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ATHENS BANNER TUESDAY MORNING MARCH 29, 1892
IS HE SANE?
JAMES ALEXANDER FARMER, THB
ALLEGED MURDERER OF IRA
DRAKE
TURNED UP IN NEW YORK.
Ho .. :rr*ndcrs Himself to the Pollce-
l* Tried In the Toombs Court and
Ha d for Examination as
to His Sanity—He was
in Jackson Coun-
ty Ten Days
Ago.
.lames Alexander Farmer, the alleged
munkrer of Ira Drake, of Jackson
c uniy, is in the hands of the New
Vork police.
Ami he went thereof his own voli
tion saying that he wanted to come
back to Georgia and stan ’ his trial,
Yesterday morning t <1 Banner re
ceived the following te . i,ram:
New York, March 21.- iSpecial.]—A
tall muscular man givi ig his name as
.lames Alexander F .r aer called
at the Leonard street
police station here Saturday and said
lut desired to surrender himself. In
May last he said he killed a boy named
Ira Drake, the nineteen year ,11
of Thomas Drake, Jof Jackaou couutj,
Georgia. Young Drake was found oi.
the Block Bridge road with two bullet*
in Ins body and Farmer was arrested
a* the murderer. He escaped from De
puty Sheriff Suddeth, and went to Ath
ens where he worked on a farm. He
iii'isequenily went West and now wishes
to return to faee the charge He says hi-
faiiier owns a seven hundred acre farm
iu Georgia.
The World.
May 10th, 1891.
The authorities of Jackson county
will doubtless send at once to New
York after Farmer, and he will be
brought back to answer the charge of
murder in Jackson Superior court.
Messrs. Thomas and Strickland, of
Athens, will represent him in the
coarts.
A YOUNG WIFE’S DEATH.
Mre, C. H. Colson Passes over the
River.
Last night at eight o’clock Mrs
Charles H. Colson died at her home in
East Athens after a lingering illness of
over a year.
Mrs. Colson was only eighteen years
of age, and was a daughter of Mr. H. C.
Silvey. For several years she had been
a devout member of the East Athens
Baptise church, and her gentle life had
drawn ^around her scores of loving
friends who will be pained to hear of
her death.
The funeral exercises will probably
be held this afternoon from the resi
dence and the remains will be interred
in Oconee cemetary.
A DARING ROBBERY
THE QUIET LITTLE TOWN
BISHOP THB SCENE.
OF
AN IRON SAFE BLOWN OPEN
The Funeral of Mrs. C. H. Colson Yes
terday Afternoon.
Tuesday afternoon at 3 o’clock, the
funeral services of Mrs. C. H. Colson
were conducted at the Second Baptist
Chnrch. A large number of sorrowing
f needs were present to pay the last sad
tribute to the deceased. Tne services
were most impressively conducted by
Dr. L. R Gwaltney and Rev. B. F.
Elliott. After the services a large con
course of frknds followed the remains
to Ooon-e cemetery, where the body of
Mrs. Colson was laid to rest till the
An iron safe blown open with dyna- re8urrect i° n morn.
The Store of Cook & Jackson entered
■iby a Bold Burglar—Dynamite —
was Used In Effecting an
Entrance to the
Safe—A Sus
picious
Party.
A HOitKIBLE DEATH
Met by a Little Negro Child Yester
day Morning-
Geo. Haygood, col., lives out near
R->ck college. Suuday night he left his
little six-year old daughter alone in the
house, when she fell in the fire and was
horribly burned. The clothing was en
tirely burned from the body, and it was
evident that the burns would prove fa
ta 1. The sufferer died yesterday morn-
i ng about eight o’clock.
CITY COURT
Is He Sane?
The 1?annku wired as once for fuller
particulars, and last night received th<
wing telegram which shows that
Farmer is now under examination as
to his sanity:
Xkw York, March 21.—[Special.]—
James Alexander Farmer, of Jacksoi
county, Ga., who gave himself up al
tin* Leonard Street Station Sun
day night saying that he had
killed a boy named Ira Drake last May,
was arraigned in the Tombs police
urt today and committed forexami-
nati hi as to his sanity.
Win n arraigned today Farmer said
he ! ad goiien into trouble down South,
and had to fly b ecause he could no'
prove his innocence. He had decided
to return ami light it our.
