Newspaper Page Text
The WatkiiiNviilc Advance.
W. <i. KI IJJYAN,
Editor, Publi-licr A Job Printer.
TERMS, One Dollar per Year. Sixty
Cents for Six Mouths.
1- PI HIJi.HH) ON tVIKV Wl.ONF.SDAV.
Watkinsville, Ga. June23. 1880
I atered at the Pc<l Offict at V .itkimvtilc 'Cicorpa,
»« SF.OON !> 1 I.ASS M AI U Jt
PI NOTES.
well,—Roeeoe. Alas, poor Ulysses! 1 know hint
• ••
Ohio’s prosifieiits; llaniuon,
Grant, llaye*,Garfield.
Don Cameron has not issued Lis
card of congratulations yet.
Pierre I/ori!hml ha* clenretl
918.000 on his liorse Uncat this
season.
The Conutitahtn of Atlanta, says,
Garfield’s “moral individuality”
stirks out like a pot leg.
• ••
A Paris pap er estimates that
Americans will spend 950,000,000
in Europe this season.
——-*■ ............
Wilhemj lias made 916,000 hy
his violin tdaving the past season.
Verj prettjlittk jiennj.
—- • -
During the year 1879, railroad
accidents in Great Britain caused
thedeuthof81 persons and injury
of 720.
Thus far this been sprint: sold about 100
pictures have from the
National academy of design at New
York, realizing about 120,000.
«*•
H.I. Kimball expects to “stand
for election,” as a candidate for
mayor of Atlanta. What has that
city done to merit such extreme
punishment.
—- —
The Atlanta Coruhtvtian is truly
one ofthc best newspapers that we
know of in tho South. As a news
gatherer it stands at the top of the
ladder.
—- • • • • — —
“I allee time pluhliesn itllec time.
Dlemoelac say: Plublican gut
bloody plnhlionn shirt. Chinaman voteo all
same and glet job washee
shirt. Tien cent.”— llrookli/n Eagle.
• ••
Wilkie Collins comes out in a
statement that he has lost thousands
of pounds by •‘American pirates”
stealing his works. Uvrpn't Weekly
says in reply that the Harper’s firm
lias paid him 130,000 in royalties,
etc.
Two hoys and two girls, the old¬
est of whom was under sixteen,
planned to elope from Ottawa and
and get married on this side of the
line. One of the boys obtained t<S0
for expenses, but the other's finan
cial calculations failed, ar.d at tho
last moment he was compelled to
withdraw from the enterprise. His
sweetheart, however,could not give
up the idea of eloping, and so ac¬
couple companied the more prosperous
in their flight.
A writer in the Scolrmmi avers
that out of 3.5,000 hatns imported
into Hamburg last year, 291 were
found to contain trichina*, white of
14,000 sides of bacon SO were found
to adds be that more seriously infested, lie
a recent commission in
this country reported that of the
pigs slaughtered than at Chicago no
fewer one per cent, were thus
infested. At Liverpool and Glas¬
gow there is no examination made
as at Hamburg.
The Princess of Asturias, now in
Baris, is an object of much curiosi¬
ty in social circles. She is twenty
eight years ot ag**, and truly “iis
haughty as 11 princess.” Since she
was an infant almost she has
lieen a great stickler for every
point of etiquette. She is the
terror of courtiers, and inconcealed
lv proud of her (msition as eldest
daughter of the ex Queen Isabella.
A few years ago the civilized
world was horrified by accounts
of Turkish brutality in Bulgaria.
