
Athens. The crop of the county this year
amounts to about 4 000 bales; usually it
runs to 4,500. Collections are reported
Old Whig Who Voted for Jackson, Quar- ! 'air, with some complaint in certain
‘ quarters.
Mr. Swep. O. Hutcheson is a well-
known Athens boy and is doing well.
He carries on a business of $5,000. Jo-
_ „. . . . ,,r - seph E. Murray is a'prosperous mer-
One of the first men I met in V, atkins- ^ with , b (, 8ines3 0 f f4,000, Harris
lie was a landmark of Oconee county g Foddrill’s is a live new house, with a
His form was bent and his hand hetray- 1 business of $3,000 a year. Dr. W. Ar-
ed evidences of palsy. But his eye was ! ^ Z\
clear and his memory good. Unmiad-
reled with Clay and Loves Cleveland.
railroad and commercial
feth & Bro. hare a store in Buncombe ' and raising mnlo colts has come back in . the tray to
~ vogue, and hundreds of dollars are made ! centre.
and saved from mulo colts. Good beef j There was a time, however, when
cattle is also attracting much attention. Watkinsville had the bulge. The ladies
Jersey butter is made in large quantities of Athens did their shopping therein the
from ibis fine milk stock. Twenties and Thirties, and Mr. John
The Jersey requires extreme good Calvin Johnson behind its ambitious
care, but repays such attention in the
>r
E. G. Ware in High Shoals District; J
L. McRae, in Salem District;. Elder &
Hodgson, well known Athens men, have
opened a store three miles from Wr.t-
kinsville. Press Elder and Guy Houg-
gon art well known here, and have built
right on the line of the railroad. They
will do well. L. B. N. Cochran has a
store in the Scull Shoals District. So
that Oconee county does a thriving trade,
and when the railroad comes will take a
tremendous hound.
THE NEW RAILROAD.
Nowhere is the progress of the Macon
Sc Covington Railroad noticed with more
interest than in uconee county. This
section and this people are entirely cut
off from the world. There is not a rail
road in the whole county,and few sections
in Georgia are more completely isolated.
Watkinsville has improved under the
very idea; Farmington has taken a new
life, and all along the proposed line new
stores have sprung up and new men have
moved in. The water powers
quantity and quality of milk. Generally
farmers say, however, that the half Jer
sey is a hardier and a handier animal.
Much money is made out of common
stock in Oconee county, as well as fancy
breeds of horses, cattle and liogs.
Mr. Wm. Marshall has fine hogs; Mr.
Wm. Ashford makes a specialty also of
raising hogs.
The stock of Mr. Robert Branch is
known, and its quality recognised wher
ever the name and fame of “Little Giant”
has gone abroad. The Branch stock is
all fine.
Hr. George Maine has some fine
horses.
One of the best stock farms in the
State is that of Mr. Robert Moon, near
Watkinsville. Itt was strong in Bermu-
—- . — - * , , da grass—and nothing better can be se
ttle river near the railroad crossings have ! cure(1 for sraz i ns than Bermuda. Mr.
become an object of especial attention. | \i 00 „ bought this place several years ago
Oconee county holds lots of good land ! {lom Mr R K Tleavos. It was once a
with clay subsoil. This land has been j . )ar t of the Morton estate, and Mr. Moon
sold at $o an acre almost uniformly. . bas made groat success of his stock, and
When the railroad comes the farms will i pi auting generally. His Hambletonian
cently come out from Athens, and is do-
ing well. J. R. McRee Sc Son have start
ed a now store—just built and have
good prospects. J. W. Reaves has a
pretty confectionery and grocery, store,
Bedford Langford has a fine carriage shop.
A. S. Langford carries on a shoe store.
W. H. Booth carries a stock of groceries
The physicians are Dr. D. M. White,
Dr. Armistead and Dr. Arnold. The
Methodist Church is in charge of Rev.
J. V. M. Morris and Rev. C. P. Msrchman.
Rev. H. R. Bernard officiates at the Bap
tist Church. The lawyers are James R.
.Lyle, one of the most popular men and
best advocates in the circuit; Richard M.
