Newspaper Page Text
GOJfcONG, JUDCE CRISP- COI
Despite th low and onbecoming
stoning that some Democratic news
papers of the North are giving
Judge Crisp, he is running the race
for the Speakership most admirably,
leaving all the other candidates and
losing them behind in the clouds of
dust thot retreat from his footsteps
around the track. Judge Crisp is
in the race with a record. He has a
record m the minds of all loyal
Democrats of this country, which
counts for much. He is a ‘‘four
times winner.”
It is surprising to observe that
one or two Democratic newspapers
re against Judge Crisp in the race
he is making It is not strange ei
ther that he should have enemies
among the Democratic press of New
England when it is taken into con*
siderationtthat many of those same
papers are as fickle to the party as a
school girl to her sometime lover.
But, we are surprised to find that
the Boston Herald, a paper that has
always been sound in its Democra
cy, should so suddenly change from
supporting Judge Crisp to opposing
him, with no better excuse than the
mere rumor that Tammany is behind
Judge Crisp. The Herald says
Indications are to the effect that
Tammany Hall is taking an active
part in the contest for the election
ot a speaker of the coming national
House of Representatives. It was
well understood many weeks ago
that Mr. Crisp of Georgia was the
candidate of Gov. Hill of New York
for this office. Mr. Croker, who
rules Tammany Hall, has, in addi
tion, if our information is correct,
within a short time enlisted in an
earnest effort to see that Mr. Crisp
receives the nomination. When the
boss of Tammany moves in this way,
it is understood that more than the
office immediately involved is con
cerned. It is part of a general en-»
terprise to obtain possession of pat
ronage at Washington. Tammany
has not generally put out its schemes
to the extent of controlling national
as well as State politics, but there is
reason to believe that this is part'of
its present programme. We do not
intend by this to say anything in
impeachment of Mr. Crisp, who has
the t reputation of an honorable and
upright gentleman, and who is well
qualified for the Speakership ; but it
is a matter for serious consideration
on the part of New England Demo*
crats, and. indeed, of Democrats
generally, it they can afford to en»
courage Tammany Hall m this effort
to increase its already dangerous
power.
Judge Crisp has already stated to
the press of the .country that he was
not the candidate of Tammany. He
says Tammany, so far as he knows,
will support no candidate as a po
litical machine or organization. The
truth is, Mr. Mills is more than apt
to have sworn allegiance to the Gold
bugs of New England that causes
this attack on Judge Crisp in bis
behalf.
The Charleston News and Courier,
too, with some well concealed insin
cerity claims that Crisp ought not to
be elected, because he is supported
by the Ben Butler and New York
Sun wing of the Democracy. Good
gracious 1 The News and Courier
confesses that it does not think
Judge Crisp is proud of his support
and is not in political touch with
each an element, but still harps on
the fact that he has such support
and gives that as a sufficient reason
for defeating him. What inconsis
tency 1 The News and Courier is
very fastidious in its Democratic
fancies all of a sudden. If that pa
per would think twice before it
speaks and then speak frankly it
would see and say that Judge Crisp
has the support of the pure and un
dented Democracy of the Solid South
and much of the purest type of Eas
tern and Western Democracy in his
grasp. If his record for clean De
mocracy has even shamed the Ben
Butler wing and brought that into
line so much the better and none the
worse for Judge Crisp.
Indeed, “it is better to be safe
than sorry,” and thoee newspapers
opposing Judge Crisp should get on
the safe side before it is too late.
In the meantime, go ’long Judge
Crisp. Yon are Georgia raised and
you haven’t gone back on your rais»
in*. Go .’long; you’re a sure win-
ner J
THE THIRD PARTY.
