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pjCARLTON TALKS.
- lI: H. CARLTON, THE G12-
‘congressman FROM
*JlS DISTRICT, HA4
YEW "WORDS TO SAT
M ' n *‘
" v flkrltlriHodii *ilopl»db
the lt« - publicau».
f ij ii. Carlton is back from Wasli-
V', for a few days, spending the
with Ids family. The genial
K is looking well, and thew ' "
l£ many congressional dnhw
i 1,11 )i«htly upon him. He has bfcen
r l iillv welcomed by his inauy ad-
' hiii? constituents.
The Doctor has a good deal to say
, jL,t the condition of affairs in Con
fer. lie is not very complimentary
fljjs remarks as to our friends the
jJJJv and is particularly severe upon
SHoethods which the republican party
t ConereM propose to use this season.
^Siid he a ww days ago in conversation
“The dem-
very dark
b«* made good. Hi-many friends hope
'O, as four Imndivd (Ritters is » m,od
sized nmiMiiit oven for a Congressman
Dr. (.'arlt'.r, leave.- f.u- -1,i. ; i. ,1;
the latte? - p - irt ,>f this week. He ex-
pccts abusy time from now until ad-
»our!m*:i! ^21 ^ *
> UR I ED TREASURE.
ritfl by Gen.
tli Carolina.
■[Special J J-:-
in Kershaw
enused by the
t-
A MINISTER FORCED TO
RELIGIOUS DEPARTMENT.
DR. GOODALL. -COMPELLED .TO
MARRY THE GIRL nE HAD
discarded. *
strangers,
ccially com-
of Ohio to
ich was bur-
en Sherman’s
is state. The
3hatt ar
Slid
Jha Banker reporter:
^tsiu Congress have a
wtlook before them this season. Their
Aliens from the Btart must be on the
Jfeniive. We will be unable to do
“ g, ; tive legislation, and our sole pur-
ijjg f r om the start will be to prevent
{hi nassage of any objectionable legisla-
Son bv the republicans. This v.e will
j 0 by lillibusteriug. With the narrow
oijority the republicans have in Con-
«re<9 they will be unable to have a
Juoruni of their own party in the house
Jjgny time and the democrats by re
fusing to vote may at any time thus
prevent the passage of any bill wnich
Ly be odious to them.
That the worst is to be feared
born the republicans in the way
of bull-dozing is shown by the charac
ter of the member of the party whom
they have elected speaker. Speaker
jeed has already shown by his rnlings
ia the chair of the house that he will be
iiartis-an in the extreme, and that he
will be a mere tool in tne hands of his
p-irty leaders. His total disregard of
common courtesy, much lees of parlis-
rneuurv law, has aroused no little in
dignation.iu the house, where the im-
uidfovnily just and courteous rulings of
Speaker Carlisle, -are Still heid in re-
■ membrauce. Theelej^Jy unjust rulings
of lieed remind fipe of an incident
whicl happened in file l?orty-Seventh
Congress, I believe: ’ ***««
Koifer was ftp*aker-at~ the jk)»e^*ndj
bu rulings were, moi "
those oi the gentleman from
now wellds tlie.ga
in his partim. ru I<tfP| sl
Thompson, dembcr«io'c0n
California. Mr" Th'o'mp®
the matter pass oyer in silence, howev
er Ho angrily oxcW” 4 "' 1 *’
fotnured Republican . .
le this house until I make you spill
:■ lin e of vour blood, for the insult you
have just* perpetrated!” With these
words lie rushed toward the speaker’s
tk-k. at the same time drawing a mnr-
ik-uus weapon. He was stopped, how
ever, before he reached his intended
victim, and by the adjournment of the
house ue had sufficiently cooled off’to
avoid further trouble. It i> to be re-
niaiked, however, that from that time
on Kcifor was much fairer in his rul
ings. lam anticipating that some one
wii* nut a similar quietus on Reed be
fore tne end of the preseut session.”
