Southern weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1881-1882, March 14, 1882, Image 2

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TALMADGE, HODGSON & Corner of College Avenue and Clayton-Street, MANUFACTURER'S AGENTS, ATHENS, HENDERSON WAREHOUSE CO., TALMADGE, HODGSON & CO., PR0P’§ COTTON FACTOSS. LIBERAL ADVANTCES 0351 COETONT. Wall Papers Are now becomingso fashion able and so universally usedfor house decorations that it has induced # manufacturers to use every exertion to]pmpioy all the art obtainable in producing the most beautiful and elegant de signs. They add so vastly to the refn*ment and beauty of a homethat hardly any genteel family will forego the pleasure of having at least some of their rooms decorated with these beau tiful papers. The next best ar ticle for beautifying walls, and perhaps better for parties living where no good paper hanger is obtainable, is ALABA8TINE. The most perfect article for kalsomining walls ever proauceo from the fact that it is the most beautiful, most durable and most easily applied of any article ever put upon the mar ket for a like purpose. It comes in all colors and shades and any person can apply it, and it is so cheap any one can afford to use it. It never rubs off but makes '•our walls as firm and smooth as marble. Directions for use on each package. For sample card and prices send to Duck & Company,sole agents,-,35 Broad St., Atlanta, Ga., Wholesale and Retail dealers in Oils, Paints, Window Glass, Etc. The larg est and oldest established house of the kind in this section of country. novlfi 81 PIERCED BT A RED-UOt BAS OP IRON. Quintal Sonerwino, aged sixteen, is employed at one of tbe.rolli of the Judan Rolling Mill*} in Allentown, Fa. A par of red hot iron was pas sing through the rolls, and Sonerwino stood ready with his tongs to catcli it. Jnstashe was . about to catch bold of ths bar, another boy acciden tally struck the iron. The blow gave the bar a sudden upward movement, and it p’erced his* vest and passing up his chest through his chin and the root of his tongue to the roof of his rroulh, where the hone stopped far ther progress. Though sufferin'! great j»ain, ibe hoy’s presence of iniud did not lorsake him, hut he pulled the iron out, hadly burned his hands. The other workmen stood amazed, t>ui the boy’s lather ran up to him, and walk ed Kim to physician,about six blocks distant. The hole in the chin is lame enough to admit the insertion of a huger. The boy’s course from the mill to the doctor’s office could lie traced by the blood he lost on the way. The doctor thinks the boy stands a fair chance of recovery. n«ip Voursrir. People who have been bolstered up and levered all their lives are sel dom good for anything in a crisis. When misfortune comes they look around tor something to cling to or lean upon. If the prop is not there, lown they go. Once down, they are as helpless as capsized turtles, or uuhorsed men in armor, and cannot find, their feet agar, without assistance. Such silken fellows no more resem ble self-made men, who have lousrhi their way to position, making diffi culties their stepping stones, avd de riving determination from defeat, than vines resemble oaks, or sputter ing rush lights the stars of heaven. Effort persisted into achievements train a man to selt-relinnce, and when he has proven to the world that he can trust himself, they will trnst him It is unwise to deprive young men of the advent >ges which result from their own energetic action by ‘hovit- ing’ them over obstacles which they ought to surmount aloue. J. T. -WATERMAN, PROPRIETOR. Athens. Ga., March, 14, 1882. U. O. CABAN1SS, - - Travbuso Agist, I* authorized tc- mike collection!, to mcelve ripUoRi. me to contract for id cm tiling, for "•fly and “ Weekly Banner. Sad Incidents of the Rood. Little Bock Octette. Alexander Jasper, an old man from Crittenden