Oar dispatches yesterday from At.
lanta state that in an interview with
Senator Ellington he says there!
unmistakably a Third party in Geor
gia, fally organized and ready to
sweep the State. He gives the names
ofth ose who, he claims, have organ
iaed the People’s party in Georgia
and be thinks ths.t he is safe in the
prediction that Georgia is going out
i ranks of the Democrac
'
Pshaw ! Mr. Ellington is mista
ken. He no doubt believes what he
says. But he was never more mis
taken in his life.
There is no probability of Georgia
ever becoming tainted with Repub
licanism in the mildest type. There
can never be bat two parties in the
South—the white man’s party and
the negro party. The solid Democ
racy of the South has been the salva
tion of the South since the sorrowful
days ot reconstruction. To divide
the strength of the white man’s par
ty—the Democracy—is to bring back
in full force the sway of negro power
in Southern politics. This will never
be.
We cannot think seriously of Mr
Ellington’s statement. There may
be a feebly organized movement in
Georgia for the People’s parly, but
it will not be countenanced by the
intelligent farmers of the State. It
will never amount to a row of pins.
The Alliance of Georgia is an alli
ance of patriots and true Southeroers
who will not barter the principles
for which their fathers fought and
died on the bloody fields of Virginia
to a few sorehead Yankee politi
clans of the West for a few faithless
promises. The Alliance of Georgia
is an alliance for right against wrong;
for political freedom rather than po
litical bondage ; for Democracy and
National economy, and never for Re
publicanism, though it may be dis
guised in the sugar-coated name of
People’s party.
The Alliance of Georgia is faithful
to Alliance principles, and the Alii-
ance of Georgia will fight for them
under the Democratic banner.
Senator Ellington is very much
mistaken in his belief that the Geor
gia Alliance will forsake the first
principles of a white man’s govern
ment. They are not that kind of
men.
in the last legislatme a committee
was appointed to inquire into the
lease of the Central railroad to the
Georgia Pacific. That committee
found that the Constitution of Geor
gia expressly provided that no snch
ease should be made io this State,
and therefore, declared the lease il
legal. In the face of this com
mittee’s report, the Senate refnsed
utterly to discuss the Berner bill,
and laid it on the table forever.
Now for the consequences. The
prediction is easy that retribution
will come some of these windy win
ter days.
depravity, gratifying the animal na- j Mr. Joel Chandler Harris has un
tnre rather than appealing to the in- . sheathed-his pen again to sketch Geor-
tellectual man, then it becomes an £* a plantation life.
enemy to civilization.
The Banner is no sensational pa.
per. If we give the news clearly and
with clean methods, we do not fail
utterly in our purpose.
THE ELECTION-
The municipal eleotion is over and
the Mayor and Aldermen have been i
lected for the ensuing term
The contest was conducted on a high
plane and the candidates who did not
succeed have nothing to regret. Athens
will call for them in the future.
Mayor Brown who retires from office
next January, has made the city a most
efficient officer. He has guarded her
every interest well, and has worked
steadily and effectively for her good.
That her citizens appreciate his labors
no one can deny, and that his record as
Mayor, will be pointed to as a model is
very evident.
Hon. H. C. Tuck, the mayor-elect, is
a young man of sterling ability, and
has served bis county ably and well in
the halls of the General Assembly.
He is active and progressive, and will
keep the old town moving onward.
Tbe different aldermen are all good
citizens, devoted to the interests of the
city.
Now let every one pull for the good of
of Athens and her fullest develop
ments.
We believe that in the hands of the
next mayor and alderman, the future of
the city is absolutely safe.
Dtjriko tbe past ten years there has
been a decided increase in tbe fishing
interests of Washington, notably in the
oyster fishery, tbe yield of which has
advanced from 15,000 to 60,993 bushels;
in the salmon fishery, in which the
catch in 1880 was reports d to be 350,-
000 pounds, and in 1888 was 16.319,736
pounds; in the vessel fishery for food
species (including halibut and salt sal
mon) which has been established in re
cent years, and the product of which in
1888 amounted to 676,000 pounds. The
four-seal fishery has declined consid*
erably in value, though to a less extent
in number of skins.
