Newspaper Page Text
The Augusta and Chattanooga is no
dead issue. Not much.
The people out in Texas have gone to
calling it free silver already.
That's a reckless way they have of
heading off criminals in Madagascar.
Tua flood came at last and it now
seems that the end is not yet.
The fruit trees are halting between
two opinions as it were.
The Georgia editors will soon get to
gether down at the Chautauqua in Al
bany.
The University gymnasium is quite
an important part of the State Univer
sity. Donations are in order.
The people of Augusta will keep lit
tle arks chained in their back yards we
reckon.
Rome, Augusta, Chattanooga and
Macon all bad bad results from the re
cent rains.
Some city fellow wants to make In
dian corn the national flower of America.
Better get something with more flower
to it.
Editobs Brown and Gantt, of the
Southern Alliance Farmer, are called
as one man Editor-Habky-and-Lakby
by the Macon Telegraph.
It verily seems that this is an age of
railroad building, and Athens gets all
of them that are built in the South At
lantic States just now.
McKinlbyism has had much to do
with the defeat of the republican party
in this country. The people can’t put
up with high tariff. Not muoh.
A DYINC PARTY.
The Republican party is dying
fast, and dying hard for it is dying
with a most, unquiet conscience.
The party took control of the
nation just a short while ago and
entered upon the guidance of this
country with every advantage.
There was no reason in the out-set
why the country should not contin
ued to prosper as no nation on earth
has prospered. Next Cleveland
turned over the reins of government
to Harrison at a period when the
United States were fairly booming
on to the highest pinnacle of nation
al prosperity. The treasury was
full to over-flowing and the money
was'being spent judiciously for the
country the whole country.
But the Republicans have ruined
that picture of promise and have
retarded the -growth of the country
centuries. Tha Treasury is empty;
the nation is gravely in debt. Cor
rupt policy of an infamous gang of
political tricksters has been the
keenest blow this country has had to
suffer since the days of war and the
only good that has come of the
Republican administration is that it
has killed the Republican party.
Theg. o. p. is going to its gravel
at last and for this the United States
should feel thankful to be sure.
Democracy has a paved way from
this day on, and will rule the roost
at Washington next time.
Allianceman Gordon ought to do
some good work in the Senate now.
He has put on the whole armour and
ought to keep the faith.
A telegram to the New York Sun
says i is certain that Alliancemam
Gordon will be the next President of
the Alliance. What strange things one
sees in print.
An exchange remarks: As the copy
right bill was signed with a quill diawn
from the tail of an eagle, it is perfectly
safe to say that the noble bird screamed
on the occasion.
That air-ship scheme seems to be an
utter failure. The stockholders who
put $2,000,000 ought to be completely
convinced that all the fools are not dead
yet.
The news from Madagascar, where
the governor of Belanona is reported to
have chopped off 278 heads in a single
day,seems to show that they need some
civil service reform in that country >
too.
McKinley will run for governor of
Ohio to pave his way for the presiden
tial nomination, but be will find both in
the race for governor and the race for
the presidential nomination that he
ain’t in it.
A Washington correspondent says
that when Speaker Reed stepped down
from the chair and shook bands with
friends he wept like a child, and tears
choked his voice when he undertook to
swledge their kind allusions to
New York Herald.
Oh! Mama what have I done?
— *•-.♦
Speaking of the extravagance of the
lata congress and exchange says
Contrary to the expectation that has
been entertained in some quarters, the
stock market has failed to assume a bet
ter tone on the adjournment of Con
gress. This is about the only place
where a sigh of relief has not been
heard.
The increase of the white population
of the South in the last decade has been
about21.B per cent., the colored about
13.4 per cent., but in the North and
West-the-gain of the whites has been
about 27 per sent., while the gain of the
colored may bo shown to be in the
neighborhood of 190 per sent.
Crisp will get nothing more than he call the celebration but wuh many
eminently deserves. His conduct caressing regrets because they are
not bovs again to linger over such
pleasures yet once more. It pledges
a deeper interest in the student s
Alma Mater and makes him love the
shades of her stalwart oaks more
fondly.