county, arrived in the eity last night, bringing his wife and two boya. He seemed to beio great distress, and when questioned by a Gazette man, he told the follow ing sad story: ‘You know,* he said, ‘that the whole country ta under wa ter. I am one of the sufferers of the flood. I lived lit tbs Mississippi bot tom not far from Malison. I settled there several years ago and opened a small farm. I had heard of high wa ter but the place where I settled seemed to be high, and I diu not feel any fear Well, high water came repeatedly, but it never rtach- ed me. Night before last while my. selt and family were at supper,‘ffc were stariitd by a terrible roar. I went to the door and looked out, but could see nothing.' My wi/e suggest ed lliai ths’ho'me might ba caused by water, btft.£iat<l not pay much atten tion to tbhwmark, for I did not see how water could break through with such toN$if While I stood listening there chTqe f a bighty rush, and betore I knew it the whole country was fl toned with water. I called to my wile to help me secure the children. The house was full oft water. I seiz ed one little uirl, and my wife seized the other. The house moved. The lamp tell ’and was extinguished. I called to ray little boy, and received a strangled reply. I rushed through tbe flood toward tbe place from which I thought the sound came, aud called again, but no reply. The hou-e wedt to pieces. I seized my wile and st rug. ;led with her to a slight elevation. [Tie roar was deafening. We remain ed there until morning. When light came, a rushing torrent swept over the rile of our home. My little boy was gone.’ Two Metropolitan Millionaires. New York World. Moses Taylor, the oldest hank pres ident in New York city, has been very ill, hut is now reported conva lescent. lie is the the richest ot our active financiers, being estimated at a halt dozen millions. Moses has been making money steadily tor more than a half ceDlury, but the public has never shared in his grand success On the other hand George I. Scncy, president of the Metropolitan Bank, has given away *1,500,000 in public benefactions, in addition to Ills ex tensive pri'P’e charities. Moses ttrgulrmi at the l*oM OOlee la Athens as Penned Class Matter. ANS0EN CEMENT. ~ To The Render! of the^Bnnnrr. I have sold the Weekly * Southern Banner and the Athens Daily Banne to Messrs. YanceyCranford A Gant: proprietors, ef the Southern Watch' man, who fake possession of them this morning. SThis issue of the paper, therefore,Move's my connection with the readers of the Banner. The relation of an editor to his readers is peculiar, and the feelings which he ha- at parting with them, have much of sadness, and it is ens- lomsry, as it is proper to indulge in sentiment on such occasions. But this is emphatically an age of business, and as a rule sentiment must take a back seat when business comes to the front- There is no need then that I shall do more than make snch an nouncement as busii it formality re quires. . My successors need no commenda tion from roe. The people of North east Georgia know them well. They have ability, capital and enterprise, and in their bands the two old pa pers of Northeast Georgia combined will renew their yonth and mount to still higher heights of usefulness and reiicwn. I bespeak for them the support, moral and financial, of all the friends o' .he Banner and of myself, and wish fur them the foil realisation of tbsir brightest expectations. My successors will carry out all existing contracts for advertising and subscription to the Banner. ^ J. T. Waterman. Burglar Alarm. Mr. Joseph Gilmer, of Albany,Ga has invented an ingenious burglar alarm. It consists of a small, simple and portable apparatus,not more than twelve inches square, b» means of which, when properly adjusted, the , Tuvlor has’been at the head of the partial opening ot any door, or the ■ City Bank for forty years, and bis raising ot any wiudowa in a house or . success " apartment, causes a small toy cannon to be fired off, and at the same instant a lamp is lighted and a clock alarm made to ring out its jarring dbcord. It can be connected also with any number of articles of funiture, each as chairs, tables, etc. Tbe beauty of it is that it is certain and infallible in its working, and is as easily ad justed to every door and window of a bouse or apartment as to one. Mr. Gilmer, the inventor, is a practical mechanic, and lias heretofore patent ed a number of useful inventions. , success in its management is shown the lectt that its shares fire quoted at 200. Ho has devoted himself closely to money making.and w ill leave a handsome property to bis daughters (wbo are all married), but be has sons. When contemplating such character one cannot avoid thinking how much good such a man might have done had be been like George I. Seney, of a philanthropic disposition. HERB MENTION. . , There was a big anti-Chinese de monstration in San Francisco Satur day afternoon. Thirty thousand peo ple attended. The Duluth Dispatch says there has not been ke enough in Lake 8u perior daring tbe winter to interfere with navigation. A soldier at fort Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, caught 4,626 trout with hook and line during tbe year 1881. Tbe largest one weighed ten pounds- A man in Lincoln county, Ky.» ftts just been fined $25 for beating *Kta wife and one cent for driving his mother-in-law out of his house ‘by force of gun-.’ The last was the warmest February Over tgporded at tbe Toronto obser vatory; the mean temperature being 30 33 degrees, which is 7.47 degrees above the average. , The Utah Legislature has adopted a resolution calling a convention for April 10 to frame a constitution and take steps lor the admis-ion of Utah as a state. Arrangements arc being made at Hong Kong to -hip from 5,000 to 10- 000 coolies to Portland, Oregon, be fore the anti-Chine-e bill, if passed by congress, cau take effect. London, March 2.—Mail advices from the west coast of .Africa report that a ferry-boat while cr< Being the Lagoon of Lagos capsized, and that 4^ont ol 60 persons on board were drowned. The claim is made for Sharon,Mass that i> the Wealthiest town in New England.' \ u --i.lv five persons died ont of its population of 1.500 last year. Seven of these were infants uu. der 7 months, an.l the average age of the remaining 18 was 70 years, 7 months, 9 days. Five differeut patentees of the cool ing apparatus are contending before the House committee on expenses at' tending President Garfield’s illnepa, tor remuneration for the use of the room in which he lay at the White House. The House committee on commerce •greed to report to the House a bill appropriating twenty-five thousand dollars to enable the Secretary of the Navy to furnish cities with over fifteen thousand inhabitants, tbe correct lime at noon each day, •Yes, dear, of course we are going to Washington this winter: the Pres ident’s a widower, you know.’ ‘How awfully too utterly sweet 1‘ ‘Yea, and the new British minister’s a bach elor.’ ‘How too preciously consum mately lovely *1'can’t merry them both, you know, dear.’ ‘No, dear, leave me just one.’ UNSURPASSED FOR Strength, —AND— SAFETY. ; IT HAS THE ONLY PERFECT SPARK dRBtSTER mch* OIR By reference to the above it will be seen that we have purchased ef Mr, J T Waterman the Southern Banner, which will to-morrow be consolidated with the Southern Watchman and both the Daily and Weekly editions continne under the asms of the ‘‘Banner and Watchman. ” Tbe newspaper busi ness in Athens has been too mnch crowded, and we think by combining two of the oldest and leading papers in Georgia it will be to the interest ot both subscribers and publishers. There is, however, one regret we deeply feel in the