“Wlmt£about the National Election
J.atr, doctor,” we asked.
“The Republicans are in dead earnest
about the passage of this law and will
make great efforts to carry it through.
The Democracy is, however, pledged
to see that this is not done at any haz
ard. The result of such a law would be
to provide for the appointment of over
live hundred thousand officials to super
vise elections in the South. This would
be a tremendous feature of federal pat
ronage and would give unlimited op
portunity for corruption. Aside from
this, however, it would be a clear vio
lation of the sovereign power of the
states, to place.their elections under the
control of federal officials. It would
bring back some of the worst features
of the carpet bagger’s system. The
Republicans have emphasized their de
termination te pass this law by the ap
pointment of Henry. Cabot Lodge, the
meanest Republican in Congress, as
chairman of the committee to which
the matter is to be referred.
The first step toward the passage of
the election law will be the attempt on
the part of the Republicans to seat most
of their party candidates in the numer
ous contested election cues to be
brought up. This, movement the De
mocracy will meet bv the most stub
born filibustering and the most skillful
parliamentary maneuvering.
Another thing which will complicate
the passage of the National election
law is the question of the location of
THE WORLD’S FAIR.
The Southern Congressman will nev
er vote for a city whose Congressmen
attempt to force upon our people such
an election law, and I
think that as a result considerable
trading will be done, resulting in the
defeat of the election law, and a boom
to tin chances of some city for the
great fair. A few weeks ago, I was
called upou at my apartments in Wash
ington by First Assistant Postmaster
Stevenson. He came to request that I
vote for Chicago as the site of the fair
of ’20. I told him that before I, or any
other Southern congressman, could
conscientiously vote for Chicago, he
would be obliged to go thither and tear
down the Libby prison and apply the
torch to the Tribune and the Inter-
Occan newspaper buildings. No South
ern congrecsxnan could with self-
respet vote for a city whose newspapers
were filled statements last year to the
effect that thirty of them occupied seats
in congress through fraud aud decep
tion. Where do I think the fair will be
held, you ask? Well, 1 can hardly say.
The committee appointed to consider
the matter will, first of all, report on
the question of whether or not there
yin ue a iair at all. To speak candidly,
if the funds for the fair are to come
largely from vbe Federal government, I
don't think there are ten congressmen
that will vote to have the show. This
matter wiU, -howevorr, be decided im
mediately after the holidays.”
Dr. Carlton says that he had the mis
fortune to los6 a month’s salary, over
$400, by the Silcott steal. lie thinks,
however, that the amount lost by rea
son of the absconding cashier will all
appearance there an
who say they have
missioned UwJ
the i icn
ere in 1
army passedti _
two men say they are from Ohio, and
they have already, employed a number
of negro laborers, wjfio with spade, pick
and shovel, are fast .turning over earth
m search of the bag-containing the pre
cious stuff It is said that about a
month beYora the elefee of the late war,
when Sherman’s armyf passed through
the State of South Carolina in a certain
place in Kershaw county, (about 18
miles from Camden and near the banks
of the Lynch river, Sherman had a
large canvas baggfull of gold buried.
The bag was placed in a big pot and put
down fifteen feet in the ground. There
was a lot of jewelry set with diamonds
in the pile, and all would be worth
from $100,000 to $200,000. The summer
after the surrender a man came down
from Ohio to dig up the treasure, but
was taken sick with fever and died. On
his death bed he told his mission, and
described, as best ho could, the spot
where the treasure was deposited. All
efforts, however, to unearth it have
proved fruitless. These new searchers
seem to mean business. The digging is
watched by many citizens, who declare
that if the pot is unearthed it will not
be carried to Ohio.
A VETERAN JOURNALIST DEAD.
The Deacons of the Orange Baptist
Church Impose a Hard' Sentence
Upon Their Voung Leader.
Db. C. W. LANE, Editor.
Judge Kit Warren Died in Atlanta
Yesterday.
Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 28.—[Special.]—
Judge Kit Warren, one of the best
known journalists in Georgia, died this
morning-at s* ofoioct. affected
With pneumonia in a manner similar to
Mr; Grady’S atthek. He was a native
Georgian and ’.was 61 years' old at the
time of his death. ...
The; greater £afC othiS $as spent
m Lee county, .where he was for a long
£^itfdge ;i qj ;i t}ie court Some years
ago he began writing humorous letters
tor-ttJft'Hmmy Scratt^Wlrfftr ’vtere wide-
n<l mid nnsfint.incriv praised. He <if-
work on the” Ha
nd later worked
ie Evening Capi-
He wrote and worked
ns
wits in torn employ
Specific company - .
He lias written spnie books fluring
his life, one of them a war story. He
was air unmarried mad and a brother of
Rev, E. W, Warren, now of Macon, but
formerly pastor of the first Baptist
church df Atlanta.
Judge Warren Was an easy and grace
ful writer, and as a writer of political
editorias won a rlputatiou for himself.
He was also a true humorist and an ad
mirable story writer.
tal in this city.
ISfit prior to
oiilic Swift
Newark, Dec. 27—[Special]—The
Rev. L. JB. Goodall, the popular young
minister of the Oakland Avenue Baptist
church at Oiange) has bad a novel and
rather rough experience. A bout a year
ago, Goodall became engaged to Miss
Sarah Bell, who hoarded with Mrs.
Henry Barnes, on South street. itLast
February, Miss Bell went to her Broth
er’s home in Charleston, S. C. It was
understood that the minister would go
South next February, and bring Miss
Bell back as his bride.
Goodall’s feelings underwent a change,
however, and five months ago, he wrote
to Miss Bell breaking the engagement,
and returning her presents and letters.
The Southern girl refused to send back
his letters or the engagement ring be
had given her.
HIS SECOND BETROTHAL.
Shortly after, the Rev. Goodall plight
ed his love to Miss Eliza Smith, organ
ist of the church of which he was pas
tor. The marriage was fixed for next
Tuesday, at Orange.
Miss Beli was apprised of the date.
Last Tuesday she arrived in Orange
with her brother. They stated that they
did not consider tba former engagement
canceled, and proposed to make trouble.
They laid the. matter before the deacons
of the church. The brother said Good-
all should marry his sister, or a breach
of pr raise suit would be immediately
started.
Pastor Goodall was posted regarding
the situation. He consulted the deacons
and |tlie Rev. Mr. Hunt, an old class
mate. They all advised him to break,
if he could, his engagement with Miss
Smith and marry Miss Bell.
The parson didn’t relish th’v course,
hut neither did he relish the suit nor
the corporal punishment that Miss
Bell’s brother threatened to inflict, so
he pleaded with Miss Smith, and she fi
nally released him. Then he faced his
former sweetheart and her brother.
The interview was a warm one, and
ended in a further rupture. Bell came
to Newark on Wednesday, and had a
breach of,promise suit started. Wednes
day night, the pastor was requested to
meet tlte deacons. On his wav to t> e
churehs he was.served with a.summons
in the breach of promise suit.
married" hi s first i.ove.
II<j was. unnerved, and when lie con
fronted sixteen deacons, who requested
him to piarry, Misspell and sav6 himself
hud the church from disgrace, he reluc
tantly consented.'" They all went
around to Mrs. 5 Barnes’ boardinghouse,
and so did file Rpv. Ml*. Hunt; who per
formed the ceremony. ' It is understood
that the clergyman and his bride went
South the next day, and that he has just
accepted a call to a church in Georgia,
and has sent in his resignation as pastor
of the Orange church, to take effect
January 1st.
A MISER KILLED BY A TRAIN.
AN EXODUS FROM GEORGIA.