SMALL POX IN GEORGIA.
With reference to the small pox
scare in Georgia the Columbns En
quirer-Sun has this to say:
It has been pretty well demonstre
ted that it is not Bafe to leave with
the newspaper correspondents that
habitate the .Georgia coast tbe duty
of sending abroad tbe news about
either yellow fever or small pox. For
a week they have been basy alarm
ing tbe State and staffing the coun
try abont an epidemic of small pox
at Harris Neck, in Liberty county.
These reports moved the Mayor of
Savannah to call on Governor Nor
then to take immediate steps to
check the contagion. Of coarse, the
legislature never took snch impor
tant action as to establish a State
board of health, and make an appro
priation for it, so the Governor had
to appeal to the Federal Government
for help. Following the visit of the
health officer of the Government^ the
reports were sent abroad that “Small
pox is spreading rapidly among the
negroes !” “Condition of the people
deplorable F’ “No medical atten
tion f* “No Jood P’ “Entire coast
in danger 1”
Onr dispatches this morning show
that the alleged epidemic is under
control,and that it has been confined
within a radios of five miles. So the
matter has been very greatly exag
gerated, as the State of Georgia has
not been seriously threatened.
THE RICHMOND & DANVILLE.
Marion J. Verdery, formerly of
Augusta, writes a letter from New
York to the Augusta Chronicle in
which he says in substance H’b
“good-bye John” to the Richmond
Terminal. He gives a most exciting
account of how the stocks and secu
rities of this giant combination of
railroad monopolists have tumbled
within the past week. The condi
tion of the company’s affaire, despite
their ability to rally now and then,
s doubtful at best. Some serious
trouble in the ranks of this colossal
consolidation of Southern railroads
may safely be predicted. There is
too mnch fluctuation. Too much
uncertainty.
It is pitiful to see the commercial
and financial interests of tbe South
thus bottled up to be shaken up and
mined at the will of these Northern
capitalists. It is more a matter of
pity sines the Georgia legislature
has allowed the Richmond Terminal
to gobble np such prosperous -roads
as the Central of Georgia. It is an
outrage that the people’s interests
have been so disregarded by their
legislative representatives.
Now is a good time to recall that
His sketch in Sun-
day’s Constitution entitled “On Tur
ner’s Plantation” was in keeping with
his high standard of literary work.
There is at Baltimore, Ireland, a
fishing school where boys receive in-
struction in all branches of a sea fisher
man’s work, and in suoh allied indus
tries as net-making, boat-bnildlng,
cooperage and sail-m&kidg.
The rare phenomenon of red scow
occurred in the past spring at Balt Lake
city. This is caused by the develop
ment of a minute fungus which likes to
germinate in snow under favorable con
ditions called protococcus nivalis.
Here’s a word to the students of the
Georgia University. In Heidelberg, all
university students have been excluded
from the theatres. This action was
taken in concert by the city and unis
varsity authorities because the students
have been bowling down every perfor
mance they did not like. Tbe general
public concluded that they bad some
rights which the nniver-.ity students
were bound to respect. Hence the pro
hibition. Perhaps this, may serve as a
useful warning on this side of the wa
ter.
Mbs Dr. Felton is engaged in form
ing clabs all over Georgia called **’1 he
Before Breakfast Club.” The object is
this: That each farmer shall pledge
himself to set apart for his wife a cer
tain portion of his ground. To this he
shall devote some time each morning
before breakfast. For she says too ma
ny farmers’ wives have nothing at all
except what he oan spare after paying
np, and if this ground is well worked it
should supply enough to clothe her at
any rate.
THE JEFF DAVIS MONUMENT-
What has become of the movement
in the South to erect a monument to
the memory of Jifferson Davis, the
dead chieftain of the Confederacy ?
The question is not altogether out
of place it appears to us, and there
are hundreds of people here in Ath
ens and all over the South who have
contributed to the fund, and who
would like to know what progress
has been made and what progress is
likely to be made in this matter.
