Jackson herald. (Jefferson, Jackson County, Ga.) 1881-current, December 30, 1881, Image 4

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i A Bar to Hard Times. THE GREAT DEFECT IN COTTON Ct'L TUBE. The methods of cotton cultivation in the South will he found, on careful examination, to have very much to do with the general queston of profit. The cotton plant itself is an herbaceous tree, with a root striking as deep as any tree of its size, and, though an annual in this climate, it is perennial in the tropics, and a tree, in fact, wherever the perennial species can grow. In its cultivation as an annual this characteristic should not be for getton. and. first of all tilings, the soil should be prepared for the growth and fertilization of deeply penetrating roots. It has beer, the habit in the older Atlantic States to cultivate at very shallow depths, alt ough the criticism is not so applicable at t! e present time as in former years, though there is yet room for great improve incut. Breaking the surface to the depth of three or four inches has been deemed sufficient in ordinary cultiva tion, and this very imperfect opening up of the soil was followed in cotton planting—a tolerable practic for small grains, possibly, but one certain to incur great risks for deep rooted plants. On the rich button lands of Missis sippi, and on river bottoms generally, is this defect of surface cultivation only slightly felt, or, at least it would not restrict production to the same degree ; but on the upland, and in dry seasons particularly, the root of the plant cannot penetrate sufficiently to produce a crop. The soil may be highly fertilized, but the feitilization is wasted ; the surface is too dry to give nourishment to the roots, and below the surface neither the roots nor the applied fertilizer can make use of the soil. This is, to a certain extent, the cause of damage to the crop the present season ; the soil, otherwise well prepared by the liberal appliea tion of fertilizers, loses the use of its pulverized surface because of the drought. The contrast is much greater in a season like the present than in one with the usual amount of rain, although at all times the difference between the free growth of plants on deeply cultivated lands and the stinted production on very thin* soil is sufficiently apparent. It will be im possible to count with reasonable certainty on a full crop in any season without a full and complete reform in this one of the methods of cultivation. If the soil is i ot thoroughly and deeply broken in the upland cotton fields, we now know that the cotton crop will not attain its usual yield per acre, and no possible state of the market ns to prices can atone for this deficiency in quantity. A striking illustration of the value of better methods of cultivation is afforded by the special crop of John. II Jones, a planter of llogansville, Ga., whose limited plantation of eigh teen acres has produced almost as much per acre in 1881 as it did in the prolific year 1880, when all the light and shallow plowed soils did better, probably, than at an)’ time within ten years. The report of this planter's success is direct, and, undoubtedly, entirely authentic, and his only point of marked distinction was in the depth of his cultivation. The soil is repor ted to be the usual upland, which on the average lias not yielded more t han onc-quarter of a bale { cr acre the pres cut summer in Georgia and the Caro linns ; yet in this unpreeedentiy bad year it gives one bale and a quarter per acre to the deep plowing of this more skillful planter. The difference between one half bale per acre and the present crop would be everything to the cotton planters the present year, and it would have saved them from most embarrassing debts to the featilizer Scalers. In a good year their free purchases of ferllizcrs would have been wise ; but in a year of extreme drought, with shallow plow ing, it has been comparatively worth less to them. The applied stimulus does not reach the plants, or they can not avail themselves of the stimulus It must, of course, be apparent that other crops suffer equally from shal low cnltivarion ; corn, in fact, proba bly suffers worse in the present year. The corn crop has been lost for the same reason, and generally it was re ported during the part of the summer that cotton endured the almost univer sal drought better than corn. All crops suffer from a restriction of their growing roots to a thinly plowed sur face lying on a hard or impervious subsoil, and these defective methods ofeuluivation, in the mere mechanical sense, have cost the planters of the South heavy losses in the crop of 