change—the loss to Athena of so estimable a citizen, and to the press of tbs' city such, a worthy brother as Mr. J T Waterman. Nev er have we been in competition with eueb a high-toned, courteous gentle man, and in taking leave of our friend we assure him that he carries with him the respect and admiration of the “Inland Queen." We esk thej continued support of Itbe patrons of tho Banner foV the ‘new movement,* and will pledge our earn est endeavors to give them • paper worthy of their patronage. Very Respectfully, Jasckt, Cuasvod A Gantt, Is til- sham Young Still IMaff ? ‘Is there any truth in the t umor, lately telegraphed from the west, that Brigham Ycnng, late head of the Mormon church, is still alive ?’ was asked by a Sun reporter yester day of John Sharp, tbe Mormon bish op, who is still at the St. Nicholas ho tel. 'I positively decline to answer that question, or to make any statement whatever on the subject,’ said Bish op Sharp. Bishop Sharp is president of tbe Utah Central railroad and a director of tbe Union Pacific, and said that his visit to tbe east waa iu connection with railroad matters. ' He intimated however, that be was watching the sentiment at Washington on tbe Mormon question, and be said he 'believed the storm had about blown over.’—Neus York Sun. A Shower or Spiders. Mr. Joe Jefferson, who lives two or three miles from Columbus, Ga. in Alabama, informed an Enquirer- Sun reporter, that a shower of spiders fell between tliat city and his home on Friday night last week. He says that the ground was literally covered the next morning by them. They were nearly an inch lorn;, bat no larger than a horse hair. U»ole Joe says that he has lived a long time, ha» read of a similar occureuoe once be tore in hit life, but never saw any, thing like it betere. Worrying a Michigander Detroit Poet. When the war broke ont. North Carolina was called tbe Union state of the south, because the people were very generally in favor ot the gov ernment.* It has been discovered by the rebel archives now under exami nation at Washington,that op to 1861 she never cast more then 121,000 votes, but that she gave, 124,000 reb els to fight the Union. . If e Union state ol the south shows such a rec ord as that, it is enoitjb to make o»e shudder to think what it might have done it it bad sympathized with the rebellion. ■ - «' A Curious History. John H. McGinnis, until this week employed in sweeping the floor of the New York post office at $2 a day, has a curious history. Nineteen years ago he returned from Colorado with $80,000, which he inurena d daring the war times to 8200,000. This sum he lost in Wall street. Now he has fallen heir to $50,000, the legacy ol an old chum.’ Ir five cents Worth of borax be dissolved in a quart bottle of salt wa ter, and kept on the washstand, and the face rinsed with it every time they are washed, it will keep them soft and smooth,, even if the hands _, T ,„ .. , do their'share of scrubning, etc., with we could have supplied eyery »aya/;e soft soap, which is apt to mak-r them in Africa with a fasbiotrabje apt, ' and rough. Converting Chinamen. Silt Like Tnbnne. During the paut year tbe Malho • diets have been very active making converts among the Chinese of Salt Lake, and many of the Celestials are renouncing the faith of Confucius to embrace the more modern tenets of Christianity. These who bare bed the most experience in converting the Mongolian |have discovered that the power of song is a more potent lever to pry under tbe edge of heathen unbe'iet than the in fluence of prayer. As soon as a ce lestial can be taught to sing Sabbath school hymns he is gone, so far as his old faith is concerned. The Chinese who have been converted have not only stuck by their change ot heart, but are studiously engaged in the work of erangeliziug their fellow brethren who grope in darkness. Vital Statistics. ' It has been calculated by a recent writer that of 10 children born in Norway a little over seven reach their twentieth ^ear ; that in England and in the Uniu-d States ot America some what less than seven reach that stage; that in France only five reach it, and in Ireland lets than five. He tells tu that in Nofway, oat of 10,000 born, rather more than one out of three reaches the see of 70; in England one out of four ; in the United Slates, if both sexes be computed, leas than one ont of four, in France leas then one ont of eight, and in Ireland less than one ont of eleren.