Ha Was Worth $40,000, but Picked
up His coal on the Railroad
Reading, Dec. 29.—A thin and with
ered man named Simon Spoiln, aged 60
yearsj poorly clad and hungry looking,
carrying a battered tin pail, stooped to
K ick coal along the Reading Railroad
ere to-day, when a train came along
and cut off both his legs, and he died a
few hours later. He had been warned
as late ><s this morning to buy bis coal
and keep off the railroad track, or lie
would be killed, but he smiled and re
plied :
“No matter; I won’t live longer than
the first of next April. Then I’ll have
reached my father’s age.”
He lived in the attic of one of his
houses, % scantily furnished apartment,
with a poor bed, a small stove,* and a tin
spittoon covering a rat hole. All the
eoal he needed he gathered along the
railroad, and yet liis real estate and per
sonal property are worth about $40,000.
This money will go to bis aged sister,
as he had no family.
A WHOLESALE LYNCHING.
Six Negroes, Charged with Murder,
Lynched In South Carolina.
Charleston, S. C., Dec. 28—[Spe
cial]—A mob of several hundred mask
ed men raided the jail at Barnwell
court-house at two o’clock this morn
ing, overpowered the jailer, and took
out eight negro prisoners, charged with
murder. There were Ripley Johnson
and Mitchell Adams, charged with
murdering a man named Hefferman,
and six others, charged with the mur
der of young Martin. The prisoners
were taken out of town and shot to
death. The jailer was tied and forced
to accompany the lynchers. The whole
thing was conducted in a very business
like inauner, citizens of the town not
knowing anything about it. A great
many negroes are colleeted at the scene
of the lynching, and more trouble-is an
ticipated.
AT DEATHS DOOR.
James F. Woodward not Expected to
Live,
Atlanta, Ga., Dec, 29.—[Special)
—Mr. James F. Woodward, who was
mysteriously shot Thursday night on
Marietta street, and so desperately
wounded, is lying at the point of death
today at the home oj Dr. Robert West
moreland on Forsyth street.
The story oftthe manner in which
Mr. Woodward was so dangerously
wounded was given fully in yesterday’s
Journal.
Since yesterday afternoon be has been
growing worse, and at noon today death
was hourly expected.
Ulnrder In South Carotin a.
Columbia, S.C., December 23.—[Spe
cial]—Henry Saxon, who made .some
sarcastic remark about the quality of
music furnished for a country dance
near here, Christmas night, was asked
to step outside by Willis Glass, a musi
cian, and was instantly killed. Glass
escaped.
How the Negroes of Bartow and Polk
Counties were Deluded Into Emi
grating to Arkansas.
Cedartowx, Ga., Dec. 27—Special]—
Great excitement has prevailed du
ring the past week because of the whole
sale exodus of negroes. Hundreds have
already left their work in the fields to
go to Arkansas, lured by the extrava
gant premises made by railroad emigra
tion agents. For some time there have
been rumors of a general exodus. Lit
tle attention - was paid to these reports
until last Monday, when the citizeus of
Cedartown found their depot crowded
with colored people, waiting to be
transported to their new homes in the
Southwest. It was learned that the one
hundred and fifty or more farm labor
ers who were collected at the depot,
were only the pioneers in the great ex
odus which will soon depopulate Bar
tow and Polk counties of their farm
hands.
The emigration scheme has been
worked with great skill, and has been
kept a profound secret, until matters
had gone too far for white influence to
have any effect. Three months ago, a
section from above Cedartown to StateB-
borough, in Bartow county, was flooded
with circulars and pamphlets which set
forth in glowing terms the advantages
offered colored emigrants to Arkansas.
The high wages paid, the good homes
which were given away, and the ease
with which a living could be made,
were all luminously depicted.
After this soi : t of literature had been
given time to circulate and have its ef
fect. a new element in the organized
plan to obtain workingmen for Arkan
sas was introduced. Two negroes,
named Spradling, who had once lived in
Polk county, suddenly re-appeared.
They stated that they had just returned
from Arkansas, and knew all about the
promised land. That there were draw
backs to perfect happiness there, these
two men admitted, but they claimed
that wages were high and work plenti
ful r that neither man, woman nor child
could possibly suffer want as long as
they had two arms and were willing to
use them moderately.