Farmer told Justice Duffy that he
was born May 2, 1871, and lived all his
life in Georgia up to last May.
“On Sunday ir gilt, the 4th of May,”
said Farmer, “an accident happened
hat has served to change my life. Tb»
ext neighbor to my f ither is Thomas
rike. He lives n g i two miles away.
Sis only child was lr.i Drake, a lad cf
Tiin ueen, and my friend.
‘Outlie Sunday night, the 4th of
ay, a singing was held at Raystown
'school. Ira was there aud so was I. So
was Dora McElhannon. I was with
J 1 ra. Ira was not. It was turning
when we started home.
The moon was bright
11 the night was clear. Dora and J
ent home aloug the Block Bridge road
a and live others followed us. Ira
ulked alone.
“I took Dora to her home and left her*
went straight home aud to bed. When
awoke next day, my father said:
ame*, ’tis too bad, ’lis too had.’ He
ft me without auAher word. About
n hour short of noon, Sheriff Collier
ve up to the barn and said: ‘You’ll
ave to come, Jimmy. It’s too bad. 1
nd l me then that Ira Drake had
n found dead with too bullets in him
|H the Block Bridge road.
“He said, too, that I was accused. I
ent with him without another word,
eputy S!u riff Suddeth took me and
e sianed to J< flersou for the county
i! in a buggy. 1 watched my chance
d jumped and ran, not that I was
illy but that my liberty is mine un-
1 forfeit it. i walked twelve miles
night to a station and went to Atn
ai d worked on a farm. I left there
the advice of my father and travell-
to St. Louis. Worked
an iron foundry ther
til 1 tired out, when I went to Illi-
is. From Illinois I rode to Wasbing-
i and from Washmgton to New
rsey. * i reached New
=ey last Tuesday and came over here
terday.
Wants to Coma Back.
|“ I want to go back to Georgia. My
h*r has a seven hundred acre plan-
ioa there, and I want to go.”
inner crossed the Desbroases atreet
ry from Jersey City on Saturday
lit and asked a hackman to drive to
High Constable, He waa sent
Sergeant McCoy, of the Leonard St
tion who took bis revolver and turn-
him over to Detective James Dunn,
nn took him to the police headquar-
'• He had $85 and a long, old fash'
ed horse pistol.
The World.
At Heme Ten Days Ago.
1 is a fact that Farmer waa at the
me of his father in Jackson county
ut ten days ago. He had been trav
ng around all over the country. He
not remain in
ts°n county long but started out
r only to give himself up as told in
reports from New York. Farmer’s
iher said yesterday to a citizen of
hpns, that he could not account for
son’s act, that he had never confessed
nritue, had always asserted his in-
«nce, and that he believed him to be
oeent.
he story of the crime is well-
* n 10 readers of the Banner,
d subs tantially told by Farmer in
statement to the New York police,
that it occurred on the nigt.i of
Convened Yesterday Morning With
Judge Cobb Presiding.
Yesterday morning the March term
of City Court was called to order by
Judge Howell Cobb. The criminal
locket was taken up, and a number o'
cases disposed of. This morning work
will be begun on the civil docket.
The first case called was that of the
State vs. Milledge Hamptoo, col
charged with selling whiskey. The
jury was out for quite awhile, but late
in the afternoon returned a verdict of
not guilty.
Peter Miles, who was charged with
cruelty to animals, demanded indict
ment by the Grand Jury.
Lucy Jackson plead guilty to the
charge of larceny from the house, and
was fined $10.00 or four months in the
chain gang.
Joe Bone demanded indictment by
Grand Jury. He was charged with
cruelty t» animals.
W. B. McKinney was charged with
cheating and swindling, but the ver
dict was not guilty.
mite. Was it the work of a profession
al ? Such vu the interrogation asked
by every one who heard of the occur
rence.
On Friday night last
Messrs. Cook and Jackson, one of the
leading firms of Bishop, locked their
doors and retired, little suspecting that
they would be opened again before the
dawn of daylight.
But they were opened, and a pick
was the means used of getting them
njar. And that is not all. Late in the
night, an explosion was heard in the
quiet little village. But this received
little or no attention, as it was thought
to be the crack of a pistol.
Saturday morning, however, Messrs.