There is a strange medley of com
edy and tragedy, of mirth and sad
ness in the celebration of a class tree
planting. The poem that is lead so
impressively, the song that is sung
with such happy, mellow concord of
voices, the prayers that go up from
Chancellor and student alike, and
the fun that goes around the circle
when the spade is passed to each
Senior to throw iu his spadeful of
earth—all combine to make the hour
a memorable one for the young men
May the custom never die.
in the last congress has shown his
qualifications for the office, and his
untiring work for the cause of the
Democracy of the country has made
him easily the leader of the party in
the bouse.
The Banner hopes to see Mr t
Crisp continue to lead and will re
joice without restraiet to see him
made sneaker.
PROGRESS OP THE NAVY-
The Savannah Morning News has
the following to say with reference
to oar navy that is to be :
Those who are entrusted with the
building of our navy say that in
point of effectiveness it will be the
best navy in the world within the
next half dozen years. It is only
natural that they should be enthu«
siastic about it. It is to be hoped,
however, that they know what they
are saying—that they are making
no mistakes. They are certainly
spending a great deal of money. The
naval appropriation bill, passed just
before congress adjourned, carries
$18,000,000 for constructing ships.
It cannot be complained that con
gress has not been liberal in the use
of money.
Work has just been began on three
great battle ships, and it is asserted
that they will be superior to anything
in the English Navy. They will not
be so large as the battle ships Ian nch
ed in England the other day in the
presence of the queen, but they will
carry more effective guns. And they
will be more in harmony with mod
ern .improvements.
One respect in which our ships
will be superior to those in Europe
is in the direction of armor plates,
A process has been discovered re
cently for hardening the on ter sur
face of a plate to the depth of a cou
ple of inches. One hundred pound
steel projectiles which pierce the or
dinary plate are broken into frag'
ments when they strike this plate.
And the plate is to be still further
improved—at least so the naval con-
structors say. And protected by
these improved plates our ships will
be able to defy those of any other
nation. .That is the claim made for
them, and If it is well founded we
shall soon hear nothing more about
the danger to be apprehended from
Chile's big iron-clad, which will be
a back number.
SULLIVAN AS AN ACTOR-
One of the New Orleans papers
gives a leading editorial to John L.
Sullivan, the actor. It tells in an
interesting way how the big fellow
captured the people of the Crescent
City on the stage just as he bad done
in the ring a year ago with Jake
Eilrain. It says:
‘•There was something kingly in
Snllivan’s demeanor as he strode upt.
the stage swinging bis arms
akimbo and swaggering, every look
and motion plainly saying ‘Yer bet
cber life I’m here and dat I’m de
only John L. and dontcher forget
it.’ His attitudes while graceful
were arena-like and whether shaking
hands or waving some one a fond
farewell, he impressed the minds
of the audience with the fact that he
was sparring for an opening in order
to let-fly a strigbt ‘right hander’ or
to get in a swift ’upper cut,’ and
even when he clasped the hands of
bis stage mother with both of his
own, his left was advanced, and his
right guarding his breast in sack a
wav as to convey the idea that be
suspected her of aq intention to land
asockdoliger on his stomach, and
did not intend to be canght napping,
When on the stage and in repose,
however, his favorite altitude was to
stand with his right leg describing
an arc, bis right hand resting on his
hip and his left swinging loosely by
his side, while a slight sneer chased
.itself across bis capacious month
This is exactly the way Mr. Sullivan
appears in the prize ring when he
has knocked down bis adversary and
is waiting for him to get up so that
he can smash him again,' and as a
matter of coarse the other actors feel
that they are lost sight of altogether,
“The audience was exceedingly
kind to Mr. Sullivan, and despite
the fact that when he moved across
the stage he did so as though he
were responding to the call of ‘time, :
the crowds in the galleries merely
shouted: ‘Say John, get on to yer
walk, will yer,’ bat such gibes the
big fellow bore with apparent good
nature.”
