The Watkinsville advance. (Watkinsville, Ga.) 1880-1???, October 05, 1880, Image 2

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Watkinsville Advance. VV G. 81LLITAN, Editor, l’libhiherfc Job Printer. -One Dollar per Year. Sixty Ceuta fer Six Months. 1- rur.UsHKU ON EVERY TUESDAY, Watkinsville, Ga., October 5, 1880 At tH* T m Otncc &t W«iktmvtn% Georgia, n> SECOND CLASS MATTER NATI* INAL l)EMOCRATIC TIUKET FOR PRESIDENT, GKN. W. S. HANCOCK. OF FENNBYL VANIA. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT, Tvi I « * * ♦ H. ENGLISH. Or INDIANA, State IJemocp.atic Ticket. FOR GOVERNOR : ALFiTEI) h. CO LQUIT™ A A ion sty ator, 27tii district: K, lU ItNDANISL. FOR f-I.OKKTARV OF STATE : N. C. BARNETT, of Baldwin. FOR COM I'THtiLl.KR-OENKKAL: W. A. WULG11T, of Richmond. I oil TREASURER : D. N. SPEER, of Troup. FOR ATTORN KV-(?K!YERA I..' CLIFFORD ANDERSON, of Bibb. Pit F.siiiENTt a I, Electors . H,h Iff#; STkTK-AT lAtlGE ,1. C. iil.ACK, I U. K. KENNON. Alternates—L. J. Ghim, A.P.Adams MSTRICT ELECTORS First District- Samuel I). Hr.vHvell, of Liberty. Alernate— Josephus Camp, of Emanuel. Second District \V. M. Hammond, of Thomas. Alternate—W, M. Har¬ rison, of Quitman. 'iiiiui District- l'. (' Smith, of Tel¬ fair. Alternate—James bi-imp, Jr, of Fourth Dodge, District—I,. R. Ray, of Coweta. Htirri*. Alternate—Henry C. Came¬ ron, of Fifth District—Jim. 1. Hall, of Spalding. Alternate—D. P. JJill, of Fulton, Sixth District -Reuben R. Nisln-t, ofi'utnam. Alternate—P, D. Ihihig iii.ii, of Baldwin. Seventh District—Thos. W. Akin, of Bartow, Alternate- 1*. W Alexander, ol Cobb. Eighth District—Seaborn Reese, of Hanonck. Alternate—J, K. Hines, of Washington, District—W. Ninth E. Simmons, of Gwinett. Alternate—M. G. Boyd, of White. Ex-Gov. Rrowiu 1 n udignified and exhaustive reply to recant attacks upon his fealty to Georgia, paragraph, closes which, with the following wo extract from th o Constitution of Wednesday : “1 have often been assailed by artful politicians, lint 1 do not fear their attacks. I place my cause in the hands of the great mass of the honest laboring people of Georgia. J have never betrayed them, but have fended always their stood by them and de¬ rights and their in¬ terests. and they know it. They have always by supported overwhelming and sus¬ tained me ma¬ jorities. of them 1 sprang and from them, 1 am one 1 do not hesitate to trust them. Indeed 1 have am¬ ple assurances from them that mv course in the senate meets their election proval and by the that legislature they desire iny which is soon to be The upper n lortion of McLemore’s Cove in Walk er county, Georgia, lias matrimonial recently been the scene of a sensation which rival anything of the kind ever before known among that steady going, law abiding and God-serving peo¬ ple. affair, The gathered circumstances from of the as citizens the Cove, are substautialy as fol¬ lows: Ia?ss than a year ago, two well-to-do young farmers, Robert Woods anil Joseph Colquitt each t »ok himself a wife am! to all ap¬ pearances was alliances. happy in their re¬ spective The young ladies chosen by the two farmers were each of bore respectable good character parentage, well and a as as a reputation qualification for intelligence for all and the a proper duties in their spheie of life. Ail went couples happy until with the two young when they one night last week, house, wheere met they at had a been neighlw’s bid¬ den to a frolic or party. Here the conversation turned on married life and the resi>ectivc merits of their wives were husbands. freely discussed In this by the young sation conver¬ Woods confessed a fondness for Colquitt’s wife, and Colquitt acknowledged a preference for Mrs. Woods. This resulted in a proposi¬ tion and a mutual liargain netween the husbands to exchange wives on the spot. The women were at once informed of the trade, and Mrs. Col¬ quitt resigning heartily herseli acquiosod cheerfully in the swap, to the care aim caresses of Woods. But not so, however with Mrs. Woods, who indignantly refused the prof¬ fered carresses of Colquitt, and when violence would have been used to her compel her acquiescence, tied to friends aud re|w>rted the out¬ father rageous took proceeding. her Mrs. Woods’s under his protection and invoked the law to bring the kluklux erring husband to justice, but the in-ervoiuM. and the wife traders led the country. The Sunday Phoucgiq fc 1* ft strong Norwood paper. Hend 50 cent* and get it three months. Address, PHONOGRAPH. Atlanta, Ga. PI NOTES. Richmond, Vo., expects to be very gay this fall and winter. Rice straw is worth fourteen dollars a ton in New Orleans. The west Tennessee cotten crop ie reported above the average. Catterpillars continue their rava ages in some parts of Louisiana. The cattle in western Texas are rolling fat, and tl ie grass exceed i ugly fine. City scrip in Brtnliam, Texas, is worth only eight cents on the dollar. ------- - The cotton crop in the neighbor¬ hood of Selma, Ala., is the finest since 1870. The average audience at the at Charleston, S. C., last week, 5,000. Kentucky grand lodge of Good Octoix Templars will meet in Louisville r 12. ........ - Iron lias been laid on the Texas and Pacific railroad a distance 195 miles. The fall meeting of the Nashville blood horse association comes off October 0th. The manufacture of cigars in Nashville, Term,, is assumming mamoth proportions. —* • ♦ • The peach crop in many sections of Kentucky this season is the largest for years. The silver mines of Arkansas continue to increase in interest among moneyed men. The Baptist State Convention, of Tennessee, will meet in Knoxville, 21.-4 October. A pear tree in Greenup, Ken¬ tucky, has yielded two crops this season, and is blooming again. The vintage of wineatthe Belmont vineyards, near Front Royal, Vir¬ ginia, the present season will ag¬ gregate 12,000 gallons. A Mill will bo erected in New Orleans for the manufacture of paper from the refuse of sugar cano after the juice has been extracted from it. Four hundred and fifty thousand dollars are necessary to give Mobile a channel to the lower bay seventeen feet deep and two hundred feet wide. The population of Alabama is 1,250,000. The population of South Carolina is 996,824. Excessive rains are damaging the cotton crop of Texas. Cotton pickers in some parts Texas get ono ^dollar per day and their board, —— —» --- —. A fine sugar crop will be made on all the Brazos lime bottom lands of Texas. Memphis will have a big Mardi Gras celebration. Near Wool Market, Mississippi, there is a woman who weighs 815 pounds. Kentucky State institution for deaf mutes, at Danville, has 112 students. ------ lid — Kentucky will have five canidates for governor. Jim Curry, the Texas murderer, has settled down ns a machinist in Indiana. The Tobacco crop of North Caro¬ lina, west of the Bluo Ridge, is said to be excellent. The Tennessee Baptist convention meets at Knoxville October 21. Four Republican papers have died in Kentucky this year. The North Carolina State Sunday school convention meets in Salis¬ bury 27th and 28th of October. Forty thousand dollars have been subscribed for an elevator in Rich¬ mond, Va¬ The amount needed is 60,000. lucrenoe of the Wool Tr ade. The London journal devoted to the wool trade savs that “there are few things connected with the inarch 6? civilization during this century” the growth more remarkable than of the woolen industry ot the world. This growth, which has been chiefly siuce 1820, is duo to the development of the United 8iate* and the growth of the British colonies in a great measure. In 1830 the total wool-clip was 320,000,000 last jiounds. In 1878, the year for which complete figures can be aggregated, tho clip was 1,600,000,000 five paundt, or more than times as much, and yielding GOO, fleeces 1 000,000 pounds of clean-scoured eights Previous to 1830 teven of rorld’s supply catne from yielded Europe. 740 ,(KjO.OOO In pounds, 1*78 Europe less or than half, the United States 208, 000,000 pounds, or twenty times as much as in 1830, the River Plata 240,000,000 pounds, Australia 300, 000.000 pounds, and South Africa 4-8,000,000 pounds. “The ten sheep product by improving breeds of and improving modes of cleansing, rinsing combing, This industry sorting and woftls. now employs finds a work large amount for 913,000 of capital, hands ana and 12,000,000 spindles. France takes the most ol the unsecured wools from the Plata country, which only tarn out 30 per cent, of washed wool, while Great Britain consumes the native and Austra lian fleeces ” A Fight with a Mad Dog. Mr. Thomas A^Jonns. of Oconee county, had a fierce encounter with a ma* i dog. day before yesterday, under the following circumstances : Mr. Jonas lives about six miles from Athens, near Jennings’s mill. He was sitting in his house reading, when his little son, aged about ten years, ran in and said that a dog had tried to bite him. Mr. Jonas picked about up it. his Going hat and into went the out yard, to see lie saw a strange dog run under the house. As Mr. Jonas stopped to look under the house, the dog sud¬ denly jumped at him and came so near that he brushed could his face. By the time dog Mr. jumped Jonas him straighten again. This up, the at each time was twice more Jonas repeated, knocked and Mr. the dog off by striking him underneath the mouth, with his right arm. Every could time, the infuriated animal’s teeth be heard to snap, as he came to the attack; his eyes glared rreen and glassy, and the saliva ran in streams from his lips. After the fourth onset, Mr. Jonas remembered that he had heard that when a mad dog is infuriated and can get some¬ thing to bite, bis madness is, for the time, satisfied. Acting on this