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The Jackson Hera ld.
ROBERT S. HOWARD, Editor.
JEFFERSON, CTFN.
limUl 9IORAIAG, May l. ihn|.
Dr. Tanner, the faster, is out West selling
1o dentists a machine for administering
laughing gas.
■3 O O
In a city of Mexico bookstore, a Yankee
tourist found a Spanish history of the United
States, published at Madrid. It contained
500 pages of mixed and curious information.
Lincoln's emancipation proclamation was
unadc to relate to Indians instead of negroes.
An incidcntof Indian bravery in King Philip’s
time was located in the war of the rebellion.
The characters in “ Mrs. llcnriquetes Decker
Stowe’s” “ Uncle Tom’s Cabin” were given
ns historical. The pictures were as queer as
the text. Lincoln was shown with a Cabinet
partly composed of Indian chiefs. New York
was a small, straggling village, and Wash
ington had a monarch’s crown on his head.
The Czar is doing a good deal to conciliate
4iis subjects. lie has just issued an ukase
that will bring joy to the peasants who bought
lands from the government soon after the
order of emancipation. The annual pay
ments that they could not meet have been
remitted, and the large land holders have
l>een notified to make their tenants proprietors
'before 1883. This will please the agricultural
Class, but the strongholds of the nihilists arc
in the towns among the mercantile and pro
fessional people and artisans. Nothing short
of a Russian parliament, a free press, and a
responsible ministry will satisfy them, and
these the Czar seems to consider inconsistent
with the autocracy that be is tremblingly
trying to preserve.
The import of opium in 1876 into the
United States showed an increase of 70 per
cent, over that of 1807; but the import of
1880 was 140 per cent, in excess of that of
1876. Four years ago the American opium
eaters were believed to number 200.000, but
since then their numbers have doubled, and
it is now calculated that they consume 5,000,-
OOOgrains per annum. East of the Mississippi
ithe Chinese have almost a monopoly of the
•drug, but in Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and
Kentucky there are said to be three opium
•eaters to every 100 of population. Physicians,
druggists, and traders all report that the use
of opium is alarmingly on the increase, and
they attribute it chiefly not to the disuse of
intoxicants, but to the increased use of the
hypodermic syringe for injections of morphia-
It is noteworthy that women supply four
fifths of the victims of opium.
The Rev. Father Maloney was deposed
from the Roman Catholic priesthood at Erie,
Fa., twelve years ago. lie went to Kurope,
and only latel} r returned to his old home.
Ellen McQuillian apparently died soon after.
ward at Summit. Maloney commanded her
to rise from the dead, and she immediately
opened heresies. This was accepted by many
in that region as a miracle, and the alleged
cure of several cripples increased the ex
priest’s fame. The Bishop of Erie discounte
nanced these tilings, but without effect.
Maloney made arrangements to open a big
boarding house for patients, in order to se
cure all the profit possible out of the business ;
but a detective, after gaining his confidence
now exposes him as an impostor, and accuses
him of forging certificates of cures. It is said
that he was making S2OO a week.
The new English Copyright bill, just in
troduced, gives a copyright to newspapers in
respect of “ compositions of a literary
character,” and in general to any creative
work of the chisel, the brush, or the pen. In
the case of written works, the author or
publisher shall deliver a copy to the registra
tion office, to be hereafter established, fill up
the necessary particulars and make due at
testation, pay a shilling fee, and obtain his
certificate. There is to be no copyright on
sermons or lectures, which seems hard, seeing
that some of the ablest works now employed
in university education were originally
delivered as class lectures to students. The
copyright, after registration, is to endure for
fifty years in the case of all productions of
the pen, and in the case of other works for
the life of the author and thirty years after.
Moderate quotations, with an acknowledg
ment of the source, shall not be an infringe
ment. Breaches of the act are to bo remedied
by an action for damages and by summary
power to enter and search for and seize and
confiscate to the owner of the copj-ri<dit all
reproductions of his work, and to obtain a fine
of £5. Foreigners may obtain the same rights
aa British subjects.
Politics and the Country.