And Dallas, Texas, is having the
same trouble with Harbison that Ath-
Is having. The News says: It
appears that the appropriation for the
public building of Dallas must be cut
down $00,000 just to please a sqeamisb
president who admits that his former
veto of the measure was the result of
ignorance.
Tom B. Reed made a speech at Del-
monico’s the other night in which he
■aid that Americau people had seen a
congress with sufficient will and power
to do wbat it wanted to and let the credit
or Marne go'to whom it was due. That’s
not the kind of congress we -want. We
want a congress that will do right.
Georgia’s increase in population by
the late census ' was 19 per - cent.
The Southern States were as follows:
Florida, 44.7 per cent; Arkansas,
41.8 per cent; Texas, 39.0 per cent;
Georgia, 19 0 per cent; Louisiana, 19.0
per cent; Alabama, 18.9 per cent;
South Carolina, 18.0 per cent; North
Carolina, 13.7 per cent; Mississippi,
Tennessee, 13.1 per cent; Ken-
.8.8 por cent; Virginia, 8.1 per
cent
■ 40
Athens could not get the federal
court wnieh she wanted, but retains a
Arm grip on.her contempt for Wana-
xnaker. Perhaps the two things were
incompatible while the pious W. re
mains a member of the cabinet, but
Athens is to bo congratulated on hav
ing the best of the two.—Macon Tele
graph. ’ -~ T
You are right. The contempt that
Athens has lor such as Harrison and
his henchmen is a finer feather in her
•ap than a towering Federal building
Weald be.
CRISP A UTTLE AHEAD.
It is generally known already that
It will be Speaker Crisp in the next
Honse. The campaign has been
opened and Crisp is leading the four
candidates fairly from the start The
Washington correspondent of the
Boston Herald prints the following:
Senators Peffer, Kyle and Irby,
Representative Jerry Simpson and
other leas well known Indecrats and
grangers who began to draw their
$416 a month to-day, propose to re
main for some time in Washington.
It is said there is to be a more or
less formal gathering of the Farmers’
Alliance pen elected to the 52d con
gress here this Bpring to plan for the
contest which ihey desire to exercise
in the organization o f the next House.
They .may net all be here at the
same time,butbetween now and Jane
they are all to be heard from, if, in*
deed, they do not appear here in
person. They piopoBe to have a large
paitin naming the speaker and the
majority of the committees, and will
correspond with all the candidates
in turn to get their views and pro
mises.
The speakership campaign has al,
ready began, and will ran all spring,
summer and fall, from present ap
pearances. Crisp,Mills, Bynum and
Springer are now the only avowed
candidates. Orisp and Mills are
about even in the race, with Crisp a
little ahead.
The other capers North and Sonth
are giving similar reports of the sit
uation in Washington, and it seems
surely very probable indeed, that
oar Mr. Crisp will be the speaker of
the bouse for the fifty-second con
gress.
This is as it should be. Mr.
LET IT STOP.
Tojndge from the previous way
some papers have of asking Col. L.
F. Livingston, President of the State
Alliance to step down and out, it
would seem that they better know
how to manage the affairs of the
State Alliance than the Alliance
itself.
But, these papers that seem so for
ward in this matter are the very ones
that have always attempted to cry
down the Alliance and hiss it out of
existence. There is no ground for
this effort to create a Jireach in the
State Alliance. If there is ever to
be any charges brought against pres
ident Livingston, they can only be
brought before the Executive Com
mittee of the State Alliance or the
Convention. When this is done, and
some action is taken by the Alliance
itself, the newspapers will have moie
right to their attacks on Col. Liv
ingston, or if he is acquitted of the
chargee these same papers will sie
that they had been laihcr too pre
vious.
Now The Banner is no Living
ston paper any more than it is a
Noriheu paper. It is a paper for no
oue mau in the Alliance, but hopes
to be of service to the eutire order.
For this reason we have never fell
called upon to interfere in a matter
that must be settled by the Alliance
itself aud cannot be settled by any
body else for tin in.