A demand was made upon the
Porte for a better administration in
the provenc* and the stoppage of
the outrages u|kiu the Bulgarian
people. Russia the mode these same
outrages pretext for the late
war with Turkey, as a result of
which Bulgaria and Rnumania
were erected into serni-indejK-n
dent principalities. Hardly hud
the fortune** of war placed them in
the ascendant, than the Bulga¬
rians and the Roumanians 1* gan
to jwrsecute the Mohammedans
dwelling in their midst. Since
then numerous outrages have
been reported, to all ol which Eu¬
rope, so swift to demand the
ed punihment of theTutk. ha? turn¬
a deaf ear. The situation of
the Mohammedans in tiie two
principalities deplorable have England at last become
so that has at
last determined to see if something
cannot be done to protect them
and bring their prosecutors to
punishment. Tire ambassador to
Constantinople obtain has been instructed
the exact (acts relative to
the outrages, nr.d confer with the
representatives with view to of other their powers,
a prevent recur¬
rence. This nctktn is creditable to
the Gladstone ministry, and goes
tar to disprove tin* belief in
quntlers that its jodicv in the
East will he only to InVtor the
Turk, It shows a <li*t*ositinn to
see justice di ne to Loin (hiistiuti
end MohMiiimiduti.— Atw IhUu
J>< macro)
The End of the Beasim
The second session of tlse foify
sixtli congress w;,s ingWsmtslv en¬
ded at 12 oVLck of yesterday. A
tamer congress perhaps never ex
isted. Doth sides, having in view
the presidential conflict, strove to
say nothing, and both succeeded
wonderfully well Neither party
desired to Udk, much less to act;
and so the six-months’ session
resulted in the passage of the reg¬
ular appropriation bills, and noth¬
ing of importance beyond. Ti c
democrats were crippled in some
respects by their small majority in
the house, and in all respects by
the political hostility ol the de
facto president. The republicans
could not do much, because both
houses were organised against them.
Rut, the trutli is, neither side
wanted to do anything of iin|>or
tance ; botli believed in letting well
enough alone. This is shown in
the want of action on the funding
bill, upon which party lines were
not drawn. It had few, if any
opjwinents, and yet the session left
it in the house in which it origi¬
nated. Of the political bills, the
joint electoral resolution was taken
up so lute in the session that the
re pul dien ns were able to postpone
its consideration until the next ses¬
sion; the handfgl of Sam Randall
protectionists were able, with the
aid of the republicans, to' prevent
the taking up of the tariff bills,
coming us they did from the ways
arid means conmsittee near the heel
of the session; the chief supervisor
bill remains on the houso calen¬
dar, although an important general
election is coming on, and tlm
deputy marshals bill was passed
just iu time to catch a veto, mak¬
ing it impossible to provide any
remedy to overcome it. The en¬
tire session was dilatory, non-com¬
mittal, tamo and disappointing.
The Mexican pensions bill and
fifty other useful and unobjection¬
able measures were left on the
calendar, much to the discomfiture
of the people and very much to
the satisfaction of the monopolists.
The responsibility for these acts
of omission must be shared by tin
two parties alike, because one con¬
trols the legislative branch of the
government, and the otliei the veto
machine. The most that can be
said of the session is, it did little
or no harm. As a do-nothing body,
it was an immense success.- Atlanta
CoMtUulion.
•‘0!d SI. *»
Old Si, after hearing of Garfield’s
nomination, went out among his
neighbors to see what they thought,
of it. Yesterday lie reported :
“Well, I nr’ sntisfide dut do ’pub¬
lican party hez drnw’d er bob-tale
dis time!”
“Don’t you think Garfield can
the trip safely
“No, sab ! Hit ar’ posserhle for
cnnul-bote boss ter beat de
on do practise ground’,
but dat ain't no sine dat lie’ll git
his nose ober de line fust w’en de
race happins slio' nuff!”
“NVhnt is the trouble with Gar¬
field principally?”
“Dari* plenty ob bit! In de fust
place I beer’d ter day dat bo one
time got credit in Mobile an, neither
hissclf rite on de books nrter
wu.ls!”
“You mean ho was in the Credit
Mohilier scandal ?’’
“Yus, sail: dat Mobile business
was skandalous, to b« slio’ 1 Den l
lieer’d dat he grahlteil mo’ salary
b'long ter him up dar in Wash
in’ton City 1”
“Tliat is true to some extent.”
“An’ hit’s ’gin him wid de hones’
’long wid odder things Use
’b<»ut him. Ennyhow lie
got no chance down in dis
nock ob woods—eben de niggers
’j»ear ter feel dat Gyarfiel’
'll do ter het on 1”
Why is tliat ?”
“Well, arter all dere Vperience
wid de kvarpit-baggers, de fned
man buros an’ banks, an* w id Pres¬
ident Hayes dey’s gettin’ sliy ob
huyiQ* er pig inersack. l)ey don't
kno’ nuifin 'bout Gyarfiel' and
bit'll take er heap er talk ter make
’em take him on true’. De names
don’t jingle ter suit de niggers, an’
when de names don’t jingle dey’s
got ter heab somethin’ else jingle in
derears ’tare dey’ell vote for ’em.