A month or more was given the two
Spradlings to do their share of the
work, and then one of the master
schemers commenced to play his part.
This time the actor was a white man
named Henry Jerrell. He described
himself as a large plantation owner in
Arkansas, with immense crops that he
was unable to garner for lack of hands.
He made most extravagant promises,
iftnd the result was, that many people
living near Cedartown were awakened
Sunday night by the sound of wagons
passing their houses. From every di
rection travelers commenced making
their way to the depot, and when the
sun rose, between one hundred and fif
ty and two hundred of them were wait
ing on thfe platform of the depot. Every
effort to make them change their minds
failed, and now many plantations are
without a single laborer, and planters
can do nothing. This is said to be bat
the beginning. i r : 1 .
SUFFERING IN HIGH PLACES.
The poor are apt to suppose thal 'ibe
dgngtfve pretiy nermraHy what our nk>d-
tfcnparlaucp is wont to describe a a “;t.
good time” TU- ir own lot they know; is
for the most jmtit very sad one, but w$gn
the carriages go by, and the music strikes
up the lighted bails, no skeleton, they im
agine, is in that house. • We were very,
much struck with an article we read last
week on the terrible afflictions of the House
of Hapsburg, and other European royal
families. That article waa written and
published a day or two before the an
nouncement by cable of the suicide of the
Austrian Grown Prince Rudolph. la it
was stated that the Hapsburg family are
heirs to insanity through epilepsy, and
that they go oue into blank idiocy in mid
dle life, and some even in the flash of
youth.
“Tba Grand Duke Leopold, the inheri
tor of the vast estate of the house of Este,
bad marked ability, attainments and cour
age. He wa9 also of abstemious personal
habits, but passed by this horrid heritage
into a condition in which he bad not sense
enough to feed himsrif. The Imperial
family, consisting of ninety-eight Arch
dukes and Arch-duchesses, are either emit
ten by this disease or go all their lifetime
in bondage through fear of it The Em.
peror’s youngest and favorite daughter,
Princess Valerie, shows unmistablt? signs of
it even now in her young womanhood-
Arch-duke Louis Victor the youngest
brother of the Emperor, is already an im
becile. Kniser Ferdinand was not much
above a beast. Some, under the fear of
the family curse, have refused to accept
crowns.”
The Hohenzollerns, too, have like
troubles. Fredrick IV, of Prussia, brother
of the old Emperor William, was insane
and incarcerated in the latter years of his
uud the Presbyterian is authority for
the s'utement that the present Emperor of
Germany “if not yet in incipient idiocy,
will soon be there by inheritance and bis
own vices.” Heissaidto . be diseased to
an extent that will soon unfit hint for any
station but a hospital.
“The heir apparent to the crown of
Austria,” “is also an epileptic, and has
been in durance by his insanity.” The
nextjtnorning the .cable annouEped ‘ the
sudden death t‘by apoplexy” of the Crown
PriuCe Rudolph. It has been since apper
tained that he c irriniritted suicide, and the
act was pro.ba.hlj’..douc iu a fit of tins-raity.
It is also stated that the Hapsburgi have
carried their malady to Spain, where
the infant heir to the throne is-already
a snffrrer from it. Tlio youngest son toQ
of Qteen Victoria died in 1884 at Cannes
of epilepsy. " The "present Queen of Den-:
mark is a victim to a form of the same
disease. The Czar Nicolas of Russia was
insane. The present empress of Russia is
said to be on the verge of the malady.—
Tne Duke d’Alencon of the Orleans house
of France is suffering from dementia.
duch are the beads that weare the
crowns in Europe. Power nor wealth
yields aoy exemption from pain and
trouble.—Sek ct ed.
Hon. G. Edwards Lester,
Late U. Si. Consul to Italy,
author of “The Glory and
Shame of England,” “America’s
Advancement,” etc., etc., etc.,
writes- as follows: .