We conceive that the farmers have
the wisdom to take care of their own
affairs and we beiieve they will do ii.
Let all thi9 interference cease. Let
things quietly take their course,
and let the Alliance settle this ques
tion alone.
amazed at his moderation.
Reed’s Anecdote Illustrating How H«>
Felt on Giving up Power.
Special by News Telegram A'soclatton.
Washington, March 10 —Strange as
it may seem, S eaker Reed had some
very » arm per.-onal friend3 ou the Dem
ocratic side of the last House. There
were several with whom he loved to lin
ger and exchange jokes as much as with
any of his brethren on the Republican
side. And he has the greatest respect
for some of those Democrats with
whom he has the hardest and most acri
monious contests both in committee
rooms and in the hall of the House. He
is not on speaking terms with Mr- Miffs,
of Texas, but only the other day he ex
pressed the highest regard for the flery
“Mr. Mills,” he said, “is a hard
fighter, I sometimes think he shows
more fight than i9 reasonable or fair,
but he is a straightforward, honest,
manly man. I never knew him to tell
a lie or ao a mean act.”
Representative Crain, of Texas, is a
personal favorite with Mr. Reed. The
relations between the two are so friendly
and intimate that Mr. Crain bad no
hesitation in stepping up to the ex-
Speaker alter the final adjournment of
the House last Wednesday and inquir
ing wi.at apology he bad to make for
his highhanded treatmentof the House
Mr. Reed paused, smiled, searched the
ceiling a few seconds for an answer and
then said:
“My dear boy, you puzzle me. Your
question makes me feel pretty much as
Lord Clive, according to his own ex
pression, might have felt when he was
under examination by a committee of
the British Parliament on a charge of
having acted in too high-handed
manner in India.
“You remember that as commander
of the British forces iu India Clive was
acensed of accepting for his own benefit
preseuts from the native princes whom
be had subdued, aud of being unkind in
his treatment of some of those native
princes. Clive thought of the condition
in which be found British interests in
India and the condition in which he
left them. He recalled the horrors of
the black hole of Calcutta and the fact
tliat there was not a British force within
15,000 miles to avenge that atrocity.
Moreove-, he remembered that the Brit
ish had been deprived of nearly all the
foothold they had in India and were on
the point of being driven bag and bag
gage into the Indian Ocean when he or
ganized, almost created, a small
force with which be turned the tide on
the natives and established the
British Empire in India. Then Ue re
membered how complete his victories
were, wbat vast opportunities he had
for revenge, how thoroughly he had the
barbarians iu his power and how little
mercy the barbarians deserved. When
lie thought of the opportunities be had
and of how little advantage he took of
them, of the temptations that beset
him and of how little he yielded, his
i idignalion at the paltry charges pre-
s mted against him boiled over and he
could not help exclaiming:
“ ‘My, God, gentlemen! I’m amazed
at my own moderation.’
“And you will not forget,” Mr. Reed
added suggestively, “that the house of
commons, as a result of that investiga
tion, passed unanimously a resolution
declaring that Lord Clive had rendered
f reat and meritorious services to Eng-
.ud and to Inijia.”
ABOUTSHERMAN
. A Car Load of Upright Pianos
In Fancy Cases of Mahogany. Antiqne Oak and French Burl tv i
will soon arrive for the Spring »rade. Hold your orders a few da s The fluent “"I
tore Moulding ever brought to the city will be here in a few days. Keep an eye 0 n
window. S«e wbat Madame Sosnowski, former Principal of Lucy Cobb Institu e no.****
Home School, says good for us: „ .. . . w#f t»i
To Hop* Hal* Music House : -We h*ve been using your Mathusbek Pianos in on „ u ,
or a number of veers, and consider them superior in tone to all others. W e have hie
use tor 8 jears, without ever being tuned or repaired. We would recommend mv
mg a first-class Piano to buy the Mathusbek upright. C. SOrtNOWSK? *'•*■
February 7tb, 1891. Home School, Ath^,’ r
yjf-Qld Pianos taken in exchange at reasonable prices. ' *•
HOPE HALE’S MUSIC HOUSE, Athens, Qj.