Wen Ylckshun day comes now de
nigger ar’ Iwhind’ de counter an’
hez got somethin' ter sell ; an’ ef
wants ’em de only way
lie'll git rm ar’ ter sen ’long his
bar'l wid his ticket pnstid on de
head ob hit. Dat in* fetch ’em,
but de fotogrnfan' taffy bailees ar’
played out!”
Mr.J MBuioe’* touring mill and
coffin factory, in the vicinity of
Home, was destroywl by lire on
Friday last. The ortginid csatt of
the machinery and building was
I Rijn* l. There was an insurance
of Itf/iGO on the property.
NT.iTK NEWS.
In 1875 Mr-. Henry Kennedy, of
Augusta, lost h plain gold ring at
* l< ,' ars,na ^ ** ar t ^ at t *0’* 1,11
* r " lu * ,S “J :i ««iored man named
Bcreicki, while digging
U P 8<,, ” c ground there with a pick,
unearl, ^* d the ring and returned it
to Mr. Kenedy uninjured,
On last Saturdaygthout three miles
from Griffin, a young man hy the
name of Sullivan shot another by
the name of 11 ol/fe.s with a shot gun,
die charge taking effect in his right
thigh. Hobbs returned the fire with
a pistol, the hall lodging in the side
of Sullivtin. Sullivan hns made
his escape. Hobbs is seriously,
though not fatally hurt.
The Hinesvillc ( azette says tliat
one of the census enumerators has
developed a % remarkable case of
longevity in Liberty county. An
old colored woman in the 15th
District is put down at 1-10. .She
was born in Africa where she
spent many years, and from there
was brought to South Carolina
where she missed a quarter of a
century. From thence she came to
Liberty county, where she has
lived for the Ijist hundred years.
We learn from the Augusta Aries
that a few days ago a Mr. Tafhnm,
of the firm of Tatham »fc Co., of Phil¬
adelphia, arrived in that city with
five miners, who are en route to Mc¬
Duffie county, where preparations
are being made to open up a gold
mine. The machinery and a large
force of miners will arrive in a
short time and he forwarded to
McDuffie at once, and the mine
will lie put in operation at the
curliest possible moment.
Augusta AV«i»; “When a South
cm man tells bis Yankee friend
that we have thccottoiv at the very
doors of our mil's, be means exactly
wlmt ho says. Two weeks ago,
where now are being laid the foun¬
dations of the new Sibley Cotton
Mills, was a field of cotton one foot
high. To day this field is hare of
any semblance of growing cotton,
it having all been dug up in making
ready for budding the great mills,
‘‘ibis is literally, cotton at the very
doors of the mill.”
St. Simon’s correspondent Bruns¬
wick Advert,ter : “Master Walter
Ames, the little fellow whom we
mentioned some time ago in the
experiment of holding thu rear end
of a full powder Husk with the
nozzle in contact with a red hot
stove, is now recovering from ex¬
periment number two. Helping
his idaymate, Clarence Gowen,
drive a cow to the pasture, last
work, in order to check her spe d
in time, ran the rope (with which
she was tied) around a neighboring
tree. Not like the Irishman who
to the j
cut coon out of the tree
over the river, sawed the limb
between himself and the tree, so
that he fell with the coon. Master
Walter, unfortunately, placed him¬
self between the cow and the tree,
with the further disadvantage of
having the rope around his neck.
Alter cboding and yelling, he has
come out of the scrape presenting
all the external signs of having
been the victim of a first-class
hanging. Rest, quietude, linseed
oil, Hour bandages, liniments, and
ull the other appurtenances belong¬
ing to a surgeon’s shop, will bring
young America to his former state
of pristine inventive ingenuity,
ready for experiment number three,
in q couple of w eek,_
A voting woman ran wildly into
a St.Louis police station ,md said
that rats were killing three babies
in a certain house Officers were
dispatched to save the infants •
to see the woman, discovered at
once that she was suffering from
delirium tremens, as a consequence
jl-kkib
'
_ m m , „ __
Now is the time to subscrilic to
Tmk Advance. Only St a vear.
LawS deceased, applies Ssss. for letter*
to me ot
dismission from said estate, lhese
are therefore to cite and admonish
all he and parlies or tM-rsons interesteil oflice, to
appear at mv on or
lie tore the show first Monday in July.
1880. to cause, if any they can,
whv said letters should not be
granted. and official Given signature, under mv hand
at WatVi.is
vJHn utle, ti.u T l.ts \l.,r March . 1 , H 1^. <<,1
J. R. L\ LE, Ordinary.
apr.7, 1880-u’
A. H. Jackson
Keep* constantly on band a large
supply of
LUMBER AND SHINGLES,
«t his Steam Mill, near hhistville.