W e agree with our St. Louis contemporary,
the Republican, that it is a cause of great
congratulation that while the political caldron
is boiling furiously in Washington, and while
a resident of that city during the past two
months might probably imagine that the world
wasbeing turned upside down, the excitement
does not extend to the country at large. This
latter, it remarks truthfully, is utterly unaf
fected in its real life by the complicated
troubles in the capital—the mortal quarrel
between the President and Senator Conkling,
the stubborn fight in the Senate between the
Democrats and Republicans, the Malione
bargain and the delayed confirmations. Of
course there is a lively interest felt in New
York over the Garfield-Conkling rupture, and
in Virginia about the outcome of Mahonc’s
tangential experiment; but the country is at
perfect repose. It does not feel a single
emotion of apprehension. It docs not give
the faintest response to the uproar at Wash
ington. It is busy, buying, selling, building,
plowing, planting, traveling, conceiving new
enterprises, organizing new schemes of pro
duction and interchange, substituting short
cuts for long routes, reaching the Pacific at
new points, piercing Mexico b)’ anticipation
and spreading the magical influence of- modern
forces over regions hitherto left to solitude
and inaction.
The country, it reasons further, indeed
feels and exhibits a thrill of animation and
even of excitement, but it docs not come
from the wrangling at the capital; it is the
thrill of anew prosperity. There is improve
ment perceptible everywhere. The old causes,
real and artificial, of discord between the
North and South have utterly disappeared.
The sections are satisfied with one another.
The concord between the States is becoming
more cordial every day. All sections of the
land arc so prosperous that each imagines its
prosperity to be special and exceptional. The
country is full of money and rapidly emerging
from debts that have burdened it for sixteen
3 ears. Our exports are exceeding our im
ports at the rate of $235,000,000 a year, and
we have scarcely disposed of one enormous
crop of grain and cotton before anew one
equally enormous is promised in the ocean of
emerald now spreading over twenty-five
degrees of latitude. A people are never so
happy and contented as when so absorbed in
their pursuits as to forget politics—and that
is precisely the condition of our people at this
time. This is indeed a gratifying picture,
and the more gratifying because it is true.
We are also specially glad to believe that the
South, of all sections of the country, is pre-
in the happy condition above
described. The people are beginning to
realize that politics perse is a very unprofit
able employment, and that with wealth secured
public influence will follow naturally. So the}’
are bending their energies towards geting
rich, and what is more are in a fair way of
accomplishing their object.— Savannah News.
Ochoney Billy Mahone I
When Senator Hill, in his phenomenal
speech, uncovered General Mahone, he began
a drama that has been glorious for the De
mocracy everywhere. The party backbone
was stiffened and its soul electrified. It was
inspired to make a history for itself that no
one believed it capable of. From that first
reconnoissance in force to the surrender of
Dawes and the war between Conkling and
Garfield, Democrats everywhere have been
proud of their party allegiance and its Sena
tors, and are specially grateful to the noble
and brilliant genius who tore aside the mask
from Malione and gave the signal for the
charge along the whole line that has demora
lized and routed the Republican array. With
Mahone made a necessary and component
part of the Radical machine, the wedge to
split, not the South, but the Republican party,
was driven in by Benjamin 11. Hill, and the
blows that followed were of such sturdiness
as to divide the tough old log as it had never
been severed before. The Mahone alliance,
thus boldly and magnificently fastened upon
the Republican Senators, has been poison to
the very veins of those who hoped to be made
healthily solid by it. Under the wreck lies
little Billy Mahone. Who will dig him out ?
Cockling ? That depends upon what side
Mr. Mahone espouses. Garfield ? That de
pends upon a similar contingency. Was ever
a poor creature so bedeviled by fate and his
own treachery ? lie bet the Old Boy his
head, and the Old Boy has won it. When
last heard from, Mahone and Riddleberger
were being considered by the committee of
safety much as a dry-nurse coddles a sickly
infant: for the committee is also placed in
the uncomfortable position of selecting Cock
ling or Garfield for its executioner.
The Republican party’s experience with
General Mahone is about similar to that of
the owners of the railroads once bankrupted
by the Readjuster. With this difference,
however : Mahone beggared the roads, but
enriched himself. He has now smirched and
corrupted and split the Republican party, but
retires or remains with no reward to speak of
or in sight. In uncovering Mahone, Senator
Ilill builded more wisely and grandly than
lie suspected. What the little General will
now do is a matter of some curiosity. What
the Republicans will do with him i3 another
interesting problem. They fear to keep him
in or kick him out. They have been Muhoned
and do not know how to cure the distemper
without killing themselves. In compelling
Mahone to cleave to his fleshpots, Mr. Hill
has made the Republican party the most
odious and distracted organization beneath
the planet. —Chronicle & Constitutionalist .