Next to Exchange Bank—Young Men’* Cb •
March lO-dJU*
UfBe sure you find the right honse.
Association New Building.
ELECTRIC LIGHTS IN JERUSALEM.
Quite a great sensation has been
stirred ap in Jerusalem by the intro
duction of electric lights. A trav
eler who has recently returned from
the Holy Land talks interestingly
about the amazement that has been
caused by these lights.
The electric light plant is used in
a large floor mill adjoining the sap
posed site of Calvary and close to
the Damascus gate. If the Arabs
and Jews were filled with wonder by
the flaming gas jets in 1887, they are
confounded when they see the light
of electricity in 1891. Many of them
are so alarmed that they hardly dare
to look at it, and the Mohammedans
call npon the Prophet for safety
They ask wbat it is, where it comes
from and how the magicians make
it. When told that it is the same as
lightning, they become still more
mystified, ask bow it can be caught
or held and take care to keep at a
respectful distance from it. “ Per
haps,” says the traveler, “ the day is
not far distant when the streets and
houses of Jerusalem may be lighted
by electricity, and even when Pales
tine, long desolate, shall blossom
like the rose.”
It now seems that Jerusalem is go
ing to become a city of modern im
provement just like the American
cities. Railroads are being built to
her historic gates, real estate specu
lators are going to the old town
banging out their cards, and every
thing is beginning to look as though
this is yet to become a boomed city.
It bas been said with truth that
in course of time the children of Is
rael, who once held Palestine, and
who yet chant the songs of Jerusalem
all over the world, may be induced
to try the prosperity of the Holy
Land.
THE BOYS OF’91.
Long live the boys who planted
the tree of ’91 npon the cherished
University campus yesterday !
This is a pretty custom of the co’-
lege boys at the University of Geor
gia and is one that should be forever
kept ap with the spirit that has
marked the planting of the trees in
past years. It is a little incident
that is remembered long afterwards
by tbs students when they have
grown to be men filling the world’s
varied a vocations, and they never re-
Catarrh Can’t be Cured
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they
cannot reach the seat of the disease.
Catarrh is a blood or constitutional
disease and in order to cure it you have
to take internal remedies. Hall’s Ca
tarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts
directly on the blood and mucous
rurfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is no
quack mediciue, It was prescribed by
one of the best physicians in this conn-
try for years, and is a regular prescrip
tion. It is composed of the best touics
known, combined with the best blood
purifier--, acting direcrly onthemuco. s
surfaces. The perfect combination
of the two ingredients is what produces
such wonderful results in curing ca
tarrh. Send for testimonials free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Tole
do, O. Sold by bruggists, price 75c.
THE ELECTRIC LINE.
Work Is Progressing * Finely and the
Cars Will Soon Arrive.
The electric line is soon to be finished.
Mr. Vops, the enterprising manager
of the railway, says the work is going
to be pushed through to a speedy com
pletion, and a large number of bands
will soon be put to work grading the
joad bed ou the main line.
The Rock College branch is already
completed and the track laid. It will
only lequire a week or ten days to put
down tae entire track and then the
wires will be strung overhead, by Mr.
Abell who is here to superintend the
work of putting down the electrical ap
pliances of the road.
The new cars have been ordered, and
will soon arrive.
Everything is fairly humming up and
down the liue, and the magic current
will within a few weeks be carrying the
people back and forth between Cobb-
hara and the heart of the city.
Sweet Gum and Mullein is a sure
cure for coughs, colds, croup, con
sumption and all throat and lung- dis
eases.
AN AGED CHRISTIAN
Falls Sweetly to Sleep In Jesus Yes
terday. , m
Sunday night at about one o’clock,
Miss Martha A. Wilson breathed her
l»8t, at the home of her brother, Mr. J.
Frank Wilson, on Baldwin street.