Shingles and. from 12 to *5.50 |>er thou*
mavo.lPHKlm *
Now u the best time toaubscribc
Only 91 |wr annum.
Letters of Dismission.
< «' FA)ll <»i A—Oco vke CoLVTV.
Emory F. Anderson, of Jtiliy as adrninis
trator of the estate Klutts,
late of said county, deceased, applies
to me for letters <_f dismission from
said estate. These are therefore to
cite and admonish all parties or
persons interested to l«e and appear
at my oflice, on or before the first
Monday in August, 1880, to show
cause, if any they can, why paid
letters should not be granted. Giv
en under my hand and official rig
nature, at Watkinsvibe. This Mav
3d, 1880.
J. R. LYLE, Ordinary.
niay5,1880-3m
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGf Oconee County.
Whereas, Aaron ( row, Administrator
of Margaret W. Darker, represents to
the Court, in his jtetitien, duly filet! and
entered on record, that lie hat fully ad¬
ministered Margaret W. barkers estate.
That is therefore to cite all pei
concerned, kindred and creditors to
show cause, if any they ean, why said
administrator shoo'd not he discharged
from his administration, and receive
letters of dismission on the first At juday
in {September, 1880.
JAMES U LYLE, Ordinary.
jum-7|h,’8(’-3nt
CITATION.
GEORGIA—Oconee County.
\\ hcrcas, James K. Whitehead ap¬
plies to me for Letter i of Administra¬
tion mi the estate of Santo d Whitehead,
late of said county deceased. These
are therefore to cite and admonish all
concerned, to show cause at my office
on or before the second Monday in
he July next, why said letters should not
granted, (liven under my hand at
office, this 7th day- of June, 1880.
J AMES R. LYLE, Ordinary.
junc7 ,’80-30d
James Mauldin,
.JfckBoot and Shoe
MAKEl *^v .
Watkinsville, : Gk.ouoia.
Has removed to liis old stand, and is
hotter jirep ri-d than ever to do all kinds
of Boot and Shoe work. Repairing a
specialty, -it lowest prices.
ALSO.— Dressmaking and Hair work
done in the liost manner, and prices
to suit the times. ai>rl4,"m
Jbcri Ifalker, Col.,
1 w* A B 13 TC K ,
Watkinsville, Ga.
8er>‘" Can he found at bis Shop
next door to II. C. Durham’s Con¬
and fectionery, on Saturday evenings,
o’clock, Sunday mornings until 10
a. m. mnrlO SO-tf
NOW1SY0UR CHANGE B- *-*
— TO KXetlAXOE —
CORN-MEAL-
1 will keep at the store of
J. 0. F0DDRILL,
CORN MKAL for
SALE Oil EXCHANGE
48 pounds of Meals tor ’>(» pnnnds of
Corn. Persons coming
TO TOWN,
bring their Corn and get their
Meal Without Delay.
Highest CASH prices paid
FC) DU A TNT.
HENRY JENNINGS.
m«rl7,1880-tf
FRIDAY, JULY 23,1880.
Commencement Week.
* ’ 1 ♦ c* •’*»'
•
J&Ab W V[' TT *J Jll D V 1 t t U 1 1V XT
U *
__
Tho Grandest hxeurse.n of the sea
^ AtUn'ta bv w-.J2°"the'T L;L J ' * ' P ?'• f '
t( ,F f nr ,K M
i ' Morning, auly 23,
.
‘ ' 1*“‘ 4 ° cl ^ k » | ‘
„ . |
flr. m . eh r ere 'TTde TT'
f which
This is the 8th Annual Ex
mana 8”'n>eut of Sapp,
eheiked M fe v
tlirough. A comfortable seat for all.
Street Parades. The A thews
, ;<i , • u ,. . Uo ‘V ,„ n , in _“ | p
^ V. ! , S.T .f' , m ° n '
r ifa T,. llt :T.i ? * riK *. 5 i -* 0 *** a ' n }’ ar ‘
T-n" lr t 1 fro, L‘
qq i 7 V T » “‘ <l "S f 1 ," 0 *
’
i,* T ^ A( o., 1 U atkinsvdle; . A ' V,‘ ’
‘
" 1 • »«ung and A. II. Robnek, U‘.x
mgton or Iron, the managers, Edward
Ha f >p, Eugene Brvdm, .VI It. .Morton.