The fulfilment of Zadkiel’s prophecy that
the Czar would be slain in March has given
a wonderful impulse to the sale of the almanac.
Liberal Party in the South.
Northern Republicans profess to be much j
exercised over the question of breaking down |
the solid South. They represent that such
solidarity represents proscription and
trogression, and although the facts and
figures of the last census staggered all their
predictions in regard to the mildew and
material stagnation in Southern States, they
still affect, to be anxious to break up Demo
cratic solidity here. To Ihe present Adminis
tration, two plans have been proposed. The
one was crested with Mahone and liiddle
berger, and has petered out in the camp which
raised its standard. Repudiation and In
dependentism have been cast aside in this plan
of regeneration, and the President has ex
pressed himself in favor of distributing offices
in the South among straight out but respect
able Republicans. This seems to be the wisest
course, from the Administration standpoint;
but ever}’ da}’ it is becoming more apparent
that a Liberal party is being built up in the
South —not through Republicanism, but in
spite of it. The Republican part}’ is founded
in sectionalism and nurtured in hate. It has
been an effective engine ofwar.butan unsatis
factory element in peace. Indeed, had not
the business interests of the country taken
the work of conciliation in charge, that work
had -never been performed. Had Moses
Taylor listened to Northern campaign journals
and Northern politicians he would never have
extended his railway possessions, already
heavy, in the State of Georgia. Had Samuel
Keyser complete confidence in Dawes and
Frye, he would have withdrawn all stock in
Sibley Mills, instead of increasing, almost
doubling, his subscription. Ilad Eastern
capitalists and Western kings faith in the
political party which they pretend to follow,
Augusta’s railroads and Augusta’s factories
would not have witnessed the resumption of
confidence which has made the past year,
financially and industrially, so memorable in
the city’s history. What party hate and politi
cal agitation have retarded, the business
interest of the Nation has satisfactorily ad
justed. The South is too fertile and prosper
ous for capital to remain away from lier fields
and enterprises. It will be useless for politi
cians to preach proscription and hatred in
the next campaign against that section
j where millions of Northern capital have been
j sown. For every Conkling waving the spectre
of the bloody shirt and depicting the horrors
of Gleufruin,there will be a Jay Gould in New
Y ork, with Ins two million five hundred
thousand of Texas and Southern Pacific to
refute argument so foul. For every Cameron
in Pennsylvania capering with the ghosts of
sectionalism and intolerance, there.will a Tom
Scott and a Clyde with their thousands of
miles of Southern steel rails in confutation.
For every random “ shot gun” report in
the South, there will be twenty-five thousand
spindles to drown the sound, and for every
gaping, sectional wound, there will be cloth
enough to bind up and staunch the tide of
blood.
Capital is conservative, and it will be hard
to convince Northern statesmen that re
pressive measures of unjust commercial re
strictions should be put upon that section
where hundreds of their own constituents
have placed their money and staked their
interests.
Nor will the South be unmindful of the
trusts submitted to her keeping. She, too,
will foster the liberal spirit which the North
is beginning to show. She will broaden in
political opinions as she has improved in com
mercial methods. She will become more
National in her feeling because more pros
perous in her institutions, and people will be
as careful to preserve a conservative, pro
gressive tone in politics as to open up invest
ments and to make dividends for Northern
stockholders.
The argument is net a sordid, but it is a
practical one. The North is healing the
breach by her wealth, and wo are cultivating
the olive branch by our industry. The solu
tion is as logical as it was inevitable. The
Country’s business interests have taken the
question out of the hands of parties and of
politics. Where sentiment has failed, com
mcrce has done the work. The Nation’s
pocket lias been found more responsive than
the Nation’s heart; and party politicians,
though impious enough to “ harm the dove,”
arc powerless at last to “ chain the eagle”
in its southward (light. In short. President
Garfield need net exercise himseu unduly,
d’lie Liberal party in the South is buiktUg up
itself. — Chronicle t$- Constitutionalist.
An Important Decision.
Avery important case has just been deci
ded by the Supreme Court of the United
States, the effect of which is to declare the
unconstitutionality of all State laws making
it incumbent upon drummers and commercial
travelers to take out licenses. The question
presented to the Supreme Court was the con
stitutionality of those provisions of the reve
nue law of Virginia which practically imposes
; a discriminating tax upon manufactures of
other States when brought into Virginia for
sale. The Court holds. Sections 45 and dG of
the revenue law of Virginia, which imposes a
tax upon the agents of foreign manufacturers
who come there to sell goods of foreign origin,
to be a clear discrimination in favor of home
: manufactures, and against the manufactures
of other States, and that they are, therefore,
an infringement of the power vested in Con
gross to regulate commerce among the States.