Miss Wilson was a thoroughly conse
crated Christian lady, and has for a
number of years been a devoted member
of the Presbyterian church of this city.
She having been a faithful follower of
the Master was ready when the sum
mons came.
Miss Wilson ha* by her amiable and
gentle Christian manner won for herself
scores of friends whose hearts are pained
with sorrow to learn of her death.
She leaves a brother and sister to
mourn their loss, and we extend to them
our sincere sympathies in this sore hour
of trial.
The funeral will take place this
morning at 10 o’clock, conducted by
Rev. C. W. Lane.
THE MATTER SOLVED!
Mr. Jones:—Say, Smith, why is it that ou do all your trading -» tK
New Book Store ? *
Mr. Smith :—The idea of your asking such a thing ! If you would tak
the trouble as I did, and go there and buy your goods at the prices the
offer to the trade, you would not ask that question again. Don’t you k D( /
they came here to give the good people of Athens a chance to bay *
prices of Atlanta and other large cities ? w
Mr. Jones :—Is that so ? Well, they will have my trade in future.
THE J^CKSOIST & BTJRKE CO
' THE NEW BOOK STORE.
Ill BROAD STRERI ATHENS, QL
Imperial Life Insurance n ‘"
^ —OF—
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The most desirable form of Life Insurance ever offered bv any company.
Assets in proportion to Liubili ies larger than any company doing business In the Ptitej
The following statement of the proportion of Assets to Liabilities Is taken from the ''gr*!.
tor” 1889.
Cash Assets to each $100.00 of Liabilities, 4 per cent, valuation.
IMPERIAL, OP DETROIT MICHIGAN
EQUITABLE,OFNEW YORK $,£•
NEW YOnK LIFE, OFNEW YORK |„72
NORTH WESTER.V. OP WISCONSIN |i,-S
MUTUAL, OF 'EW YORE
Rates lower than any responsible company. No p:licy written for over tlO.OOO.
No vtso ary •‘estimated*’ value*.
Guaranteed cash values inserted in policy.
OCAL BOARD.
A. H. HODGSON, OEO. T. HODGSON,
JAS. C BLOOMFIELD, M. D. J. W. HINTON,
C. A. ROWL'ND, JNO 1). MOSS,
.J O. uKIFFETH, W. M ROWLAND,
u-E-MaRUN, saml Raphael,
FEED. S. MORTON.
MOSS A ROWLAND, Agents.
A. A. 8ELDEN, Special Agent.
FRANK R. LOGAN, General ’gent, Atlanta, Ga.
What a Veteran Thinks About Him.
Gen. Win. T. Sherman is dead!
This news when heralded abroad
doubtless was heard by many with re
gret and sorrow, but we hardly think
that it elicited one ioto of sorrow from
the many in the south who so well re
member his brutality and devastation
during the war.
Now that he has been called to the
“Bar of Retribution,” it is best, per
haps to let his deeds go unnoticed and
hope that he repented of his black life
before he tried eternity.
By northern papers, however, he is
being loudly praised for his “noble
character” and courage in war. He is
even being placed alongside of our Lee
and Jackson who had not one bit of his
selfish aud brutish disposition in their
nature. Therefore we think it but
right anil justice to show up another
and quite a more prominent phase of
his character and remind the peo
ple, through whose country he laid his
“March to the Sea” that he is not what
they represent him to be.
Everyone who knows anything of the
war either from experience or history
will sustain the fact that he had as lit
tle mercy and feeling for those who
came in his way as the Cannibals have
for an alien victim. His only object
was to clear his way of everything that
would in the least impede his march.
He killed old men, women and little
children without a thought of their
helpless condition. He burned our
homes and citieB, be left nothing but
ashes to mark the places that had been
the habitation of our people. He
aroused the negroes to sura an extent
that they were equal to any of his fiend*
ish designs.
Would a civilized man call that noble
even in war? * Would he call it
courage? Do these things resembla
the noble character of either Lee or
Jackson. They were of entirely differ
ent caste, as different as dav is from
night.