1881. A writer in the Southern Planter and Farmer, of Richmond, Va., for Octo ber, attributes his success in wheat growing solely to deep plowing, lie raised twenty bushels to the acre on land previously supposed to he worn out and practically abandoned, using no manure or fertilizers. * Under the old system of farming in Virginia the lands have never attained one third of their productive capacity, and one can scarcely form an estimate of their powers of production. I plowed from eight to ten inches deep, and turned up soil that had not before been reach ed for years, if ever.” The lesson taught the present year in the partial failure of the cotton crop, not only on dry uplands, baton many ether badly managed soils, should speedily lead to a more thorough re form in the mcthols of preparing the soil for cotton.— Brad street's. Cause and Effect. The main cause of nervousness is indigestion, and that is caused by weakness of the stomach. No one can have sound nerves and good health without using Hop Bitters to strength on the stomach, purify the blood, and keep the liver kidneys active, to carry off all the poisonous and waste matter of the system.— Advance. Butter Sponge Cake.— Fourteen eggs, the weight of the same in sugar, eight ounces of flour, six of butter, and the juice of three lemons. T B '° KO€KRS, PIt'KIIKS, ISKIiJ ■ Bvb £ tftA B 9 STKlti, aud the IL KMJULIC. * ‘ ~ THE KINO FORTUNE MAKER: O ZONE I A NEW PROCESS FOR PRESERVING ALL PERISHABLE ARTICLES, ANIMAL AND VEGETABLE , FROM FERMENTATION AND PUTREFACTION , RETAINING THEIR ODOR AND FLAVdII. 01'0.\II —2 s u*ifiwl als-, active slate oi‘ **.”—WersTEK. This Preservative is not a liquid, pickle, or any of the old and exploded processes, but is simply and purely OZONE, as produced and applied by an entirely new process. Ozone is the antiseptic principle of every substance, and possesses the power to preserve animal anu vegetable structures from decay. There is noth ing on ill : fare of the earth liable to decay or spoil which OZONE , the new Fre sermtive, will not preserve for all. time in a perfectly fresh and palatable condi tion. The value of OZONE as a natural preserver has been known to our abler chemists for years, but until now no means of producing it in a practical, inexpensive and simple manner have been discovered. Microscopic observations prove that decay is due to septic matter, cr minute genns that develop and feed upon animal and vegetable structures. OZONE, applied by the Prentiss method, seizes and destroys these germs at once, and thus pre serves. A t our offices in Cincinnati can he seen almost every article that can be thought of preserved by this process and every visitor is welcome to come in. taste, smell, take away with him, and test in every way the merits of OZONE as a preservative. We will also preserve, free of charge, any article that is brought or sent prepaid to us, and return it to the sender, for him to keep and test. jZf can be treated at a cost of less than one dollar a thousand dozen, and fen be kept in an ordinary room six months or more, thoroughly pre served. the volk held in its, normal condition, and the eggs as fresh and perfect as on the day they were treated, and will sell as strictly •• choice.” Theadvan tage in preserving eggs is readily seen ; there arc seasons when they can be bought for 8 or 10 cen ts a dozen, and by holding them can be sold for an advance of from one hundred to three hundred cent. One man with this method can preserve 5.000 dozen a day. P jffr 1 g 2 “IP* Q may be permitted to ripen in their native climate, and can be h wV is 8 transported to any part of the world. The juice expressed from fruits can be held for an indefinite period without fermentation —hence the gre it value of this process for producing a temperance beverage. Milk and cider can be luld perfectly sweet any length of time. \fj fh Ifp | E? & can he kept for an indefinite period in their na if ism Bam s ae3 &■ tural condition, retaining their odor and flavor, treated in their original packages, at a small expense. All grain, flour, meal, etc., are held in their normal condition. Kia ¥*s Hjr K : rfi gUy C A “3“ Q such as beef, mutton, veal, pork, poultry. u sV LV j c SWa fin ini 6 v 5 game, fish, etc., preserved by this method, can be shipped to Europe, subjected to atmospheric changes, and return to this country in a state of perfect preservation. TfY pp nr* TES after trkatbi) by this £& y 1 iL JD£f PROCESS will .WT become IIAIWIB). Dead human bodies, treated before decomposition sets in, can be held in a natural condition for weeks, without puncturing the skin or mutilating the body in any way. Ilcnce the great value of Ozone to undertakers. There is no change in the slightest particular in the appearance of any article thus preserved, and no trace of any foreign or unnatural odor or taste. The process is so simple that a child can operate it as well and as successful!)’ as a man. There is no expensive apparatus or machinery required. A room tilled with different articles, such as eggs, meat, fish, etc., can be treated at one time, without additional trouble or expense. # BST'In fact, there is nothing that Ozone wild not preserve. Think of everything you can that is liable to sour, decay, or spoil, and then remember that we guarantee that Ozone will preserve it in exactly the condition you want it for any length of time. If you will remember this, it will save asking ques tions as to whether Ozone will preserve this or that article — IT WILL preserve ANY THING AND EVERY THING YOU CAN THINK OF. There is not a township in the United States in which a live man can not make any amount of money, from -iff ,000 to 810,000 a year, that he pleases. We desire to get a live man interested in each county in frhc United States, in whose hands we can place this Preservative, and through him secure the business which every county ought to produce. A "EV^'sO* await? any man who secures control of JsL JE UJSIJEd OZONE in any Township or County. A. C. B,owcn. Marion, Ohio, cleared 82,000 in two months. $2 for a test package was his first investment. Woods Brothers, Lebanon, Warren County, Ohio, made SO,OOO on eggs purchased in July and sold November Ist. $2 for a test package was their first investment. F. K. Raymond. Morristown, Belmont County, Ohio, is clearing $2,000 a month in handling and selling Ozone. $2 for a test package was his first investment. D. F. Webber. Charlotte, Eaton County. Mich., has cleared SI,OOO a month since August. $2 for a test package was his first investment. •J. B. Oaylord, 80 LaSalle Street, Chicago, is preserving eggs, fruit, etc., for the com mission men of Chicago, charging l.'c. per dozen lor eggs, and other articles in proportion'. He is preserving 5,000 dozen eggs a day, and on his business is making $3,000 a month clear. $2 fora test package was his first investment. The Cincinnati Feed Company, 408 West Seventh Street, is making $5,000 a month in handling brewers’ malt, preserving and shipping it as feed to all parts of the country. Malt unpreserved sours in twenty-four hours. Preserved by OZONE it keeps perfectly sweet for months. These are instances which we have asked the privilege of publishing. There arc scores of others. Write to any of the above parties and get the evidence direct. Now, to prove the absolute truth of everything we have said in this paper, WE PRO POSE TO PLAGE IN YOUR HANDS THE MEANS OF PROVING FOR YOURSELF THAT AYE HAVE NOT CLAIMED HALF ENOUGH. To any person who doubts any of these statements, and who is interested sufficiently to make the trip, we will pay all traveling and hotel expenses for a visit to this city, if we fail to prove any statement that we have made. MOW T 0 ® E CTJRE A 8’ liVJ o FORTUNE WITH A-a A test package of Ozone, containing a sufficient quantity to preserve one thousand dozen eggs, or other articles in proportion, will be sent to any applicant on re ceipt of $2. This package will enable the applicant to pursue any line of tests and experiments he desires, and thus satisfy himself as to the extraordinary merits of Ozone as a Preservative. After having thus satisfied himself, and had time to look the field over to determine what he' wishes to do in the future— whether to sell the article to others, or to confine it to his own use, or any other line of policy which is best suited to him and to his township or county—we will enter into an arrangement with him that will make a fortune for him and give us good profits. We will give exclusive township or county privileges to the first responsible applicant who orders a test package and desires to control the busi ness in his locality. The man who secures control of Ozone for any sjtccial ter ritory will enjoy a monopoly which will surely enrich him. Don't let a day pass until you have ordered a Test Package, and if you desire to se cure an exclusive privilege, we assure you that delay may deprive you of it, for the applications come in to us by scores every mail—many by telegraph, “i’.rst come first served” is our rule. If you do not care to send money in advance for the test package, v e will send it C. O. 1).; but this will put you to the expense of charges for return of money. Our correspondence is very large; we have all we can do to attend to the shipping of orders and giving