There has oeen very much said
about the Jeff Davis mono menu It
has been “ talked np” and “ written
np,” until it is a familiar theme in
every household throughout the
Southern States.
But it now seemB that the interest
is beginning to wane. It is shameful
to tell it of true and loyal Southern
ers, but it is the truth, they do not
manifest the same interest in the
matter now as they once did ; pero
haps it is because there is no leader
to take op the movement where it
has been left off and carry it on to
that success which it so richly de
serves.
It we are correctly informed there
has been bat $30,000 raised as the
fund for erecting a monument to the
memory of tbe Confederacy. The
South ought to give at least four or
five million dollars to this purpose.
This could be done very easily. Why
cannot every citizen pay as much as
the subscription price of his news
paper and thns make it an easy as
sessment, bat a certain one?
The Banneb believes that right
here in Athens there are hundreds of
dollars that are ready to go to this
uud if there were only a leader to
start the work. Would it not be
well to have a meeting and start
this ball rolling at once ?
Why not ?
If the Democrats do not elect their
candidate for president next year they
will have no one to blame except them
selves. The country wants honest
money and tariff reform. That
sound democracy. Go to the people on
that issue and success is certain.—
Charleston News and Courier.
Correct; but the people want a little
more of that “honest money” than they
have been getting.—Athens Banner.
Very well, then. Boll up jrour
sleeves and go to werk.—rAmerican
Union.
And so we will. The first thing the
Democrats will do is to elect Crisp
Speaker.
Five century plants, all iu bloom, is
the interesting and very rare eight now
to be Been in Los Angeles, in the gar
den of the church of Our Lady of ATI
Angels. They are said to be growing
about a foot a day.
CLEARING LAND.
A Vermont farmer picks the apple
seed from bis cider presses and sells
them for use in the manufacture of
prussic acid, He gets about one busbel
of seed from 140 bushels of apples,
Eli Terry founded the manufacture
of clocks in America in 1794, and the
centennial is to be celebrated in less
than eighteen months in Terryville,
Conn.
Editor Hal Moore is authority in
poetical matters. Bat that was a great
joke on him saying John Howard
Payne was the author of the “Last
Rose of Summer.”
Labor Saving Device* for Removing Stone*
and Grabbing Oat Small Timber.
The clearing of land is heavy work
which is frequently left from year to
year because of its hard character. To
obviate the difficulty such work occa
sions, a New York farmer, writing to the
New England Homestead, says:
“I have invented an attachment to my
stone boat by which the team is com
pelled to do the loading of heavy stumps,
rocks, etc., and which facilitates the
moving of large quantities of rnbbish,
the leveling of knolls and filling of cradle
holes. As will be seen in the cat, the
right hand rail is removed from the com
mon stone boat and the boat plank is
attached to the boat by a heavy hinge.
This extra plank is drawn by a chain at
tached to the team the same as the main
boat We will suppose a heavy rock
has been pried oat of the earth. The
chain of the wing is loosened and at
tached farther back on the main chain,
while the block at A is inserted to sep
arate the wing from the boat Tbe boat
is then driven beside the rock, and as the
team proceeds it will frequently take its
place on the boat without effort on the
part of the driver, the wing tending to
force it in place. If because of its shape
this Is not readily done, a very little pry
ing while the team is in motion will set
it where it is desired. Meadow land
which ta to be leveled most first be
Mb. Jerry Young, of tbe Southern
Alliance Farmer, is in the city Mb.
Young says the Alliance is growing
stronger in Georgia every day.
The Demostbenian society will have
a handsome hall. The old society will
be kept alive for generations yet un
born.
A Cold wind was whizzing around
the corners yesterday but theu the can
didate was there and kept the people’s
hands warm all day.
The candidates are coming in on tbe
home' stretch now. Bee bow they
run!
Give the Glee Club a big push here.