Cook and Jackson were as
tonished to find not only
the doors of their store epen, but also,
the large iron safe in their store was
open.
The safe was blown open with dyna
mite, is an evident fact, as several
holes made by a drill in the hands of a
skilled hand are to be seen. The ex
plosion heard the night before was ea
sily accounted for.
Fortunately, Messrs. Cook & Jackson
had on Friday afternoon, taken their
money from the safe, and expressed it
to another point, This amounted to
ibout $240.00.
The butglar was after money, and
none of the goods in the store were mo
lested. From the safe, ii j succeeded in
getting $15.00 or $20.00. In effecting
in entrai.ee to the store he evidently
nurt himself, as blood stains were to
he seen on the pick handle with which
tie npt-ned the door
A suspicious looking man was no-
tic d in Bishop ail day Friday, since
which time he has not been seen. His
tame is unknown, but as he comes uli
ter the ban of suspicion, a look-out
he kept for him.
DRUNK NO MORE,
How an Athenian Stopped off Drink'
Ing.
Every day the lives of men change,
and sometimes very little circumstances
effect those changes.
So it is in the life of a citizen of Ath
ens. The change came a few weeks
since.
This citizen had been an habitual
drinker, had drank up most all the
money he earned and the liquor habit
had firmly settled upon him. He had a
friend \\ ho was in the same fit as to
liquor. lie loved his toddy.
Ills friend’s family grew 6ick, the
wife and children were stretched upon
beds of sickness, and the death angel
was hovering near. Under such cir
cumstances the husband and father
came borne drunk, and instead of be
ing kind and affectionate, was very un
kind and wished they were out of his
way. His wish was partially granted.
This citizen happened to see all this,
The spark of manhood in his bosom had
flamed up into a bright blaze. He was
a man again.
He will be drunk no more.
THE CITY COURT.
Takes a Recess Until Saturday Morn
Ing—The Jury Drawn.
But little business of general impor
tance was transacted in the City Court
Tuesday, No criminal cases were
tried, but a number of judgments were
taken in civil cases. The jurors and
bailiffs were dismissed at noon yester
day, and the court took a recess until
Saturday morning at 9 o’clock, when
motions will be heard, and perhaps oth
er civil cases will come up.
THE JURORS DRAWN.
The Jurors for the June term were
drawn, and the following is the result
Upson C.Nowell, Jos. H. Stone, Jno
W. Burmby, C. Bode, Macon C. John
son, Robert S. Beni diet,-M.D. Brown
ing, Geo. H. Palmer, Jae. S. Cheney
Jno. Bird, James F. Butler, H. L. Gare-
bold, Howard Mullen, Ws.U. Pledger,
James E.Pittman, Wm. Pittman, Frank
A Wilbanks, Wm. S. Hodges, M. H.
Parr, Wm C. Orr, Henry Bensse, Henry
C. Conway, Myer Myers, Wm.H Gann
Wm. H. Barger, Thos. H. Barrett,
Chas.M. Bell, John B. Fattman. Robert
C. Orr, G. D. Parr, Wm. A Pledger, B,
J. Porterfield, Geo. M. Booth, S.
Mitchell, David Hemrick.
SHILOH’S CONSUMPTION CURED
This is beyond question the most suc
cessful Cough Medicine we have ever
so:d, afew doses invariably cure the
worst cases of Cough, Croup and Bron
chitis, while its wonderful success
the cure of Consumption is without
S &rallel in the history of medicine,
inoe its first discovery it has been sold
on a guarantee, a test whioh no other
medicine can stand. If yon have a
cough we earnestly ask you to try it.
Price 10c., 50c. and $1. If your lungs
are sore, chest, or baok lame, use Shi
loh’s Porous Plaster. Sold by B. “
Orr, City Drug Store
and J. E. Talmadge received a tele
gram from Conway,Arkansas ann mac
ing the death of their uncle, Dr. Thom
as J. Young, at that place. The cause
of Dr. Yonng’s death was paralysis.
Dr. Young was for many years a citi
zen of Athens before moving to Arkan
sas, and many of the citizens of this
place will remember him well.
The remains of Dr. Young will be in
terred today in Aikansas.
In Which Athenians Will Take Interest
It is given out that at an early date a
wedding will occur in New York that
will be of interest to many Athenians.