—London San itary Record A Historic Skeleton Unearthed. Erie, Ft, Special. The gale of Wednesday uprooted a tree on Preaqne Isle, ana the roots dragged np two skeletons. The own er of one, Jamee Bird, has been .the •nbjeot of cheap sentimental poetry all through Pennsylvania for tbe last •evenly years. During the war ot 1812 James Bird sod Ed Rankin were shot aboard the Niagara for dev eertioD, aud weye buried at the spot over which the tree grew and flour ished. Bird’s death was poetized, aud he Was eonsidered a hero and martyr, falling beneath a dozen bal let* a moment before his pardon ar rived. Enaify Wasters. Bocbastar Express. We are a nation of energy wasters. The American people are altogether too fond of use I emi endeavor, too much given to spending money to no purpose. Onr lightning calculator baa figured that if all tho money ex pended Id const surveys and Arctic exploration bad been used in the pur- chase of plug bate tnfi winter ulsters, Hunt's Rheumatic [Cure The only reliable and safe letaedy for £* 3^ S TT SflE A T £ 0 SC I! taken according to direction* it never fails. Cures cases of t wenty or more years standing, and remoeeaal impurities of the blood sod muscles. Thousands rejoice over iu marvelous cures. HUTCH 18029 A BBO. General Agents. Sold by all Druggist. Atlanta, Ga. novis i HuRlSES -AND— MfSilifll W. S HOLMAN Will keep constantly on hind a fine lot of BROKE MlILES and HORSES, which he will ee!l u low ae can be idTorded in this market. Examine my stock before buying elsewh-re. Special rate* given to dealers. THOMAS ST., ATHENS, GA. nov!5 CMS. F. STUBBS & CO* (Successors to Groover, Stubbs A Cot) COTTON FACTORS The_ Widow's Bewitched Button Bax. St. Louie Republican. Mrs. DeWolf is a widow, residing with her fifteen year old daughter in East St. Louis on Collinsville avenue, next to Kleinhenn’a barber whop. Oa a recent night she find her daughter, about. 7 o’clock, sat down by a table to do Borne mending and sewing. On the table was placed a box containing a large number of buttons of almost every conceivable description. AH at on<« buttons began to fly about the room, striking on the bed, stove and other ai tides ot furniture. Mrs. De Wolf and her daughter, of course, were alarmed, and thought that some one was throwing the buttons into the room from tbe outside. But they noticed that their* button-box was bee- ing emptied of buttons. Thoroughly alarmed, Mrs. DeWolf called Mr. Kleinulienn, the barlier next door. He with his mother, an old lady, and his assistant, Pete, horned to the wo- mao’s apartments. Buttons, sure enough, were lying on the floor, on the bed, on the stove sod elsewhere, and were continuing to be hurled from the box. All ot them comments ed picking up buttons and depositing them back in the box. But the but ton throwing continued all the time, and the patties were hit upou their faces aud beads by them. Again and again was the box emp tied. This phenomenon continued tor about two hours, when it sudden ly cessed, and the buttons being* tbe last time placed in the box remained unmolested. There was a bright light burning on the table the whole time, and uo agency could be detect ed io the manipulation ot the but tons. All this is inexplicable by the parties mentioned, all of whom related it to the republican reporter. None of them are spiritualists. Extravagant Use of Flowers. ~ It may be thought that the use ot flowers in fashionable bouses borders on extravagance when we read of $5,0 Y*) fjy*nt for flowers for a single evening. . Jiu. -uis must be reckon ed modest indulgence when we read that a gentleman ot the Claudian family, celebrated io anoieni Rome as a connoisseur and for his elegant tastes, spent $100,000 on roses tor a single lea-L—Bouton Transcript. A Fish Story. 