Where a power is vested exclusively in the
Federal Government, and its exercises is
essential to perfect freedom of commercial
intercourse between the citizens of the seve
ral States, any interfering action of the
States must give way. The judgment of the
State court was reversed with costs, and the
case remanded for further proceedings.—At
lanta Constitution. !
The Rising South.
Our brother of the New Orleans Times is
of opinion that one of the results of the Cot
ton Exposition at Atlanta next Fall will be
that the eyes of Northern cotton manufactur
ers will be open to the fact that cotton can
be manufactured in the South at less cost and
with greater profit than in the New England
States. Very few of the manufacturers of
New England, says the Times, have ever been
in the South, and the greater majority, if not
all of them, therefore, have very erroneous
ideas about the facilities which the South
possesses for the manufacture of cotton
goods. Some of them think that the climate
is unsuitable, others that labor cannot be ob
tained, still others that the composition of
Southern society is hostile to manufacturing
enterprises. They offer to ignore the fact
that cotton factories, wherever they have been
established in the South, have been success
ful and have yielded a large profit on the
capital invested in them.
We have no doubt that much will bo done
at Atlanta to open the eyes of the North, but
it is a curious paradox that Mr. Edward At
kinson, who urged the exposition, is on record
as discouraging cotton manufacture in this
section, lie came to Georgia, but did not
visit, we are told, either Augusta or Colum
bus, the two great centres of factory opera
tion and enterprise, lie tarried in Atlanta,
which lias a hard time in keeping one mill
going by steam. It has been suggested by
one of Mr. Atkinson’s own people, a man
who not only believes in Southern cotton
manufacture, but is largely interested in it,
that Mr. Atkinson is not at all blind to the
South’s supreme advantages, but he does not
wish to see anything that would militate
against his own interests and those of New
England. We have to thank him, however,
for suggesting a scheme that may undeceive
others who are honestly in the dark. We
have the water power, the climate, and are in
the cotton growing country. Labor is easily
procurable and skill will come in time. Our
people arc conservative and not run mad with
Socialism. The mills will find it profitable
to come South where the cotton is, just as the
iron manufacturers will presently discover
that their true bonanza is also here. A prodi
gious effort is being made by Eastern dema
gogues to keep flic South in vassalage, but
this will fail. We shall have all the develop
ment needed and all the population. In this
tremendous epoch Georgia must sec to it
that the reputation she lias abroad of contain
ing the most energetic, progressive and en
lightened people in the South will not only
be maintained but augmented. If our plan
ters would learn to depend less upon outside
food supplies and fertilizers, and if our city
people would the more encourage factory in
dustries of all kinds, instead of going wild
over risky speculation, this State would rank
in the very van of the Union for wealth and
attractiveness. Both in country and city
many have done well, as all admit, but there
is much more to accomplish. We want
another cotton mill built as soon as possible,
and it may be of advantage to pay some at
tention to other kinds of industry. Why
should we not, for example, have a shoe fac
tory ? The machinery is as procurable by us
as by any other people, and the profits, from
all accounts, are enormous.— Chronicle and
Constitutionalist.
A Losing Joke.
A prominent phpsician of Pittsburg said
jokingly to a lady patient who was complain
ing of her continued ill health, and of his
inability to cure her, “try llop Bitters!’’
The lady took it in earnest and used the
Bitters, from which she obtained permanent
health. She now laughs at the doctor for his
joke, but he is not so weil pleased with it,
as it cost him a good patient. —llurrisburgh
Patriot.
Hero lidpertiseitienis.
MEAL! LEATHER! SHOES!
I AM now prepared to keep constantly on hand
and for sale, at my Mill, the very best CORN
MEAL. Custom grinding promptly attended to,
and 48 lbs. of meal guaranteed for every 50
lbs. good corn. Upper, Harness and Sole Leath
er, Kips, Calf and Coat Skins, and a nice lot of
Womens Coat Skin Shoes for sale. Mills, onc
lburth of a mile cast of Jefferson. on the Daniels
ville road. may 0 F. S. SMITH.
if ' * End threshermen.
ss—lf you want to buy Threshers,
fULCfor/r Hull, rs. Horse Towers or
I'-neinf* (either Portable orTrac
fe 'p v lion, to use for tlircahii.c, sawing
NEwSS® or for general purpos; s), buy the
"Starved Rooster” goods. % 'The
Best is the Cheapest.' For Price
List and Illustrated Pamphlets,
' . (sent free) write to The Ai i.tmaS
tori isr.’Wj <fc Taylor Comi-axy, Mansfield. O.