It will be the marriage of Miss Matsie
Burns, formerly of Athens, to Mr.
Nichol, of New York.
Miss Burns is a niece of Mrs. Sarah
Rucker and Mrs. Jas. Carlton, of this
city, and while here made many
friends.
ATRIBUTE
i will
Farmer Will be Tried Next August.
Sheriff Collier was telegraphed from
New York that James A. Farmer bad
given hiacsjlf up, and accordingly will
be brought back to Jackson County.
No cause in the world can be assign
ed for his giving himse f up. when he
had plenty of money on his person to
keep out of the way and no necessity
was apparent for his surretder. It
must have been that he was willing to
ace his trial, and prove his Innoc nee.
He will he tried at the August term
4 Jackson Superior court
Oedicated to the Memory of Jennie
Murrell, Who Died Sunday, March
13th, 1892.
Mysterious are the ways of God. We
:e but dimly througheaithly mists aud
ladows, iiLd often, as we look out of
the madness called life, it is bard to re
alize that afeer the despair, the burial
uymu, the prayer, and the coffin’s clod
there is somewhere up yonder near the
great white throne, in the radiant zone
of Heaven, the beautiful rest of God.
Moved by a sense of the great sorrow
that has visited the superintendent of
our school in the death of his beloved
daughter, Jinnie, we, the teachers and
pupils of the Winterville Methodist
Sunday School, desire to tender him
the only consolation in mortal power,
our sympathy and love, and to record
this tribute to the memory of ouryouug
friend.
On a bright and radiant Sabbath noon,
when the sky seemed all beauty and the
world all bliss, this guileless maiden,
who stood where the trook and river
meet, on the borderland of childhood
and womanhood, went onward inio the
perfect life, leaving a memory that must
ever be an inspiration and a joy, aud
aow her sainted spirit is chanting
praises with those who have washed
Jieir robes and made them white in the
blood of the Lamb.
A devoted daughter, an affectionate
sister and true friend, has passtd from
earth to heaven, and a newly mad
grave has opened to receive all that
remains of one of earth’d precious treas
ures. Friends, old and young, gathered
around the casket and grave with of
ferings of flowers as a last token of love
for her, whose gentle life beginning in
a home very dear to her, reached out
in ever widening circles to all the world
She was so kind and sympathetic in her
nature, so courteous from early train
ing, so bright and courageous in her
home, social and school relations, that
it was a sweet privilege to be stimula
ted and enlivened by her attentive look
and attractive manner. Alt graces
found their perfection in her, r.ni no
one who knew the gracious gentleness
and sweet Christian symmetry of her
character can ever forg. t her.
She has gone front earth to heaven
but the influence of her beautiful life
remains with us, and while we shall
miss the unfailing love, the un-;eifbh
levotion of one so fondly loved in life
so deeply regretted in death, still we
would not reo&ll her to this vale of
tears, this borderland of sorrow.
Not alone in the desolate home is she
missed 1 In our school where sue loved
to come, her memory will ever be off* c-
tionately cherished, and day by day we
shall think of what she is doing in those
bright realms above. Thus we can
still walk with her and keep unbroken
the bonds of love, though the swelling
heart will often heave like the moaning
ocean that cannet be at rest.
She is not dead but gone to that
school where Christ himself doth rule.
To her bereaved pareants we tender
our heartfelt sympathy. Suddenly
striken their hearts were not prepared
for the blow. It was indeed a bitter
cup pressed to their lips by a loving
Father, and our prayer arises that He
will comfort those in whose hearts ’
left this aching void.
The precious memory of
her loyal life and
the sure and blessed hope that she now
rests with Christ, will shed a halo of
glorious light around the sad drapery of
the tomb.
They mourn thee, thou ostbut glori
fled one; dark is the shadow in their
home; thick the gloom that environs it
cold the chill on their loving hearts!
*‘Oh Thou who looked pityirglydown
on Nature’s agony,
Who bids ns hope, forbids ub not to
weep!”
Teach them to say:
“Thy will be done.”
Resolved, That this tribute be re
corded in the minutes of the Sunday
Sohool; that a copy befurnnhed the p
rents of the deceased, and that it L
published in the “Athens Daily Ban
ner” and “Oglethorpe Echo.”