attention to our working agents. Therefore we can not give attention to letters which do nokorder Ozone. If you think of any article that you are doubtful about Ozone preserving, remember we guarantee that it will preserve if, no mailer what it is. O bST 55" ET fjjM o** a e desire to call your attention to a class a of references which no enterprise or firm based on any thing but the soundest business success and highest commercial merit could secure. We refer, by permission, as to our integrity and to the value of the Prentiss Pre servative. to the following gentlemen : Edward C. I’ovce. Member Board of Public Works; E. O. Eshelby. City Comptroller; Amor Smith, Jr., Collector Internal Revenue; Wulsin & Worthington, Attorneys; Martin 11. Harrell and P>. F. Hopkins. County Commissioners; W. S. Cappelhr, County Auditor; all of Cincinnati. Hamilton County, Ohio. These gentlemen are each familiar with the merits of our Preservative, and know from actual observation that we have without question The Most Valuable Article in the World. ilie 82 you invest in a test package will surely lead you to secure a township or county, and then your wav is absolutely clear to make from $2,000 to SIO,OOO a year. Clive your full address in every letter, and send your letter to "VAC-E.WVBB CO., EWvWA, ec - S. E. Corner Race and Plinth Sts., Cincinnati, 0. Jackson Sheriffs Sale. ILL be sold, before the Court House YY door in -Jefferson, Jackson county. Ga., on the lirst Tuesday in January. IS$2, within the legal hours of sale, to the highest bidder, the following described property, to-wit : Twenty-five bushe’s of corn in the shuck, eight hundred bundles of fodi.hr and one bale of cotton, weighing about three hundred and thirty pounds, more or less. Levied on as the property of‘ (1. L. Wood, to satisfy a ti. fa. issued fr< m the Superior Court of Jackson county, at the February term. 1881. in favor of S. P. Thurmond vs. Green Wood and M. B. Poster. Property pointed out by S. P. Thurmond, plaint iff in li. fa. T. A. Me FIJI AN NON, Sh'fF. For eoijßHEras, .*>, fi OiOlWriO widows, fathers, inotluia or \ST I children. Thousands yet, entitled. Pensions given if'rtsJ. for loss -f firißer.toe.e.ve or ri4>tnrc,v:irieso veins or nny m-etiHc. Thousands of pensioners mid [lt / soldiers entitled to INCKHAKK and liOI NT V. PATENiTH procured lor Inventors. Soldiers if Nt\ land wurran ta prorumf, lumplitmid sold. Soldiers f I and heirs arrly for yor rights at once. Send // IT stamps for •'The Citizen-Soldier,” and Pension II ill A and Jlomity laws, blanks and instructions. We TTtoi can refer to thousands of Pensioners and Clients. 1 Kf Address f>J. W. f-itzg/srald <& CO. PENSION & j 1 ft \t I'AT&HT A tt’ys. Lock iioi st>s, YY ashingtan, V. 0, PARKER’S t!''? 1 '”" 1 ' S. TM. 1. PARKER’S GINGER TONIC If you are wasting away with Consumption, Age, or any Weakness, you will find this Tonic the Best medicine Yon Can Use for Restoring Health & strength, r sr superior to Bitters and other Tonics, as it builds up the system but never intoxicates. 50c. and $* ? z “- None genuine without signature of Hiscox & Cos,, N. Y. Large saving in buying dollar size. Floreston New, Fashionable arul Exreed- Fragrant Sold by Dealers i*i Per fun u*ut V 5 and 75 els. A. R. Robertson, DEALER IN MONUMENTS —AND— TOMBSTONES. Large lot of .specimens ready for lettering. G-I’VE IVEE CALb. A. R. ROBERTSON, Oct. 21, 1881. Athens, Georgia. Domestic Matters. The yellow stain made by the oil used on sewing machines can be re moved if 1 , before washing in soapsuds, the spot lie rubbed carefully with a bit of cloth wet w’ith ammonia. White Mountain Cake.—One pound of flour, one of sugar, and half a cup of butter; six eggs, beaten separately, one cup of sweet milk, a teaspoon of soda, and two teaspoon fuls of cream tartar. Flavor to the taste, and use fruit if desired. Waffles. —One pint cold boiled rice ; thin it with cold milk, and add one egg. beat all together well ; add a small piece of butter, and stir in Hour enough to make a batter, stiff enough to bake. A Nice Plain Pudding.—One quart of flour ; bill ter the size of an egg ; a pint of milk ; two table spoonfuls of bakinn powder ; one cup of cut raisins. Steam one hour in a two-quart dish. Boil a pint of milk, a Id sugar, two ta ble spoonfuls of flour and flavoring for the sauce. P'or a good or easily made pudding* sauce take one tabiespoonful of butter, two tabiespoonful-* of flour, two thirds of a cup of sugar. Pour hot water over these, stir well and bod until thick ; flavor with lemon, wine or with nutmeg and a tcaspoonfu! of vinegar. To Cook Carrage.