Jackson County.
Whereas, James Greer applies to me for Letters
of Administration de bonis non, with the will an
nexed, of Winney Williamson, late of said coun
ty. deceased—
This is to cite all concerned, kindred and cred
itors, to show cause, if any, at the regular term
of the Court of Ordinary of said county, on the
first Monday in June, 2SSI. why said letters
should not be granted the applicant.
Given under my official signature, this May 4tli,
1881. * U. W. BELL, Ord.’y.
EOKGI.I, Jackson County.
M hcreas, tfie estate of Columbus Long, col’d,
late of said county, deceased, is likely to be with
out a representative and to continue so, no one
applying for Letters of Administration on said
deceased's estate—
Administration de bonis non will be vested in
J. L. Williamson, Clerk of the Superior Court of
said county, or some other lit and proper person,
on the first Monday in June. 18S1. unless some
valid objection is made to said appointment.
Given under my official signature, this May Ith,
1881. . IT W. BELL. Ord'y-
AN OLD SAYING
TELLS US THAT NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS!!
VERY TRUE; BUT WHAT MADE TIIE
SUCCESS?
Men shake their heads now-a-days, and say the big stores arc.eating up the little ones. But why 1
made the big stores big? They were all u little ones* 1 once. Ten years ago we occupied why j
would be called at present a very small store. To-day we devote
TEN TIMES AS MUCH SPACE
to business as wc did in IS7I. What has caused this
Enormous Growth. ?
Certainly not possession of any secrets of business; certainly not advertising, though that has con I
tributed its share; certainly not our location. There is only one explanation :
Tireless Industry and Pleasing the Pablie.
Pleasing the public means having just what the people want at the
LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES.
This policy is the one wc have pursued for the last ten years. The attractions which wc otl'or in
the assortment, in the quality, and, above all, in the prices of our goods are such that no lady C :ul I
resist going to
o o xi es xxr js 3
For Latest Novelties in
Dress Goods, Dress Trimmings, New Carpets, New Shoes,
LARGEST AND CHEAPEST STOCK OF
Ever shown in Athens.
Ladies’ Ties, Scarfs, Jabots. Handkerchiefs. Gloves, Ladies’ and Childrens’ Hose, Parasols, Um
brellas and Fans in all the newest and most elegant styles and designs.
"VETtxi'te CS-ood.s.
Piques, Lawns, Linens, Cambrics, Mulls, Swisses in a larger variety at LOWER PRICES than
any house in the city. Ladies who want BARGAINS, New and Stylish Dress Goods,
New and Stylish Gloves, Parasols, Fans, to see all the Latest Spring
Fashions, are requested to call, as we have the FINEST
STOCK we have ever shown.
OUR SHOE DEPARTMENT
Is complete for Ladies, Gentlemen and Children.
CLOTHING FOR THE MILLION AT COHENS’,
For Men, Youths and Boys.
GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS,
SOLE AGENTS for the u KING OF SHIRTS.” Every Shirt GUARANTEED. Price, SI.OO.
C3r©:ri,ts ? Underwear,
Tn all qualities. Gents’ Gloves, Hosiery, Handkerchiefs, Cravats. Scarfs, in all the latest Styles.
Our stock in every department is complete, and our goods are fresh and of the best qualities, (jive
us a call before purchasing elsewhere, and we will be sure to save you money.
M. G. & J. COITEN.
HENRY HUMAN’S
poktd if-oifik. store.
rjMIERE is no use going to Atlanta, Athens, Gainesville, Jefferson, or any other large citv or
X town, to get what you want on your farm or in your house, as I keep a full line of DRY I
GOODS, CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, YANKEE NOTIONS, CROCKERY, GLASS
AND WOODEN WARE,
GROCERIES OF ALL KINDS,
SUGAR, COFFEE, TEAS, RICE, PEPPER, and all kinds of Spices. A full stock of
Bacon, Flour, Meal, Syrup and Molasses.
Also, all kinds of FARM TOOLS, PLOWS, IIOES. RAKES, FORKS, Etc.