Mrs. Z ill ah Hutcheson,
Miss Belle Harris,
Geo. B. Atkisbon,
i - Committee.
Sunday Marob 20th, 1892.
LAID TO R "ST.
A FORMER ATHENIAN
Dies at Hts Home In Arkansas.
Tuesday about noon Messr*. C. G
AN APPROACHING WEDDING
WILL BE BROUGHT BACK.
For Over Fifty Years.
Mas. Winslow’s s-cothtso Svavr has been
used for children teething. It sooths the child
Tottens the gums, allays all pale, enrea wind
colic, and is the heat reme ly for Dlarrhcea.
twenty-five cents a bottle. Bold bv all drug-
f : "lr Viorghont th-wo-td.
THE FRUIT CROP.
Waa It Damaged by the Recent Frosts
Reports are coming in from all over
Georgia as to the effect of the recent
frosts upon the fruit crop of the State.
Discouraging reports come from several
sections of the State, while from others
they are brighter.
Speaking with Mr. Wm, Thurmond,
a prominent nurseryman of this sec
tion yesterday, it was learned that the
frost did not do such damaging busi
ness around here as in other parts.
He says very little damage was done,
and bplieves that the fruit crop of
G ory : a this year will be a large and
pr fit able one.
Thirty-Three Baptized —A very
large number of people witnessed the
baptism ceremonies administered by
Rev.L. T. Smith, col. The baptisms
t >nk place on th** branch just above
the site of Mr. MeGinty’s old planing
nrll. Thirty-three persons were bap
tized Rev. Smith is one of the most
popular of colored preachers, and is do
ing a great work fi-r his people. He is
pastor of Hill’s Fir.-t Baptist church.
A PLANT PROTECTOR.
A Cheap Contrivance Useful In Raising
Early Melons aud Vegetables.
A useful contrivance worthy of hrisg
extensively used is a plant protector for
early melons, encumbers, squash, toma
toes, beans, etc. It is made of wire, is
cheap, convenient and durable. It con
sists of No. 8 wire hoop about 15 inches
in diameter and three pieces bent nearly
in shape of a half circle and looped at
the two ends around the hoop, crossing
each other at the top. They are secured
where they cross by being tied by a
piece of small annealed wire. This wire
framework should be conical and slight
ly tapering from the bottom to top, so
that they will
nest into each
other when put
ting away. The
wire framework
can be covered
with old newspa
pers, or strainer
or cheese cloth wire frame for plant
costing three or protector.
four cents per yard. When put on, a
little soil on the edges in several places
will prevent the wind from blowing
it off.
The strainer cloth covers might be
sewed fast to the framework, but mice
and rats are apt to make nests among
them when stored away, so it is rather
better to keep the cloth or paper separate.
These protectors can be made of several
sizes. For tomato plants they might be a
few inches taller than for melons. Wire
is so uinch cheaper than a few years ago
that these plant protectors can now be
furnished in quantity at abont $2.50 per
100, including the wire, or can be made
to order by tinners or wireworkers in
small lots at |3 per 100. Gardeners and
truck growers can sometimes save the
cost of these protectors three times over
in one season. Competition now makes
earliness the great object, and some
cheap artificial protection from frost,
bugs and cold winds is indispensable,
says the New England Homestead, from
whieh are reproduced the foregoing cut
and description.
Routs Rheumatism.
Mr. Charles Lawrence, of Ashland,
Neb., says that Swift’s Specific cured bin.
of severe Rheumatism, of which he ha<
Suffered for over Six Months,
with vain efforts to get relief. He recom
mends it to all sufferers from Rheuma
than.
Cores by forcing out the imparities
of the Blood, and building up the
general health. It is entirely vege
table.
Book on the Blood and Skin, mailed free.
The finest assortment of pa-
)er stock in the city at tbf
Bannkr iob offioft.
Beekeeping In a Small Way.
Why should not every farmer have a
few colonies to gather the honey and
fertilize the bloom of his orchards? There
is nothing in the way of every intel
ligent man or woman living in the
country doing this. The necessary in
struction for beginners is cheap and
available. Like a modern hardware
store, supply dealers have every fixture
of hives and their appliances ready for
service that a novice may begin at once.