Wm. Sim*, High’ Maxwell. jun'J
__— ---
:(, Jj. JiVLL, broker.
ATHENS, GEORGIA.
Will buv and sell o« COMMISSION
ssc’jritiss of a:; hihos.
Office At the Bank of the University
Kt fKIiS to
V I (i. kUittt
in*.) 2t!,3iu
-Business CaiVU
James 01. Jbijle,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
WaCTCIXSVILLS;, Ga.
8-3?” Will practice in the Courts
ofttconee and adjoining counties.
mar‘il,’80-ly
—
Ot. M. Jackson,
Attorney & Counselor ati £w
AND .IL’LHIK Of THE
(l){08K
Watkinsville, Ga.
IW Will practice in all Courts
except County, the County Court Oconee
tnarl7,’80-ly
"
Oi. f. J brasher,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Watkinsvili.e, Ga.
Qjr' Will practice in the Courts
Oconee and adjoining counties,
marl 7,’80-1 v
John 0T, Utterson.
ATTORNEY AT LAW J
Watkinsvili.e, Ga.
K?” i’rompt attention given to all
business entrusted to his care Office
in Court Ho jsc. marl 7,’80- ly
(S, ('. OThomas,
fl ITTflfUIfU I I IIKNl Y A! i -r a A .... W
° 1 1 ‘f.' 1 ^ 1 ” 1 I TT
»\ atkinsvili.e, Ga. , J
mar 10
®. .11. If hie, M. 2.,
f R ACTICIN p ^HYSICIaH,
Watkinsville, Ga.
VCf™ M ill be found at bis office when
not called off. marl 7,’80 tf
Or. J. Jt. flder,
STl 'l /l L haS r £ rvn, * y completed an extra course
Jefferson Medical College,
T)f Philadelphia, Pa.,
()(Ters his professional services to the pub¬
lic at large. Having been thoroughly tutored
in the system of his grand-father's (Dr.
Lindsay Durham’s) practice, he proposes to
make flic following diseases a specialty :
( hronir Pleurisy, Bronchittis anti Rheu¬
matism. Diseases ol the Heart, Kidneys,
Skiip J.ivcr, .spleen, Scrofula, Syphillis (jkix,)
(»onorrh«ca. Old-Ulcers, Dropsy, Dyspepsia,
Neuralgia, Epileptic hits, lmpotency, Steril¬
ity [barrenness,] Abortion, etc. Very spe
cial attentions given all diseases peculiar to
females. Office and residence, at \Vm. 11.
Bishop’s about 3 miles from Farmington on
the road leading from theaforeSnid place to
Watkinsville. All communications strictly
private, and promptly attended to. P. ().
Watkinsville-(»a. niari7,*8o-iy
J. C. Bone,
General Repairer of
Guns, Pistols, Watches,
CLOCKS, Ac.
Near Watkinsville, Oconee County, Ga.
All as cheap as good work ean lie
dene by anyone and guaranteed. Call
on Dr. 1). M. White,- and be will iu
form you as to my whereabouts,
may 10,1880.
Junes Of, Ifilson,
—Manufacturer ol ami Dealer in—
FURNITURE, Burial CASES,
C<) I' - !•’ I x ,-s, .fee.
Over Reaves, Nicholson Jv Co., llroad Street.
ATHENS. GEORGIA.
1 o I 1 F. for the purpv»sc.
trutli ,*8o- ;tn
01, /(. rt lien's
IrTor.-;e nndNtule
MILLINERY STORE.
Cur. Cluyton <t JaekxoN sir.,
ATHENS, dA.
I have in Store a good assortment of Sad
You will find U,at iny harness' is made
of the best Western la ther, al hand
J* * 1 knM, t » V"’ "T«*n"g ?*- notice, -«d
»h |«s I make a specialty and a
better assortment cannot be found in
M.V harness cannot be beat in ,.ri oes
T nU *, 1,, V ’ sit the city
-
v ’” ,r J‘ r ^nee.
SexC"'' -
1 ^ *
apr.7,1880,(im
THE BICKFORD
AUTOMATIC KNITTER
h |le Imit a pit of suck! in
“M mhmu _! Every mxchiu
wamuud henna. and m a hm
u unulitm npnrcnwd bout mrcumpanks A menplemc null ln~
militant.