1 onhv.Uc Courier-Journal. One of tbe most interesting inhabi tants of the Gulf of Mexico is the fish known as tbe rarer.. He is four to six teet long and as thick Man Whenever he seta a' vessel be gets alongside end keope up with it, but never juries to pass it- Observers say that he appears perfectly happy in this kind of raring, which is moral, because it rfiords tbe passengers ho opportunity tor betting. The Republicans ot Iiimjia are al- ready boasting nf their purpose to aerrjmanoer the Bute onder the new apportionment in a manner to secure a solid Republican representation in Congress. This thing has been done before, but Illinois furnishes tbe first example ot a shameless avowal of a gerrymander in advance of the out* nige. CHAPMAN & BR0., GAS, STEAM & HYDRAULIC ENGINEERS, PLUMBERS And Fips Fitters. No. 318 Jackson Street, Naar Bell Tower, Anemia, Ga. Manufacture aud aell CHAPMAiT’S EURFKA GAS MACBINE Eatinates fumiahed and contracts made for Lighltug and Heating Residences, Stores. Factories and Small * Towna or Village*.; Commission Merchants* No. 04 Bay Htreet, SAVAXT2TAEC. CA. CHAS. r. STUBBS, JOHN K. GARNETT, Au<u»t 23,'lSSl. T. G. HADAWAY, (Successor to B. H. Allen.) Harness, Saddles WHIPS, Ac. M Y stock Is hand-made, and I defy competition from say quarter In quality, finish said price. Machine made Harness at low prices, if you want them. Repair work promptly 1 IN MONIGOMERY’S DEPOT You Will Find LOUIS COOK BUGGIES, CARRIAGES AND HARNESS, I guarantee equal to any sold in market at oame pricis. TAE OLD HICKORY W AGON, took premium at Exposition. THE ATLAS, ECLIPSE. F A UQUHAR and BOOKW ALTER ENGINES THE FARQUHAR SEPARATOR. THE HOOSIER GRAIN DRILL. THE BROWN, THE CELEBRATED HALL and CARVER COTTON GINS. THE CHICAGO SCREW PULVERIZER. HERRING’S CHAMPION FIRE-PROOF SAFES. EMERSON & TALCOTT’S WALKING and RIDING CULTIVATOR, combined with cotton seed planter and grain seeder attachments. THE AVERY WALKING and RIDING CULTIVATOR. THE MEIKLE WALKING CULTIVATOR. THE GREGG PLOW SULKEY tor breaking land. THE GREGG REAPER AND MEADOW KING MOWER. THE GREGG LAWN MOWERS and SELF DUMPING HORSE HAY RAKES. EMERSON «& TALCOTT’S combined standard reaper and mower. EMER.SOM & TALCOTT’S .Standard Mower. THE THOMAjS'Miioothing and revolving harrows. THE ACME HARROW, harrows, plows, pulverizes and covers grain a proper depth, not hing better iu market. THE OLIVER CHILLED TURN PLOW, tbe lightest draft and best turn er, tried with a Dynonieter at our state tairs.- THE BOY DIXIE and S YAUUSE PLOWS’. THE FARQUHAR COTTON A'EELi PLANTER, THE SPRING TOOTH NULKEY HARROW and CULTIVATOR, re move the two center teeth aud cultivate your crops. SAW MILLS, GRINT MILLS, SHINGLE MACHINES, ‘Evaporators, Cotton Presses, Stump Pullers, «fcc, J. N. MONTGOMERY, Broad Street, next door to S C Dobbs, ATHENS, GA. vorkmeo. Call and M. CHAPMAN BEOS., No. S18 Jackson Street, Near Bell Tower, Au gust*, Ga., (tarnish sod pat ap All Kinds of IfCIftlE 1M The leading Scientists of do-d»T agree that moot diseases ue caused by disorderedKidneys or Diver. If, therefore, the Kidney* sud Liv er are kept in perfect order, perfect health will be the result. This troth bar, only been known s short time *nd for yean peopla suffered great agony without being able to and relief The discovery of Werner’s Sale Kidney and Liver Core manes a new eta in the treatment ot these troubles. Made