His “march to the sea” stands out
today in American history a disgrace to
civilization. It has never been equaled
even in the early days of our country.
It marked perhaps the bloodiest and
most effectual epoch of the war.
His death now marks the removal of
a man whose very name has been, and
will ever be repulsive to the loyal son
of the confederacy especially so to
those whose forefathers suffered at his
hands, as did most of the people of
South Carolina and Georgia.
Soon his life will be on the literary
market. Already we have noticed that
it is in the press and we sincerely hu
that none will encourage its sale by
purchasing one.
Let our libraries be filled with deeds
of noble men whose lives are a bene
diction to our country not by the life
of a man who was our bitterest enemy
and_ who retained the same animosity
until his dying hour.
_ Old Veteran.
Lowndesuille, S. C., M’oh. 7,1891.
HcElrce’s Wine of Cardai for weak Nerves
The Price Will go Up.—Cotton men
say if the farmers will let it be known
that they are going to plaut a small
crop this year dotton will go up in price
at oace. *'
How to Cure AH Skin Diseases.
Simply apply ”8WAYlfB’8 OINTMENT.” No
Internal medicine required, cure* tetter, ecze
ma, itcli eruptions on the face, hands, nose etc.
leaving the "tin clear, white and healthy. Its
grea- healing and dilative powers are posseted
by no .other remedy. Ask vour druggist for
SwayAe’s Ointment.
Try BLACK-DRAUGHT tea for Dyspejnfa,
They’ll Raise tub Roof.—There is
a great treat in store for the music lov
ing people of Athens just after Easter
wher. the University Glee Club will
tickle their banjos and guitars for the
public.
The G., C. & N. Proceeds.—Work
on the trestle down at the G , C. & N
being through very hard rock
Will rr Snow?—The weitber map
gives the prediction that snow will fill
in the southern states within ifce nex t
twenty-four hours. Ic is not known
whether Athens will be in it or not.
for Infants and Children*
* ‘ Castori • is so well adapted to children that
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Archer, M. E.,
IU So. Oxford SL, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Cantor! a cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promote* &
Without injurious medlcatioe.
Ta* Centaur Company, 77 Murray Street, 1. T.
Agents for
The Drader Spade Harrows;
Clark Cutaway “
“ White Chipper Plows ;
“ Hampton 1 and *2 Horse
Plows.
13 East Clayton St.. Athens, Ga.
fflSSi
relGau^. e'jQve r£D.Q c
if* 4?.
rmM
IF YOU WANT THE BEST,
BUY THE
®AKJ§E CHARTER OAK,
WITH THE
'Wire Gauze Oven Doors.,
Fori SaleZZ bv
JULIUS DORNBLATT & CO., Agents,
BROAD STREET, ATHENS, GA.
al—1
r ; ’ j ;
FINE SHOW CASES.
49-Ask for catalogue.
TERRY M’F’G CO., Nashville, Tenn.
■ -f
Inter-State Syndicate!
For Georgia, the Garolinas, Ala
bama and Florida.
City Real Estate, Farming Lands,
Timber Lands and Mineral Lands,
Factory Sites and Water Powers.
15?” For sale, purchase or exchange, on
commission or option.
Immigration Agency and Labor Bureau.
For further information, address,
EDWIN D. NEWTON,
Feb 17—d3wiw4t. Athens, Georgia.
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all F** -
cut business conducted for Moderate Fees.
® Our Office Is Opposite U.S. Patent Office,
and we can eecr.ro patent In less time than tnote
remote from Washington. .
Send model, drawing or photo., with d**criPl
tton. We advise, if patentable or wit, free®'
chargo. Our fee not doe till patent la •*«£•*'■
A Pamphtt, “How to Obtain Patents.”
tunics of nctur.l client? htyoiir Stutc, county,or
town. 6ent free. Address,
C.A.SNOW&CO.
Opposite Patent Office, Washtofioa, 0. C.
for Pitcher** Oastoria.^