Transferring, introducing of queens, di
viding of colonies, extracting of honey,
handling and marketing the same, can
all be learned in a short time. In fact,
the art is fast becoming a science. The
introducing of queens, that was for a
long time considered a hazardous expert
ment, is now performed with but little
risk. Cages are now so constructed that
all that is necessary to do with the
queen and her convoy when they are re
ceived in such a cage, is just to take out
the cork stopping the entrance and put
ting the cage between the combs, or
simply laying it on top. Of coarse the
old queen has to be previously removed.
Sugar paste having been put in the cage,
stopping the hole from which the cork
has been removed, it requires some time
before the queen imprisoned is liberated,
and during this time the bees and she
become acquainted, and having liber
ated her themselves without any excite
ment, she is generally well received.
Spring is the best season in which to
begin, says the Philadelphia Farm Jour
nal. Get one or two colonies to start
with. If you can get them in movable
comb hives so much the better. If these
aro not available take good colonies in
box hives, and have them transferred in
May into whatever kind of hive you may
select. Remember there are no patents
on hives that amount to anything now.
Do not believe any venders of patent
hives. They are frands. Langstroth,
the American chaff hives, single and
double stories, the Simplicity and many
others, are all reliable and free from
patents.*
Smut In Oats and Wheat.
Bulletin 22 of the Kansas experiment
station gives the result of experiments to
prevent smut in oats and wheat. The
amount of smut in oats in 1891 in the
fields about Manhattan was abont 5%
per cent., as shown by actual count.
Potassium sulphide was as effectual in
preventing oat srnnt as the hot water
treatment previously recommended. It
can be used at the rate of one pound in
twenty gallons of water, the seed to re
main in the solution twenty-four hours,
or use abont twice the amount and re
move the seed at the end of ten or twelve
hours. Treatment of the seed with hot
water or with potassium 'sulphide both
prevents the smut and increases the
yield. The loose smut of wheat was con
siderable in 1891 on some of the plots on
the college farm. Fifty-four trials with
various fungicides did not furnish de
cisive evidence favorable in any case.
Spraying spring wheat, barley and
oats with flowers of sulphur, potassium
sulphide, chloride of iron and Bordeaux
mixture, singly, at intervals of abont
eight days, from April 21 to July 2, had
apparently IHtle if any effect in pre
venting red and black rust. Spraying
com plants with Bordeaux mixture,
chloride of ucon or potassium sulphide
did not prevent the development of com
smut.
Cold Frames.
Cold frames have much the same form
of construction as hotbeds. In the cold
frame the finely pulverized soil is warm
ed from the heat of the son received
through the glass covering, which also
excludes the cold night air from the
germinating seeds or tender young
plants. In the hotbed the heat is mainly
derived from the fermenting manure in
the bottom. This, with the solar heat
added, is very forcing, and it requires
daily attention and frequent waterings
to get the best results from a hotbed,
in the south the cold frame will usually
meet all the requirements for early
forcing. Cold frames are frequently
covered with coarse cotton cloth instead
of the more expensive method of sash
Mid glass.
Answer This Question.
Why do so many people we see aronrd
us seem to prefer tu tuff, r anil be made
miserable by In lfgesnon, Constipation,
Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, Coining up
of the Food, Yellow Skin, when for 75c
we will sell them SbiJph’8 Vitalizcr,
guaranteed to cure them* Sold by City
Drug Store. B. C. O r, Manager.
Orchard Grass with Clover.
At one of the Ohio farmer’s institutes
a fanner said: “I recommend that more
attention be given to the production of
orchard grass. When I sow clover I al
ways sow orchard grass with it. It pays
well and clover will do for pasture for
horses, cattle and swine. The orchard
grass is a very valuable adjunct in a
clover field. If yon intend cutting the
clover for hay, the orchard grass is still
strong, and will stand a great deal of
clover. It helps the clover, and I can
make a bettor quality of hay.
I don’t think, as a role, that fanners
generally sow a large variety of grasses.
We can have a great number and va
riety of grasses growing, have more
pasture, keep the ground all occupied
and give a variety of feed. I have timo
thy land and bine grass land. The proper
time to sow orchard grass is when the
weather gets warm in the spring. I can
get a better stand along in April to the
middle of May. If sown alone nse two
bushels of seed to the acre. When I sow
clover I use about half a bushel."
Here and There.