It will encourage them and help them
and thereby help the University.
Make your engagements for the Glee
Club soocert on December the fourth.
SENSATIONAL JOURNALISM.
Tbe day of sensational journalism
has passed ; thanks to the advance
ment of bnman civilization and so*
cial refinement.
The Banneb does not take any
stock in each journalism and is more
than pleased to note that it is not
countenanced by the American peo»
pie as a whole as it was but a few
years ago.
To air vicious crimes and wicked
cn8toms before the public, and espe
cially to do it in vulgar and-unclean
language can but deprave rather
than elevate tbe people among whom
Lese crimes were committed. The
first duty of the press is to work for
the elevation, the culture, the refine
ment of mankind.
When it o’erleaps this sphere of
usefulness and becomes a mere mir
ror of human passion and human
Many persons look upon Brazil as
small affair and think a revolution
there cannot be easily encompassed. It
is true that the population is compara
tively small, being only Jabout’ 12,000,-
000 all told, but in territory it is atx ut
equal to the whole of Europe, or abcut
200,000 square miles larger than the
United States. Brazil has few railroads
and poor telegraph eervico, so that it
sometimes take months to communicate
with remote states or provinces.
A big red-whUkered Irishman pre
empted an island near Minneapolis,
built a shanty, and defied anybody to
remove him. He was known as tbe
King of Boom Island, and he gained
considerable notanety by his venture.
He slept in the sbanty at night and
hired a small boy to watch the claim
daring tbe day, but in the course of
time the loneliness became oppressive,
and he has resigned tbe claim and de
serted tbe shanty.
The Russian newspapers are report
ing a singular discovery in Central
Asia. They say that In Russian Tur
kestan, on tbe right bank of the Amon
Daria, in some hills near tbe Bokharan
town of Karki, a number of large caves
have been explored, which were found
to lead to an underground town built
apparently before tbe obristian era.
The water in the lakes and streams
of western Connecticut is so low that
many mills have stopped running and
others have had to return to steam pow
er. Cider mills, however, are in active
operation, and if tbe threatened water
famine comes tne farmers will be the
gainers.
Pay for your paper is a good way
make Thanksgiving day enjoyable.
to
Thebe are4,000,000 of people in the
United States who have red hair.
The annual proauction of sawed lorn
her in the United States would load a
train of cars 25,000 miles long. Add
ing the timber for railways, fencing,
mining and export, the train would be
72,000 miles long. Adding to this fire
wood, etc., it would be 288,000 miles
long.
William Obb, who died at his home
in Troy, N. Y-, recently, claimed to
have invented and used the first cylii -
drical wall paper printing press, and to
have been the first to. combine wood
fiber with rags in the manufacture of
printing paper.
The Point Creek, Kan., poet, singing
ot the- “tumble” that the calamity pol
itician took in that state at the Inst elec
tion, sings:
Up was the stuck,
And in the very upness
Of hi* stuckitude
He fell.
Cold weather and oysters are with us
again in profusion.
The number of presidential electors
on tbe new basis will be 444.
Cent coins are a legal tender only in
sums of 25 cents.
Govebnob Hill knows by now that
he “ain’tin it,” we reckon.
Thebe will be more cotton this year
than was supposed it seems.
It was a remarkable election—Re
markable.
is here; now foi
Thanksgiving
Christmas!
Thebe will be services at all the
churches today. Go out!
It is time to build that monument to
Jsffbbsoh Danis.
Sunshine and wind—no bad combi
nation since the rains.
Cleveland maybe nominated after
alL And then again, he mout’nt.
Hill has gone to Washington,
him stay there.
Let
It never rains but it
enough, Sunday night.
poured, sure
Politics are quiet all over the coun
try.
Go it, gentlemen of the woods.
Be sure to go to church today.
Taanes for a good Mayor!
Thanks awfnliy!
Now For Athena!
Shake, Mr. Mayor.