Jackson, a sound jurist and good oificcr;
he fills with distinction the place of
County Judge. Jno. T. Anderson is
County Solicitor, and Edmond Thrasher
Thrasher is an old college
meet. He hvs grown gray, but his com
plexion would put to the blush a girl
of eighteen.
Messrs. Earl Overby and Jno. T. An
derson have put up new houses in the
past year in Watkinsville.
I learn in this connection that Mr. Jas.
grow in value, the furrows will run deep,
er and longer; the sheals will be called
for waste-weirs, and trade will
build its booth every few miles.
Will the road come?’ !
mares are noble animals and his J erseys
are justly celebrated.
Judge Wilson, near town, has some
fine Jerseys, and boasts of the brag cot-
_ . ... ton patch of Oconee. The cotton stalk
I am asked that question at every n0 w look like a denuded thicket of pine
turn. The people have oeen talking and ! sa ppli n .r«.
hoping until they are sick, and sore. Suits j q- h( . r J ' ig Httle doubt but that Oconee
[sis
ment until they have bred distrust. But ^ udds, Hambletonian stables and .Jer-
those behind the scenes now regard the : ge „ cattle. But the pig sward and butch.
Macon & Covington as more than an ima- ; er pells are bringing in a snug business
counters,smilingly welcomed his friends
from “the country.” What once waB
true commercially, long remained politl
cally. What Gen. Gordon called “the
court house ring” dominated old Clarke
and defeated Athens, So great a man as
Howell Cobb never secured the vote of
his county but once. In 1851 he carried
it by 202 votes and was elected Governor
over McDonald. Howell Cobb was a
Democrat. Clarke county was Whig to
count.on. Watkinsville was a whig for
tress and that side of the river always
whipped out this side in popular elec
tions. The whig majority was anywhere
from 150 to 200 on a good day. There
were about l,100*votos polled in those
days—and tho relative strength of the
parties seldom changed.
“Men voted upon princible.” said Un
cle Calvin Johnson.-‘and it was hard to
move them. AU told, 1 suppose there
were but forty “floats” in the county,
and the whigs usually caught them and
penned them up before the election.”
Howell Cobb was often heard to ex
claim; “1 would rather carry Clarke than
a ly county in the district.”
The other counties ware nearly solid
ly democratic, and Gov. Cobb had but
little difficulty in getting to Congress,
even over such men as Underwood, Watt
Harris, and others. But his home vie-
tory in 1851 seems to have been aided by
a strong Union sentiment which crept
iii ii)f'ii" ~~ *
lianm wVn. (no Whigs. Suffice
THE NEW SHOE
I. L SMITH A CO,
TALMADGE’S OLD JEWELRY STORE,
ATHENS, GEORGIA.
T. FLEMING & SOUS,
Wholesale and Retail
HARDWARE.
• • 7
“OLD HICKORY” Wagons,
Sash, Doors and Blinds,
FAIRBANK’S SCALES,
ffi®>TRY FLEMING’S BAZOR AXE.
igs. Suffice
it to say that John Galvin Johnson and
Howell Gol^b voted for- each other in this
. — , [ c, lj.ii. ni. ... * >.„i... b i-uu, ub-.mi.ob contest. Ctlbb was ele c t cd Go v cm or
ginary line or a speculstive scheme. Too - an( j g0O( j , ncoluJ f or several of , her I and Johnson re-elected Clerk of Court,
much of the route has been graded and too | p, anterg A page of this paper could be | Whig and'Democrat—always staunch
. ■>“ - - wr jt, t , n 0 f tbe dairies and stack-farms of personal friends, .had .a-^pqlitical love
~ feast—and lamb and lioji,' disported to-
many bonds taken for the enterprise
fail. Athens will never allow the line to : Qconee county-
stop at Madison. A prominent and en-
terprising citizen of Athens declares that
should Mr. Machen balk, he could him
self command the capital in twenty-four
hours to build the line. It looks to us
that the road will not only b« built to
Athens, but will be extended to Knox
ville, and that with the Monroe, N. C.,
connection at Athens, the Macon Sc Cov
ington, so-called, will be an importaut
line in Georgia. The steel rail will bo a
magic wand for Oconee. No county
needs it worse. No people deserve it
more.
now rr cbosses the coustt.