There is talk about establishing a con
densed milk factory at Monmouth, Me.
Western New York has a skunk farm
where black skunks are bred and raised
for their pelts.
Texas exchanges call attention to the
Lone Star cotton picker, which has been
at work in some of the cotton fields.
The money employed in the dairies of
New York state, according to a recent
estimate, is abont $350,000,000; the
valne of the cows is about $54,000,000.
Figares furnished concerning the salt
product of the United States make the
production during the year 1891 10,229,-
691 barrels. About four-tenths of this
is from Michigan, four-tenths from New
York, not quite one-tenth from Kansas
and the remainder from Ohio, West
Virginia, Louisiana, Utah, Nevada and
Texas.
GoodLooks.
Good looks are more than skin deep
depending upon a healthy condition o: 1
all the vital organs. If the Liver be in
active. you have a Billions Look, if
S >nr stomach be disordered you have a
yspeptic Look and if your Kidneys be
affected you have .a Pinched Look.
Secure good health and you will have
good looks. Electric Bitters is the
great alterative and tonic and acts direct
ly on these vital organs. Cares Pimples,
Blotches, Boils and gives a good com
plexion. Sold at J. Crawford & Co’s
Drugstore, 50c. per bottle.
COTTON GINS,
ENGINES
AND
REPAIRS,
—AT—
Bottom Prices,
WRITE TO
G. E. Lombard & Co.
Foundry, Machine, Boiler and Gin Work and
Supply House,
Augusta,
Oa,
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
For saleiby Palmer & Kinnehrew
A MAN a$450
HIS N
HIDDEN & BAT
Plano for
IGHBOR
paid only
$375.
For thcTcry gam
Piano*
Neither one wm worth
a nickel over $300.
Insure Yourself
•fainst pajinie eathor
bitunt pricea by buying
direct from
ES, Savannah, Ga.
Who hare bnfc O* « Pric and that the kmotm.
Yoa can’t pay them more than Instrument,
am actually worth. The, are not built that war.
Writ, for Latent SPECIAL OFFEBS.
^Latent!
T. G. H ADA WAY,
ATHENS, GA.
Corner Clayton and Jackson Sts.
MANUFACTURERS OF
Harness, Saddles^Bridles, <fcc.
ALSO, DEALER IN
Buggies, Carriagesand Carts.
There is a vast difference between
Oheap Goods, and Goods Cheap. Go
elsewhere for cheap goods, but come to
T. G. Hadaway
Goods Cheap.
Aug 18—wly
for Infants and Children*
“Cantortnia so well adapted to children that
I recommend it an superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Archer, M. D.,
U1 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
“The nse of ‘Castoria’ is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
Intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach.”
Carlos Marttu, D.P.,
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomlngdale Reformed Church.
Castoria cures Colic, Const!petton.
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and premotsi di
gestion.
Without injurious medication.
“ For several years I have recommended
your ‘ Castoria,' an' shall always oontinue to
do so as it has invariably produced beneficial
results.”
Edwin F. Paudex, M. D.,
“The Wlnthrop,”IKIth Ub—I awl Tdr Am,
New York City.
The Centaur Company, 77 Murray Strut, JX*itVaag^~—
THIIEO. MARKWALTBB,
manufacturer tor
GRANITE AND MARBLE MONUMENTS AND STATUARY.
Importer Direct and Contractor for Bnildinn Stone.
Marble Wainscoting and Encaustic Tile Searths
AGENT FOR CHAMPION IRON FENCE CO,
ar* The best In the world. New Designs! Original IMsigns I I Low Prices! I |*U(k
Prices and DAigus cheerfully furnished. S0F" All work guaranteed
OFFICE AND STEAM WORKS, 529 and 531 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA.
March 16-wly. • -
HORSES AND MULES.
Having re-enteredjbusiuese in my new and roomy
stables, 1 again solicit that liberal patronng which the
the goode pople have heretofore accorded me. I prom
ise them that same fair dealing which has alwaj s
been my endeavor to to hhve with them.
Washington St,
W. S. HOLMAN,
ATHENS. SA.
: $s-m
■pi
m
WL-.V.,*
A.R. ROBERTSON,
Fine Marble and Granite Monuments
AND TOMB STONES, ijjjjgg!
VERY LOW PEICES.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
m