The government of Japan gets a
large proportion of its revenue from the
railroad and telegraph companies that it
owns and operates. The question of
public taxation is always under serious
consideration by tbe statesmen and
economists of Japan.
Malor I. B. Donaldson, who was
United States Marshall in Kansas dur
ing the wild days of the pro-slavery
•onflict, is still living in Sun Marcos,
Texas, at tbe age of ninety-fire.
It Will do Better.
Covington Star.
The Athens dispensary is saidito have
cleared $1,500 the first month of its ex
istence.
A Crisp Breeze Is Blowing.
Atlanta Constitution.
And speaking of this contest the
best reports from Washington and
New York are to the effect that Judge
Crisp will certainly be elected
Oh, Let David B!
Macon News.
It will be up-Hill work to deliver
Georgia’s electoral vote to David B.
Sometimes it’s Easy to Map.
Atlanta Constitution-
The Athens Banner confidently says
that Hon. William H. Fleming, of Au
gusta, will be speaker of the next
house. The Hanker is mapping out
politics in a lively manner.
A Ball For a Bawl.
Savannah News.
The Glee Club of the State University
at Athene w ill give a concert at Atlanta
Dec. 10. Subsequently they will attend
AN ATTACHMENT TO A STONE BOAT,
plowed, when the attachment will quick
ly take np a load if the boat be weighted
If there is very mnch of this scraper
work to do, the edge of the wing should
be shod with a atrip of steel, like an old
cart tire or piece of saw blade. The out
side rail of the wing also should be high
ar than for atone. The hinge should not
be too loose. It shonld keep the wing
on the ground by the weight of the boat.’
In the second cut is shown a plan foi
grabbing small timber, originally ex
plained by a Pennsylvania farmer in
The Country Gentleman. He says: “I
use two pulley blocks in extricating
stomps. I frequently nse three. The
accompanying sketch "Sftt show the man
ner of nsing pulleys., A third block
could be used to pass the terminal lint
tinder to get lower draft, for the team
In the illustration onr object is to take
the tree out ‘root and branch.’ By meant
of a chain we attach the block B, con
taining two pulleys, to the tree aa high
aa practicable. The block A, containing
one pffiley, is anchored to a stamp oi
tree close to the ground. Anchorage
should be rather farther from tbe tree
than is shown in the sketch. One end
of tberope is made fast to the iron loop
of the single pulley block. The other
end of the rope is first passed over one
of the doable pulleys, then over the sin
gle pulley, then over the other double
pulley and lastly the end of the rope C
is made fast to the doubletree to which
the team is attached. The team
started while a man back of the tree
stands with an ax and strikes across Ut
ile ridgea of earth which are thrown np
by roots, each time severing a root, till
over goes the tree.
two fulley
EXTRACTING
BLOCKS IN
STUMPS. •
“A third block with single pnUey
fMwetimee sailed a ‘snatch block”) may
he attached independently to the anchor
stomp er to seme other low down an
eherage, and the rope C passed under Hie
pulley before attaching the team. That
will bring the draft low down and give
the team mnch better chance to plant
their fast firmly on the ground. By
using a leng cable in place of a chain to
connect the tree and block B, an anchor
age may he made at a greater distance
from the tree, as circumstances may in
dieate. One and a half inch rope
what I ase that I call a cable. The
rapidity with which a man can take
hitches and tie knots in the rope will
largely determine the number of trees
which may be uprooted in an hoar. We
have averaged as many as ten trees an
heur."
Th« IcehoaM.
Hoard’s Dairyman says: “In an ice
house it makee a mighty sight of differ
ence whether the heat that penetrates
the side soon strikes an air chamber and
has a chance to go into the air, expand
it and be carried np and ont, or whether
it goee on through a thin wall and strikes
tbe sawdust and ice. Several such
chances to .get rid of the penetrating
warm air leaves the ice comparatively
free from the influence of the sun's rays.