New York, August 1,1886.1
- i „ •,( ,|J • 122 E. 27th st. J
Dr. J. C. Aver & Co., Lowell, Mass.,
Gentlemen: — A sense of gratitude
"and the desire to tender" a service to the ■
. public impel me to make the following
statements:
My "college career, at New Haven, was
interrupted by a severe cold which so
enfeebled me that, for ten years, I had a
hard struggle for life. Hemorrhage
from the bronchial passages was the
result of almost every fresh exposure.
For years I was under treatment of the
ablest practitioners without avail. At
last I learned of
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral,
which I used (moderately and in small
Closes) at the first recurrence of a cold
or any chest difficulty, and from which
I invariably found relief. This was
over 25 years ago. "With all sorts of
exposure, in all sorts of climates, I have
never, to this day, had any cold nor
any affection of the throat or lungs
which did not yield to Ater’s Cherry
Pectoral within 21 hours.
Of course I have never allowed my
self to be without this remedy in all my
voyages and travels. Under my own
observation, it has giren relief to vast
numbers of persons; while in acute cases
of pulmonary inflammation, such as
croup and diphtheria in children, life
has been preserved through its effects.
I recommend its use in light but fre
quent doses. Properly administered, in
accordance with your directions, it is
A Priceless Blessing
in any houses I speak earnestly because
I feel earnestly. I have known many
cases of apparently confirmed bronchitis
and cougn, with loss of voice, particu
larly among clergymen and other public
speakers, perfectly cured by this medi
cine. Faithfully yours,
C. EDWARDS LESTER.
It Stauus onlts Merits
The following, twenty well known
citizens of Athens are selected frommy
list of purchasers to whom I refer as to
the merits of the Lee Range. Consult
the references, see the Range and if you
want a first-class cooking apparatus
you are my customer.
IN THECIT C
Dr 8 C Benedict
F B Lucas
H N Taylor
Prof H C White
Prof E C Branson
Julius Cohen
I H Allen
J BToomer
Industrial Home
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral?
•Prepared bvDr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Maas.
Sold by aU Druggiata and Dealers in Medicin*
Ag j>t profits per month ;wiU prove it
ir pay fo fei. 1 n-w portraits just out
i $3 50 Sample sent free to all.
W. H, Cliidester & Soa,28 Bond 8t N.Y
AA M P01IWERS. M fl w ^A T . c ^
•y.aa&Bs-agagsiii
Ihair R balsan|
Cleanses ana beautifies the heir.
[Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fall* lo 'Restore Gray
■■air to fa Youthful Color.
asaTOmg
WHY THEY WERE POOR.
Two ragged young men with faces
pinched with hunger, stopped the oth
er evening before a stately £d welling in
one of our large cities. As the curtains
were not drawn, they could catch
glimpses of the bright interior,the walls
lined with hooks and pictures, and
prettily dressed children playing. A
grave old man, with white hair alight
ed from his carriage and entered the
house.
One of the men muttered a curse on
the “bloated aristocrats.” “Why
should they live on the fat of the land,
while you and I toil and starve I”
Now this was a hackneyed, popular
bit of pathos, which has been effective
since time began. The world invaria
bly besiows its sympathy upon the poor
man out in the cold and darkness, while
it is apt to suspect the rich man, simply
because he is rich, of being a selfish
tyrant.
The facts in this case were that the
owner of the mansion had earned his
fortune dollar by dollar by steady, hard
work. Now that he had earned it,
much of his time was given to consider
ing and relieving the wants of his poor
er brethren. He was sober, frugal and
temperate.
The men outside were lazy mechan
ics, who had chosen drink and gam
bling in pool rooms instead of work.
They had their reward in rags and star
vation.
The boys who read these lines will
soon take their place as citizens of a na
tion where the antagonism between the
poor and the rich is pushed by foolish
and vicious men to the point of actual
combat. Let them look at the matter
as it is, unmoved by false sentiment on
either side. A man who lives in a
palace is ]nbt necessarily a Dives for
getful of God; nor is the* beggar at his
gate sure of heaven merely because he
is a beggar. It was not his poverty
that carried Lazarus to Abraham’s bos
om.