The Macon Sc Covington Railroad
comes into the county by crossing Hard
OCONEE COUNTY. ' "
THE OLD MOTHER AND YOUNGER
SISTER OF CLARKE.
CSeneral Features ail Physical Ad
vantages at the County-. Farms
and Water Pewert—Watkinsville
vs. Athens In Fe Olden Time.
We are getting near home when we
talk of Oconee county. It is difficult to
say which is the parent and which the
offspring—Clarke or Oconee. Watkins
ville is the old county site of the new
ed. In those old days it was safe to sell
and credit anybody. Money was
due Christmas, and everybody was good
iay. Nowadays, we cannot control la-
>or, anil debts can’t be met with such
certainty. In all other respects, farm
machinery and industrial methods, man
has greatly improved and will continue
to advance. People buy hogs and horses
now where they once raised them ; Lands
were stronger and fresher then—in some
portions the earth has changed.”
Mr. Cook is opposed to the free school
■▼stem. He believed that schooling and
churching ruined the negro especially.”
“Yes,” continued the old man, taking
up his reminiscence where his reverie
inti-rferrcd. “Joe Moss had the first
store here. Billy Manley had a store
over there where Wallie Booth’s grocery
is. I can remember when a boy, watch
ing the elections here. There were no
precincts outside of Watkinsville and
everybody had to come here to vote.
There were numerous fights during the
day, for politics were very bitter in those
days.”
“Do you know,” said the old man,
growing confidential, “that there was a
tradition among us Whigs that the Dem
ocrats were descended from the Tories?”
‘I was a dyed-in-the-wool Whig and
am yet The only vote I ever regretted
was for Henry Clay. I once swore by
Clay, but his slavery compromise smack
ed too much of abolition, and I’ve never
been a Clay man since.”
ville Academy next year and will revive
it considerably. I am told he is one of
the prettiest speakers in this section.
He is an accomplished man and will
bring out this school. Oconee has suf
fered as other counties have done, from
the skeleton school system of Georgia,
which has just enough substance to in
vite depredation, and just enough hide-
ousness to scare away custom. It is de
structive of private schools and ruinous
to education.
Labor Creek, near Barnes’ bridge, from I county,and A theus the now site of the old
Morgan. It passes through Dogsboro, 1 county. The court house, which had
crosses the Apalachee River, near Head’s
Mill. Thence tbe road passes through
Farmington—and skirts the Gwinn place.
One survey brings it into Watkinsville
been planted in Watkinsville in 1801,
was moved to Athens in 1873. Iu 1875
the Legislature cut off a big slice of old
on the east, and the other on the west Clarke and restored to Watkinsville the
Oconee county is out of debt
urer Booth shows a clean sheet and
good balance. The county has just fin
ished, along with Clarke, a fine, lattice
bridge over the Oconee, known as Simon-
ton’s bridge. Mr. John White was one
of the contractors, and it is a superb
piece of work. The stone piers and rip-
rapped wall leading up to the bridge are
compact and workmanlike. The bridge
spans the river at a place it has been dif
ficult to keep a crossing heretofore.
Oconee paid $1,155 for her share of the
bridge and Clarke pays something like
$4,000. There are several good line
bridges in this county. Oconee has a
population of something like 6.000. The
tax levy for the two years is six-tentbs
of one per cent to raise $5,793.
OTHER STORES AND BUILDINGS.
Besides the business houses in Wat
kinsville, there are other stores in the
county. Dr. J. T. Hester and I. W.
side. The road will cut through Thomas
and James Middlebrooks’ place—then
through Bart Overby’s. The line now
trenches on the Branch place, then passes
through the Elders, Bishops and Hutch
eson lands. Earl Overby’s farm is next
invaded, then Lyle, McReesand through
Watkinsville, passing out by Long
Tress- Bmucb, The other line would leave
Watkinsville by the Tan Yard Branch.
One of these routes would go through
Judge Wilson’s place—then through
Robert Mason’s, crossing the Oconee
near Simonton’s Bridge, and entering
Clarke on the White lands, would come
somewhere near Georgia Factory. The
route thence to Athens is easily sketched.