One who has tried it advises keeping
tbe seed potatoes <rt as low a tempera-
tore as pessible without freezing them.
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
Cures Dyspepsia, In
digestion & Debility*
Mr. Bd Booth, a very clever yonng
gentleman, who has been connected
with the telephone service here for
some time, will go to Richmond, Va
a ball giyed in their honor by the Alum- f J? eD f>*8® in the telephone business in
ni of Atlanta. that city, and will also study etenofra-
| pby. We wish him much success.
The
And
W-Iloloo, -poTKVsC*
Siressrsr
JSPPsssffia 1 .*-**
Around me lay caiit away, '
And as I gathered each one es^crlv
I pressed It to ray lips and d r? 7 ,
Her klsse. left there for the h
Then, after 1 had laid them whi ?f e '
WtobbhtWr.^,^
Was never sign of her! Th,,wi? Uo ' t
Were blinded; and l heard L i? 1111
Of her glad laugh, nor any hai£h P ? * Wl
But, clutching to the tattled erLi?"* ^
My tearless eyes, all vividly .
A Vision that 1s with me evrnnor? Kh ‘
little girl that lies asleep, n„r h.-ars
Nor heeds not any voice, nor fall ,??
And I sit singing o'er and o'er *„h
“God culled her in from himZ?'
doorl" ’ 6I1<1 chut th*
—James Whitcomb Ru^
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Eczema by eminent physicians. During this pc rid
she was treated by severaUpeciallsts. Hcsulea
quantities of all the blood purifiers on the mulct,
ingly recommend It as the best blood purifier ever
discovered. Yours truly, A. C. HcGEHEB.
Columbus, Ga., March 23,1833.
MANUFACTURED BT
WOOLDRIDGE WONDERFUL CURE CO.,
Colnmbns, Un.
■v FOIt BALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS
ADVihKTISIlSG.
J *T you wish to advertise anything anywhere
at any time write to GEu. ItuWhLL ;4
i ,No. 10 Ipruce st., Now York.
L'VXBY one in need of Infornatlon on the rub-
Esject o!advertising wl'.l do well toobtatotwpy
of ‘‘Book for Advrrther pages, priceoue
dollar. Mail'd, postage paid, on receipts
p- lee. I'ontair.s a carclul compilation fmoi the
American Newspaper 1 ire- tory of ar fi e best
papers and class) urna'.s; gives the circul&oon
rating of every one, and a c oil deai o: Inforuit-
tlon about rate* and other mutters peitali'M
to the business f adve.'ising. Adores* »•'*-
EZiL’S ADVKRTI8INI• Hl'HKAlT, 10 -pmo*
FOR SALE!
The best stock farm in Ge^rgis st
$8.00 per acre, contsinirg 582 arres,
situated on South rivet, .igbieeu miles
from Athens, one mile from Omeroo
G. C. & N. R- R. It i- s WHt - re4
with springs and tranche?. 200 acres
of bottom land; 60 acres well limbered
pine and original for. st; 150 acres well
set in Bermuda grata; 100 acres in good
stvteof cultivation. O e thirl casb,
one-third iwelve months, and m e-tnira
two years with note drawing 8 per cent.
Apply to
A. F. COMER.
Comer, Ga.,*or
J, T. COftSEK,
Maysville,^ Ga., ; i
JOHN T . ARNOLD. J8
• Has the Largest Stock of
Paints, Lead and 0B
PAINT BRUSHES
—AND—
"VA RNISH® 8
That has ever been kept
See me before you buy, yftU r
your interest- I will «ve i\b*t
money and give you the best £ .
aremaiiufactured. Give me a c»U.
Yours, truly,
JOHN Ll
KO. 205 BROAD ST., ATHENS. GA
nri!91-d«*- ———
amansS
HIS NEIGHBOR
S375;,
rorth ‘S^
tosnreYoiirsjlJ,
•cate*
iiiSllI
The liiMKEBjob WO* |g|
conceded to be the
the city.