In this country there are a great
many men like George Peabody, Asa
Packer, Stephen Girard, Johns Hop
kins and Isaiah "Williamson, who have
accumulated great wealth by hard,
honorable work and who have devoted
it to the help of humanity. And there
are countless poor men who owe their
poverty to idleness, dishonesty, or love
of liquor.
Learn to be just, boys, to the rich n?
to the poor, and you will he lacking in
charity to neither. If you have inher
ited wealth , remember how hard it is
for those who put tlwir “trust in richer
to enter the kingdom of God.” If you
are poor rememberjyou are no more
honest, estimable or deyout because
you are poor.
The man with five hundred dollars
a year may trust in his money and ex
aggerate its value as truly as the man
with millions. If you lie or cheat on
steal for a single dollar, it soils your
soul the same as if it were all the re-
amonds of Golconda.
CttteHEStER'S ENGLISH
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CMeh taler PWiwdiC^ai
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R1C1 BRAND
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Guaranteed the richest and purest milk man
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Children and invalids will thnvo wonderfully,
and families will find its use more economical
than o- dinary cows milk. See your grocer gives
yoS Rigi Sw iss Condensed Milk.
Import Agent, JAIMES «•. SJIITH,
New York and Chicago.
Thomas Fleming
A H Hodgson
Casper Morris
VV m Ware
M B McGinty
C D Flanigen
Mrs Blackwell
Mrs Olive
Mrs Lucy Mathews
E R Brumby
A D Mathews.
In the Country:
Dr Watkins, Sandy Cross .
W O Fluker, Union Point
Mr. Stovall, Oconee county
J W Arnold, W ilkes county
Andrew & Glenn, Oglethorpe county
J M Brisendim, “ *
James You ng, “ ' “
Hon Jas M Smith, “ “
M Mathews, •* “
James Hutcheson “ • “
TAHanie. ; “ “
J R Shields, Jackson county.
Woods Ashford,.Watkinsville
James FreemanA nti’och ' :
G A Potter, Supt. Ga. Factory.
Mr Card) Supt." Barnett Shoals.
In.addition, to the
$
I keep the best and largest selected stock
-OF-t
Stoves ’ aid Goods in
my Line
Of any^house in; tlris-ei ty., A call wi 11
; • convince. ■
E. JONES 209 Broad St
ATHENS NURSERY.
W. H. THURMOND, Proprietor
THE VERY BEST-
MU S I CAL
Instruction to be secured at the
METROPOLITAN CONSERVATORY
21 East 14th Street. New York City.
Book giving full particulars sent free. Can
enter at any time. Board fum shed in connec
tion with the.school. H. W. Greene,
General Manager.
ASTHMA CUSEd
SOHIFFU/IHirS ASTHMA CUREl
m ou uurauiv voocd a
Uie moot »koptlcal_ Price aOc.imd 81 .OQ, of 8
druggists or by miul Trial packageFrtt to siM
^beaDnRscmrniWLRnaLi|
MADE WITH BOILING WATER.
EPPS’S
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING,
COCOA
MADE WITH BOILING MILK.
and "Whiskey Hah*
Us cored at home with
out pain. Book of par-
sent FREE.
B. M.WO0LLE7. M.D.
“ Whitehall SL
TO IBI HEW
Buffering from the effects of youthful errors, early
decay, wasting weakness, lost manhood, etc., I will
Eend a valuable treaties fsealed) containing foil
psrtlcol&x* for home care, FREE of charge. A
splendid medical work; should be read by every
man who is nervous and debilitated. Address,
*Wf, F. C. FOWLER. BZoodns. Conn.
mg u nassivcu uu/vas
sal satisfaction in the
enre of Gonorrhoea and
Gleet. I presence It and
feel sale In recommend
lng It to all sufieren.