_<5k.3.1. of Tlicse Groods
Will be sold cheap for cash, or on time to prompt paying customers, and none others. I shall, in
addition to the above, keep a full line of
the BEST OF CORN WIIISKY and other spirits for medicinal purposes. Come and examine my
goods and prices before making your purchases. The highest market price always paid for CUT
TON and other FARM PRODUCTS.
HENRY HUMAN,
apl 15 Pond Fork, Jackson county', Georgia.
c ATT OIMSAXS, I7Sl|s
Lu-- iLm B a ¥ 5 set Golden Tongue reeds
only SBS. Address I)aniel F. Beatty, Wash-;
ington, N. J.
teara i| penKCaSKB iFor Saw-Milfc.
□ £a ffii a y H Foundries, uiid
■ SM m# fHr 1 Machine Shops.
xAL Hol 9 £f EE ' * or 'lfcuUrs, address
® I 'fo s V "J™ THE TANITE CO.
EMtiRY WHEELS and Stroudsbunr,
CRiNDiNC MACHINES Monroe Cos., Pa.
aS OID0ID MEDAL AWARDED
tho Author. A n<*w and great Med
ical Work,warranted the best and
cheapest, indispensable to every
man.entitled “the Science of I.ifo
or.Self-Preservation bound i:i
finest French muslin, embossed,
full s;ilt,3oo pp.contains beautiful
steel entrravinys, 125 prescrip
tions, price only $1.25 sent by
mail; illustrated sample, 6 cents;
send now. Address Peabody Med-
Funw TTTY'irT F * c:l1 Institnteor Dr. W. H. PAR
MIU If 1111 OLhl. K.KK, No. 4 Bulfinchsfc. Boston.
HAVE YOU
EVER KIOWI
Any person to be seriously ill without a weak
stomach or inactive liver or kidneys? And when
these organs are in good condition do you not line
their possessor enjoying good health? ParkerV
Caingci* Tonic always regulates these impor
tant organs, and never fails to make the blood rich
and pure, and to strengthen every part of the sys
tem. It has cured hundreds of despairing invalids.
Ask your neighbor about it.
LANDRETHS’
™ SEEDS SBEST IO 01
If not sold in your town, yon I (1 fl |
can get them by mail. Drop I I 11 I I
us a Postal Card for Cata- TU vl X
logue and Prices. The Oldest and most extensive Seed
Groirers in the United States.
oavtd landketu & sons.Philada..fa.
ADVERTISERS
By addresing I*. ({OWIIV.L \ <<>.
1U Spruce St., New York, can learn the exact cost
ofany proposed line of ADVERTISING in Ameri
can Newspapers. Pamphlet, 25c.
,r Y' r y A YEAR and expenses to agents.
'Wilt Outfit Free. Address P.O. VICKERY
Augusta, Maine.
a Y car to Agents, and expenses. s(>
Jtj'iy Outfit free. Address F. Swain A
Cos., Augusta, Me.
Outfit furnished free, with full instruc
tions for conducting the most profitable
business that anyone can engage in. The busi
ness is so easy to learn, and our instructions arc
so simple and plain, that any one can make great
profits from the very start. No one can fail who
is willing to work. Women arc as successful as
men. Boys and girls can earn laargs sums. Many
have made-at the business over one hundred dol
lars in a single week. Nothing like it ever known
before. All who engage are surprised at the ease
and rapidity with which they are able to make
money. You can engage in this business during
your spare time at great profit. You do not have
to invest capital in it. We take all the risk.
Those who need ready money, should write to us
at once. All furnished free. Address Tk.uk &
Cos.. Augusta, Maine.
TEETHINA.
WNUKKS.)
Cures Cholera Infantum, Allays trritatleiand
makes Teeth Inn easy. Removes and prevents
Worms.
Thousands of Children may he saved c*
a y 1/ear by usiny these Vouchers
For sale at DR. PENDERGRASS’ Drag Store.
V. W. SKIFF,
DEALER IN FINE
WATCHES y jewelry,
ClocKs,
Solid Silver and Plated Ware.
Tie Diamond Spectacles and Eye-Glasses.
Fine watches adjusted to heat and cold, and re
paired in the best manner. IJair Jewelry, and
all other kinds, made to order and neatly re
paired.
Sign oTtlic “Red Watt-I*,”
BROAD STREET .....ATHENS, GA.
April Ist. ISSI.