—Chit the call huge fine as for cold slaw, put it in a stew-pan with cold water and a little salt. Cover it closely and cook till nearly done. Then jour olf the water, pour on milk or cream, add butter and pepper and cook till thoroughly done. This makes a delicious dish. Potato Pone.—This is a favoaite dish in the West India Islands. Wash, peel run! grate two | 011:1 Is of potatoes ; add four ounces each of sugar and butter melted, one teaspoonful each of salt and pepper ; mix well together; place in a baking dish and put into a quick oven until it is done and become nicely browned. Apple Custard Pie.—Scald the milk and let it cool. Grate some sweet, apples. Take two thirds of a cupful of powdered sugar, four well beaten eggs, one cupful of milk, one-fourth of a nutmeg. Line an earthern [tie dish with a rich crust and let ii. bake. Then fill with the custard and let it bake for half an hour. To he eaten cold. Pan Puddings.—This is a New Eng land dish, and is nice where appetites are expansive. Take three cups of fine rye meal, three cups of Indian meal, one egg and three t.ablespoonfuls of molasses ; add a little salt and allspice, and enough rich sweet milk to make a batter, and enough to drop from a spoon. Fry to a good, brown in hot lard. Set a pitcher of water in a room, and in a few hours it will have absorbed ranch of the respired ga-es in the room : the air will be correspondingly purer, but of course the water will be unfit for use. At the ordinary temperature, ten quarts of water vrill contain a pint of carbonic acid gas and several pints of ammonia. Water that lias stood in a pump all night should always be pumped out in the morning before any of it is used. Impure water is more injurious than impure air. Pumpkin Pin.—As made 100 years ago, with this difference that than thc> made a big panful. I will give you in gredients for one pic. One voffee cup fill of stewed pumpkins ; two of milk ; a small handful of flour ; two teaspoon fills of ginger ; a dust of allspice or nutmeg on top—no eggs. Bake in a very quick oven. The crust will not be soggy if the oven bo hot enough on the bottom. Nere iron a calico dress on the right side : if ironed smoothly on the wrong side there will be no danger of white spots and gloss, which give a new dross, “ done up” for the first time, the appearance of a time-worn garment. Air the Beds. —Some advocates of excessive neatness have the beds made up as soon as they are vacated in the morning. This is neither nice nor healthful. They need to air for at least two hours. Take the bedclothes off, open the windows and doors of the sleeping-room, and let the fresh, out door air have a free passage. Unless there is a thorough draught there is no true ventilation. The only exception to this rule is during the prevalence of very high winds, or very damp, rainy weather. Curing llams.—The National Live Stock Journal asserts that hams have a decidedly better flavor, and the meat retains a more natural color when nothing but plain salt is used in the curing. If the work of salting is carefully attended to the hams, when cured with salt alone, will be ready for smoking at from six weeks to l\v< months, according to the size of the hams. Saltpetre has a tendency harden and redden the meat. It uu doubtedly hastens the curing process, but it does so at the expense of flu flavor. Christmas Fruit Cake.—-Four coffee cups sifted flour; three cups of nice brown sugar ; two cups of butler . eight eggs ; two pounds raisins, stone > and chopped : two pounds currants washed and drid ; half pound of citron cut in thin slips: one nutmeg; ten spoonful each <>f cloves and cin namon; one teaspoonful soda: cream, butter, and sugar ; mid yolks of eggs well beaten ; then the spice, then the flour in which the soda has been thoroughly sifted ; next add the whites of the eggs beaten to a stiff froth and last of all the fruit dredged with flour to prevent sinking. Bake with care in a moderate oven and you have a cake which will keep for months. It should be baked at least one week before needed for use. To remove stains on linen, rub the stain on both sides with yellow soft soap ; mix some starch in cold water to a very thick paste, rub it well into the stained parts on both sides : place the linen on the grass, if possible, in the sun and wind till it comes out. If not removed in three or four days rub off the paste and renew’ the process ; as it dries it should be frequently sprinkled with a little water. professional (lards. m n. i;. adair, Dentist, June 10-81. GAINESVILLE, GA. JOHN J. STRICKLAND, Attohn ky-at-La w, Daniklsvillk, Ga., Will promptly attend to all business en trusted to him. dec 17, ’SO. DR. N. 13 CASH. Nicholson, Ga., Tenders