A. J. STOltEB, M.Dt>
Decatur, UL
PRICK, *1.03.
Sold br Dmtdjb-
CONSUMPTION CUBED.
An old physician, retired from practice, hav-
had placed in his hands by an East India
missionary the formula of * simple vegetable
remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of
Consumption, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma,
and all throat and Long Affections; also, a
positive and radical cure for Nervous Debility
and all Nervous Complaints, alter having test
ed its wonderful curative powers in thousands
of cases, has felt it his duty to make it known
to bis Buffering fellows. Actuated by this mo
tive, and a desire to relieve human suffering
will send'free of charge, to all who desire it
this recipe, in German, French or English'
with toll directions for preparing and using.—
Sent by mail by addressing with stamp, nam
ing this paper. "W. A. Notes, 143 Bower’s
Block, Rochester, N. Y.
dec - 3[-lyeow
Located on the Newton Bridge Road, on the
Gns Hull farm, one add a half uiiles from the
Court house. Fruit trees, Grape vines, Straw
berry plants, Asparagus roots, and a general
stock of snch things as are kept in a well con
ducted Nursery.
Trees and Plants well-grown, 1, 2 and 3
years old. The varieties are all tested and ar 3
adapted to this climate. Everything warranted
true to name.
5,000 1 Hick’s Celebrated Ever-bearing Mul
berry. Will make more hog and poultry food
than anything else that can be planted on the
same ground. Bears at an early age, and con
tinues bearing and ripening tor aboutthiee
months.
Now ready to receive and fill orders. Or
ders received by Talmadge & Brightwel) at
their Hardware store. Also by Shackleford A
Hattaway, Thom-is street
Descriptive and price-list furnished on ap
plication. All orders by mail promptly at
tended to. Packing and shipping done in the
best manner. Now is the time to order and
plant. Instructions furnished as to planting
and caring for orchards, vineyards etc,. etc.,
Nov28,Mw8m.
MONEY TO LOAN
s
AT SIX PER CENT.
ATLANTA TRUST BANKING "COT
C. C. Chandler, Agent,
Jefferson, Ga.
The firm of Mitchell andCbandler has
disolved by mutual consent. I will con
tinue to negotiate loans on farm mort
gages in , i« ; ».i» - %• of Jacks
Banks, Oconee, - Madison and other pla
ces by special contract. An extension
of five years .will be allowed, but the
borrower can pay back the money at
any time. Partial payments can also
be made at any time. Money can be
secured at very short notice. Don’t
fail to see ms before borrowing.
Yours Truly,
12-6-dw-6m C. C. Chandler.
Notice of Dissolution.
The partnership heretofore existing
under the name of Carlton & Steediy
has been dissolyed by mutual consent
IV. A. Carlton,
W. B. Steedly.
Athens, Ga, Dec. 19, 1889.
d2w-w4w
Wm. A. Weatherly, 1 Petition for Scire Fa-
VS. f cias.
an *i \ apppearing to the
William Safstrom. j *court by the entry of
the Sheriff that the c.efend*»ts in the above
stated case are not to be found in said county,
and it appearing by evidence satislactory to
the court that defendant C. a. Lampkiu re4djs
beyond the limits of the State to-v. it, in the
State of Texas and that defend-mt William Sat-
strom also resides beyond the limits of the
State, to wit, in the State of California.
It is therefore ordered by the coart that- said
defendants be and appear In person or -bv at
torney at the nextterm of the Superior court of
Clarke county to be held on the seconl Monday
in April 1890 then and there to answer and
make defense il’ any they have to pe titioners
said petition to revive judgment. Ordered fur
ther that this order be published once a month
forfour months in the Athens Banner, a nows-
paper publishpd in said county of Clarke and
that hereupon service of said petition to re
vive judgment shall he considered fully per-
BUMS
Dec 10 lm 4m. Attorneys ft* 1 Plaintiffs.
a true extract from the minute- oTiClarke Su
perior court, C D VINCENT, C. S.O.