The surveying force have been once or
twice as far as Farmington, when, for va
rious causes, they have turned back.
len a Clay man since.” coumy. ur. «. x. ». ...
Mr. Cook used to drive his father in a ] Thrasher have stores at Salem. Dr.
air 75 miles, to Miiledgeville, when the : Price, it is said, is building there. Mr.
[legislature met The General Assem- ] James Price has a new building at Far-
bly elected the Governor. He was pres- I mington, which, by tbe way, 19 the pret
ent when Clarke beat Troup for Govern- | tiest site for a town in the county. The
or and heard the cannons fire. Next I new railroad will call Farmington into
time, however, the Whigs came out and new life ana make of it. a prosperous
elected Troup. The Yazoo business was town.
freely talked of .and mingled with the
campaign charges.
Mr. Cook voted the first time for An-
Mr. J. A. Wilson has a new town one
mile from Watkinsville.
This side of High Shoals Lowe Sc Lan-
drew Jackson for President. He did not niers have a store. The factory is just
support him for re-election, and regarded . beyond in Walton county. R. S. Grif-
crown and apart of her lost possessions.
It would have been better to leave Wat-
liufAille and Clarke together and form-
a new regime and a new county in Ath
ens in tho first instance. The county
shout i have been called Howell or Carl
ton, or Delony—or something historic or
suggestive.
Oconee just got through in time, for
the Constitution of 1877, viewing the 137
republics in Georgia, declared the work
of creation complete and closed the door
against all new formations.
Watkinsville and Athens, as near as I
can judge, were laid out about the same > crazo for building new court houses, but
gether.
So that Athens, with all her intellec
tual coterie and all henbuiiness advan
tage, was a vassal to Watkinsville, up to
the time of the war, and the other side of
the Oconee maintained the mastery in
many a well fought battle. As earlr as
1845 the question of moving the court
house to Athens was mooted; but Wat
kinsville was too well buttressed in
power and politics to surrender. The
tight was made again and again, and the
great group ot' men who have gone to the
bench and to the Governor’s chair; to
t ic field and to the forum, had to ride
seven miles over bad roads to the courts,
or send their papers through the mail to
be signed, copied or approved. Wat
kinsville was a staunch and gallant little
fortress. Tho Whigs totter about the
streets n> w with something like the old
fire in their fading eyes. Nathan Cook
is 83 years old—his father was member
of Congress for several years—and they
are all full of the days when they kept the
Democratic party and the town of Ath
ens at bay.
WATXIR8V1LLB.
Watkinsville was the geographical
centre of old Clarke county—leaning to
the direction of the spring. It was about
15 miles to each corner of the county,
The present court house was the fourth
one put up for the county, and was built
in 1827. Mr. James Carlton, of Athens,
I believe, contracted for the brick work.
It has discarded the old red tint and
taken on a blue coat It has been moved
from the middle of the square to the
rde, and is neatly enclosed with an iron
f ince. Oconee has not yet caught the
Call at the
JEWELR
OF A. S. .MANBFYMJLIE?
AND EXAMINE THE BEAUTIFUL
Jewelry, ’Wedding Presents
DECOEA.TED OHI1TA. and. (300133 .
A C'OCltTT FOR FIVE STOCK.
No county in the State has finer stock,
or in proportion to its size, more of it,
than Oconee. The very name has cornu
to suggest fast horses and good cows—
with the various breec's of neat cattle,
hogs and sheep. Oconee county has more
than once gotten up creditable fairs for
farm products and stork, and her exhi
bitions at tl)c Athens fairs generally
draw good crowds and command tho blue
ribbons.
Besides the planters already named in
these articles, there are the Prices and
Moons and Branches and Wilsons, who
own fine stock, and who are now famous
breeders ia Georgia. These gentlemen
have fine studs, some rare old Hamilto;
nian mares ana mules and cows.