his professional services to the surrounding country. Rheumatism, Neu ralgia and the diseases of women a speci alty. Feb. l3th, ISSO. ly Howard Thompson, Attornf.y-at-Law, Gainesville. Ga. Prompt and faithful attention given to all business placed in his hands. WILEY C. HOWARD, A ttorn ey-a t-L a \v, Jefferson, Ga.. Will attend faithfully to all business en trusted to His care. inch 4, ILMAN ct THOMPSON. Att( >r keys-at- Law, . Jefferson, Ga.. Will practice in Jackson and adjoining counties. CHARLES STERN &> CO., i?h:h3 clothiers, ATHENS, C3-HIOR^C3-IJL. V. W. SKIFF, The Jeweler, Keeps a well selected stock of W wYeWs, CVoe\^,^evv-c\.Y\\ Gold, Silver and Seleloid Spectacles and Eye-Glasses, TIIE BEST Silver and Silver-Plated Ware. And he is receiving weekly, New Go o-tL s OF THE Latest Designs. Drop in and look at SKIFF, the Jeweler, when in Athens, and have your Watch repaired and .Jewelry mended. Athens, Ga., Nov. 4th. HOM E 31 AN U FACTURE! SHOES! HARNESS! LEATHER! WE are now making the very best quality of the above articles right here at home, and they are for sale. We do not expect to sell them merely because they are home manufacture, but because of their excellent quality and low price. We are making regular- WV&.'WE.SS'. of the very best material and workman ship. and offering them for 25 per cent, less than the usual price. Our BROGANS cannot he beaten in excellence, or cheapness for the quality. These sell only by the case. Bridles. Col lars and Harness, double or single, always on hand, or made to order. We have the most experienced workmen. All wc ask is a trial. ATKINS. CARR A CO. ’ Maysville, Ga., June 17th, ISSI. 500 MEN Can be supplied with the finest Cooking Stove 9 ever brought to the marhet of Northeast Geore( (l With our excellent Cooh Stoves, we give everythin that is WANTED in the Kitchen for all cooking purposes, and <>u ur cvntee in every cooh stove to give satisfaction, / you want something that is good and will be cer tain to give you satisfaction, APPLY To W. H. JONES, Snp’t, At th.e “ Red Store," OPPOSITE COHEN’S. Athens, Ga., Sept. 16th, 1881. One Th ousand People Wanted! TO BUY THOSE CHEAP GOODS AT PARKER & CAMP BROS. We are receiving daily, a large and well selected assortment of FANCY AND FAMILY GROCERIES, Canned Goods, Sugars, Coffees, Teas, Syrup, and the Best Mackerel I3ST THE CITY. WE CALL SPECIAL ATTENTION TO OUR STOCK OF SVvocs, CuhdXs, Cvokws, Sc We have bought in large quantities, and can otter G-reat Inducements TO THOSE PURCHASING BAGGING AND TIES. REMEMBER, WE SELL ONLY AT ROCK BOTTOM PRICES! Highest Marhet Price Paul for Cotton. Call and See That We Mean What We Say! PA PIC HR Sr CAMP BEOS., Feb. 2.* No. 12 Broad Street. Athens. Ga. J. N. MONTGOMERY, (Broad Street, next door to Col. Dobbs, Athens, Ga.) DEALER IN LOUIS COOK’S BUGGIES, Carriages *£? Harness. Which I warrant equal to any sold in this market at same prices. TIIE OLD HICKORY WAGON—warranted as good as the best. THE FARQU HAR ENGlNE—noted for power and durability. THE FARQUHAR SEPARATOR—nothing better nor cheaper in market. THE ATLAS ENGINE—one of the most popular and cheapest on the market. The well-known ECLIPSE ENGINE, and the BOOK WALTER ENGINE, 01 Horse Power, for $355. The well-known BROWN COTTON GIN, CONDENSER<md FEEDER Cheapest Clin on the market. Also, the celebra ed HALL GIN; nothing finer. COTTON PRESSES. P 0R T ' ABLE CORN. WHEAT and SAW MILLS, SORGHUM MILLS. EVAPORATOR? SIIINGLE MACHINES. The well-known OLIVER CHILLED TURN PMPj; SULKY and GANG PLOWS. Improved HARROWS, GRAIN DRILLS. READ ERS. MOWERS, and other improved agricultural implements. A Iso, several of FERTILIZERS. B@y**Samplc ENGINES and other articles kept on hand. Sept 9-iy J. N. MONTGOMERY. CL 2D. M’KIE, ATHENS, - - - - - - - G3D3il AGENT FOII T. T. HAVDOCK’S Cincinnati Buggies & Carriages, ' The Columbus Buggy Co’s Fine Buggies and Carriage THE CELEBRATED Wilburn One and Two-Horse FARM WAGON. good assortment of Harness. Also Manufacturers’ Agents'for the SHIP COTTON GIN. Cotton Press. Condenser and Feeder, the best gin oUt 1 at . the market. Steam Engines, Saw Mills and Agricultural Implements. Prompt tention paid to orders. Terms liberal. Office and Ware-Rooms, corner t-la.' and Thomas Streets, Athens, Ga. July 22 JOHN WINN, Salesman^ New Opening! WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, ATHENS, . . . GEOEGIA. CHARLES A. SCUDDER. DEALER LIST WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELItY and SILVERWARE ALL kinds of Repairing done by the latest improved methods. Gold to. Engraving. All jobs and orders sent by mail or Express promptly BRUMBY'S DRUG STORE, College Avenue, Athens, Ga. SC P