, ^ •«'***» Kni,s wi
l ” er 50 7 li m g.irment-. socks Mocking l
^
kl,l ' s l ‘ vor >’ P'^stWe variety of
plamor . taney stitch. ,0 per cent.
proht Farmers in manufacturing knit goods.
ean treble the value ot their
™u. hy converting il into knit
Agents wanted in every State,
Countv, City and Town, to whom
ver.v low prices will be made.
For full particulars and lowest
^ ^ Madline
lilt KFOKU KNITTING MACHINE CO .
Brattlehono. Vt.
npr2l,18!«<i—j v
/
, 1
BEST
SIMPLE. DURAHIJ'T,
,
.9.NF»CF.SSARY (HARP,
in MACKLNE. nu fflfll'
fly as a SEWING
New Athens Advertisements.
1 ONLY GRADUATED DRUGGIST in this SECTION in CHARGE.
I_’_[{F.S(?Rl_l"_'£[UNSwi-} smegwifl.
Sole Proprietor of Jacobs Riilliantiue and Downtime's Tooth Powder.
_ Sl. ISTTiOiy M
STOVES! n STOVES!
i I
agas
-and- -AND-“
TIN-WARE. M I TIN-WAEE.
-g>4
BEST IN THE MARKET!
-at
J. C. WILKINS,
mnr24,l880-4m Broad Street, Athens, Georgia.
The Cheapest Crockery House in N.E. Georgia.
A Cordial invitation is extended by
LYNCH & FLANI6EN,
to their many Oconee county friends to' visit their
Crockery and Glassware Store *
Merchants and house-keepers can save money by buying from thei D
Crockery, Glassware, [Lamps, vtlery, Tinware, 'Woodenware,
WHIPS & FANCY GOODS.
Best Goods with Prices at the Lowest Point,
Everything guaranteed to be as represented.
LA SCIl & FLANIGEX, Broad Street, Athens, Ga.
mnr24 80-8m
JAMES E. MURRAY. | I. W. THRASHER.
Murray&thrasheB, Watkinsville, ?
Georgia,
In returning our thanks to our friends for their very liberal patronage durinz
the past, we would again renew our offer of one of the
Largest and best selected
STOCK Of GOODS!
Ever brought to this section, and ask the people of this and adjoining counties to
give this Stock a careful examination. In
OF I>ry Goods Our Lines
JEANS.
BLEACHER and BROWN DOMESTICS,
STRIPES and CHECKS,
I LINES, of standard makes, frtimOe, to 9c per vd
LADIES TIES, J '
DRESS GOODS,
Is full and at low prices. Our KTC., ETC., ETC.
FANCY GOODS DEPARTMENT
Has had the most careful selections, and in style and xuality can’t be surpassed.
\\ e have the best line of J
Caps,
Is large Kcady-Madc 4 lotIii 11 o*
«,f the best styles and material, and bought with a'vw to meet
the wants of all class of purchasers- Suits from $2 75 m
The Departments of Drugs, Hardware and Staple and
are always full, with prices as low as rhe lowest. This large stock is in store and
in transit ami in a few days will be full and complete, We again ask to
call and examine. MURRAY you
Watkinsville, Ga., Mav 5, 1880. & THRASHER.
ORDER YOUR
Saw Mills and Gtist Mills and Cane Mills
Plantation Machinery, Engines and Boilers, Cotton
P Screws, Alill Gearing, Shafting. Gudeons’. Pulleys, Hangers’ Journal Boxes,
Hr Tnrbine Water Wheels, Gin
m | ■Rk Gearing eular (cheap), and Judson’s Governors, Diston’s Cir
I. Saws Gummers and Files, Belting and
Babbitt Metal and Brass Fitting, Globe and Check
S^f. Castings Valves and and Whistles, Gin Ribs, Guages, from Etc., Iron and Brass
GKO. R. LOMBARD & CO.,
r FOREST CITY FOUNDRY &, MACHINE WORKS,
‘ Xear "’•ler Tower,) i >14 to 1<»24 Fenwick Street,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Rejvairing promptly done at lowest prices.
Athens Pharmaceutical Co
-M.4NVKAVCRFKS AMi Li.ALJRS IN—
EAUK and STA N DART)
Elegant Pharinacuentiral Preparation Toilet Requisites.
JOSEPH JACOBS,
3-Sk etc 2S3ZS. tfi SSSSff,
Corner Claoton Street and College Avenue, ATHENS, GA.
npr 7,’80-tf
Rafi; & Stanaamd Medicines on Hand,