Hr. James D. Price, who owns. “Red
Jacket”—a stallion well known iu Ath-
time. Gne had the courthouse and the
other the college. It was the design of
the University founders to keep the col
lege away from wbat was supposed would
he a very large town. They dreaded
the demoralization of the courthouse and
shuddered at the bare idea that the Uni
versity should be in a city. It is well
they did. Had the college gone to Wat
kinsville Athens had never heen
heard of. The bofd spring around
which this town began to cluster,would
have bubbled in silence over the rocks
and escaped unnoticed to the river. The
campus oaks would have twisted their
untutored limbs and cast their ungainly
shadows in the wUd woods still. The
own with the college soon outgrew the
talks about remodeling aod enlarging the
old building. It needs it. The Clerk of
Court and Ordinary kcOp their offices in
a low building—distinct from the court
house—which was put up in 1822. ' Ail
these things should go together, and
judging from appearances, I should Bay
Oconee needed a court house. Remod
eling and repairing are often more costly
than rebuilding. Treasurer Booth tells
me Oconee doesn’t owe a dollar, and has
money in the box. This is a pointer.
OCONEE rBO FEB.
Athens finally grew to such propor
tions that the court house had to come
to the town, and “the old capitol” was
deserted in 1873. After whipping sever
al such movements, Uncle John Calvin
had been
Johnson, who I
i clerk of the Su-
READ AND P0NJKE&.
ATHENS PAYS KOBE forCOTTON
AND SELLS
STOVES CHEAPER
Than any of tho markets in this section,
SaMrcy Jones
Arc headquarters in Northeast fis. lor
Stoves, Tinware and
HOUSEFURNiSHiKG GOODS.
Call and see oupimmense stock at No. 6 Bror.d ?t., Athens, Ga,
SOUTHERN MUTUAL
INSURANCE GOMPANY.
Organized. I84r7-
Assets May 1st, 1886, $881,554.45.
Profits Divided Among Policy Holders.
Losses Paid Since Organization....
Profits returned to Policy Holders.
,...,$:V252.()78
2,088.397
town with the court house. Families per or court for forty years, and autocrat
settled in Athens from the' lower coun- of the Whig party for thirty, gathered
try; beautiful housesdotted the avenues; ‘ up the archives in his hat and crossed
the community was cultured and vigo- the river in obedience to the wiU of the
rou.s and the Georgia Railroad horse cars j pe> p’e. Of all the public papers, but
t ns—thinks there is more money in geod
stock than in all the cotton that can lie
grown. The old fashion of keeping jacks 1 pulhd up to the to the town and opened I one remained.
I saw it la Watkinsville
PIANOS AND ORGAN
STRUCK BOTTOM AT L AST.
Ifeiees Si@w©iei and Quality ef Gaoli Impuevei*
I Deal Squarely! Sell oil Easy Terms! Sell for Small Profits! and Sell Every Time!
Some of my Leaders: ICnabe, Hallet & Davis, Mathnshek &
Son, Emerson Peace Pianos. Smith American, Shon-
ingei*, Chicago Collage, Willcox & White Organs.
. f*r. BTTXSIZX:, -A.tli.eKLS, O-eorgria.
; - jgM-iMarw, i i—a—a—
OFFICERS OF THE COMPANY.
YOUNG L. G. HARRIS *..■■■■ ..President anil Treasurer
STEVENS THOMAS .' Secretary ana General Agent
WILLIAM W. THOMAS .Assistant Secretttry amt Adjuster
ARTHUR E. GRIFFETH Book-Keeper
RESIDENT DIRECTORS.
YOUNG L. G. HARRIS, JOHN H. NEWTON,
STEVENS THOMAS.
JOHN A. HUNNICUTT,
JAMES 8. HAMILTON,
MARCELLUS STANLEY,
FERDINAND PIIINTZY.
LEON H. CHARBONNIER,
EDWARD 8. LYNDON,
RUFUS K. REAVES.
m
‘:M8
■rt-ys&Bi
0€®N11 COUNTY'!
HOW TO SAVE MONEY.
Have a New and Fine Stock of
AND SILTERWi R
COUIE AND «E
BEFORE YOU BUY IT pH|
■Watches and devrelry Eepairod.
A. SCUDDER, JEW
ATHENS,
, V .