from a simple trop’cal leaf of raro value, li contains just the elements neoes- eary tu nourish and invigor.de both of these great orjrans, and lately restore and keep them Vu order. It is * POSITIVE Kenedy for sit tne diseases that esnse puns In the lowe* part of the body—for Torpid Liver, Headaches, Jaundice, Dizziness, Gravel, Fever, Arne. Ma larial Fever, aud all difficulties of the Kidneys, Liver and Urinary Organs. It is an excellent and safe remedy for females during Pragnmncy. It will control Menstrua tion and iolnvalnable for LenooRhtaa or Fail ing of the womb. As a Blood Purifier it Is unequaled, for it cures the organs that make the bl-od. This Remedy, which has done each wooden, is put np in the Largest Sited Bottle ot any medicine upon the market, and laaoldbydrog- iriata and all dealers at $1.Z3 tor bottle. For Diabetes, enquire for WARNERVS SAFE DI ABETES CURE. _ H. WARh'KU * fthfidannwlvt It la a positive remedy. CO.i Boeheater, X. I. BENSON! The Great'Temperance Reformer, la doing a great and noble work, but there is ANOTHER BENSON in’Athins, whose work for exceods all, other work of the kind, now done in Athena.J F, Bensc —THE— AMO W&GQwMa. ’XGQJV is the man to tee, if you want genuine southern work, that will bej’r the teat. Don't boy wag ons until yon see l a turnons Benson Wagon X which is cresting snch a revolution In -the one and two-horse wagon business in Athens and oil the oonntiee in Northeast Georgia. For aals at my shop, or at Chilili, N'okerson, W^nnAOoy, tP.BENHOK, CHAPMAN BROS., No, >18 Jackson Streat. Near Bell Tower, An gnsta, Ga., sel' Delameter Steam CHAPMAN BROS., No. $18 Jackson Street. Near Bell Tower, An- gosta, Ga., famish and put np C All Kinds of MACHINERY CHAPMAN BROS., No. 818 Jaekson Street Near Bell Tower, Ao- gnsta, Ga^ Manufacture andaeli GAS MACHINES. PENDLETON & BRO., ■FOTJXTDRY- ■•ANTK— MACHINE WORKS Nos. *18,617 and tt» Kollock Street, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. O UR Foundry and Machine Works, which were destroyed by fir* In July, have been rebuilt, enlarged, and mmiahed with new tool*. We can furnish IKON A.\U BIUSK CAUTKWt AXD H CHIKKBT of all description* at reasonable prii and of Um beatqnnllty. Wn would cull at tent! * ur specialties, “ A, P. TRIPOD, SXGXT, FRESCO and HOUSE PAX27TEE’ 13 SOUTH BROAD ST, A-TXiA-XsTT^., GA. ' ’ — DEALER IN Mill ■ ' 'Window ©lass, Iron, Fairbarks’ Descriptive List and 1 OTIS ELEVATORS Steam & Hydraulic, mm OFJALL KINDS. . . ’ CHAPMAN BROTHERS. 318 JACK80NJST", AUGUST^, 3A. Having accepted ths Agency ot tho shove are now prepared to (tarnish and arrest them.; aw JO- AGRICULTURAL IMPLIMENTS, HOLLOW WAHE, FEED GUTTERS. Circular, Hand and Cross Cut Saws, Com SheUers. the celebrated _ ' WEBSTER WAGSON, W att Plows, Hor c and Mule Shoes, Rubber and — Leather Beltings. Harness and Leather Cotton, SISAL ROPES AND CORDAGE, SHOE FINDINGS, HARNESS Ol? ALL DESCRIPTIONS. ETC. n.| «-wr( THE LADIES’ FAVOKITR. Notice to Builders. Aram, Ga^ Feb. IT, K8S, bo received until March tl, ‘ 1883, lor the building of the chapel lor the Lucy Cobb Institute, in ~ r"35: Because it ^ie the Lightest Banning, The moat quiet; nukoqt’ie pretiirst atitoh; (and hts mors conveniences thansuy^other il.ichine. It ia warranted fiyayeara,and liaMi* taaleatlto sa’t, and give* the beet satisfaction oi any machine in tiinjmurket. •> -•• • .r - --v .. Intending purchaser* hr» eolioited to eiinvne ft bo- .lore bnyiiig. Responsible dealers wanted/ . in «1) unooenpied territory. Proposals will be .888, lor the build__ _ . . juoy Cobb Institute, in Athens, Ga. Plans and sped flections may be seen Ion ap- pl’eationto the untlenigu-d. The right reserved to rejec^anj^end all bids 4IId;twCt |S wretary Boird of Trances. J. D. & T. F. SMITH, 'S55S W bole -ale ami Retail Dealers, •. ’ -j 59JBROADJSTREET, ATLANTA, JGA, w C, D. MoPfoZS, Ag©»t, Athens, GaJ