idea, quick into the as thought, dog’s mouth; he thrust his hat and as ground.. the dog Both grasped it, both fell to the rose at the same time, hut the dog—-as Mr. Jonas had supposed lie would—ceased the attack, and ran into the lot, and under the barn. Mr. Jonas got out his gun and shot the dog, but did not of quite pitch-fork, kill him. ho With the the animal aid a drew out and knocked him on the head with an axe, which finished him. The dog Akins, had previously colorod bitten Thomas a man, who lived two miles above Mr. Jonas’s. Akins went at once to Watkinsvilo to consult could a physician—with what result we not learn. lie was bitten in the chin : and every at¬ tempt the dog made at Mr. Jonas, was towards his face. Two dogs were also bitten—ono belonging to Mr. David Stephens, and one to Peter Damons, colored. Both of theso dogs The ought to bo killed at once. and didn’t dog was a strange one belong anywhero in the vicinity of whero this occurred. The presence of mind of Mr. Jonas was remarkable, and doubtless saved him from being bitten, and from a horrible death. He shows his hat, with the print of the dog’s teeth in it .—Athens Banner. Two Little Negroes Burned To Death. A gentleman from Harris county informs us of a very distressing scene which occurred in that county on the place of Mr. James Toler on the 1 Dili instant. The little negro children were about one and four years old. The parents went to the field to their work and left the chil¬ dren locked up in their cabin, and left is the supposed, fire burning and in the fireplace, it from which the cabin took lire. Tito screams of the oldest child attracted the attention of the hands in the field, lmt before they could reach the bouse it was too late to give any help. Mr.Toler, who the burning was in building hearing, and also knocked ran to the door down, but the fire had made such headway that he was unable to enter the building. The remains of the oldest child were found crouched in the chimney jam covered with the fallen eatth and not much disfigured, burned but tho youngest was almost com¬ pletely being found up. a near portion the of centre the remains of the cabin. When will the colored people learn to take better care of thcirchildren ? Itisnotunfrequent that we have to record similar oc¬ currences. In leaving little children alone great caution should be exer¬ cised to prevent accidents of this or similar kinds.— Columbus Times. With his own Hand. Yesterday most" we received the details of a horrible suicide, com¬ mitted by a young man near Chaly¬ beate Springs, in Meriwether county. Last Friday evening Mr. Allen Moody, who the springs livesnear and Chalybeate, purchased went to a little powder and a few buckshot. He returned home and carefully loaded his gun and set it to one side. The next morning early he told his mother that he was going out to kill some squirrels* and took the gun and left the house. Soon after he left the house a gun shot was heard out at the shop, and when some of the family went there they found the voting man cold in death and his Wains scattered over the building. en * tered his forehead a litUe above and almost centerly between the eyes, and it is presumed he died ra*lf act' * nn 1° !!1 known, that without could mental derange rnent, have prompted him to have taken bis own life. He was considered a most excellent young deplored.— man, and the set Enquirer. is greatly Columbus A , „ New York , journal . , sums up t , ,e «»?t of summer pleasures and to 1 ie citizens of that busy town, shows that Coney Island alone has taken in 811,000,000 during the TH. visitors, and an expenditure number of .2 P® r capita. The total visitors Highlands, at Coney Island. Rockaway, Long Branch, Boach, Glen L-land and hurt 8 raii d total G950,000, and their expenditures, of transportation, at Sl4, ‘•-;2,000. lo carry them the round fnps cost ^ 8o.R2,500 more. It is ?J S0 estimated that several mil R. on9 ' vcre consummed in excur Bions to remoter of the visitors places. A Coney large proportion Island and other adjacent to transient udjourners spots, however, were in New York. James r R. Lyle, A fTORNEY AT LAW. Watkinsville, Ga. 55?“ Will practice in the Cour's of Oconee and adjoining counties. mar31,’80-ly LI, Jl, Jackson, Attrncy&Coun elorata av and judge of the ©mnitg Watkinsville, Ga. Will practice in all Courts the County Court Oconee marl7,’8Q-ly THE BICKFORD AUTOMATICS! KNITTER I: will knit a pair of socks in fifteen minute ! Every nmchine warranted herfect, and to d: just as Rpmemcd. accompanies A compktctc each in— struction book machine. Kails all I es of work, narrows and wi¬ dens it; shapes all sires complete. Knits over $o different garments, Socks, Stockings, Mittens, Leggins, Wristlets, possible Gloves, etc. It knits every variety plain profit or fancy manufacturing stitch. 75 knit per goods. cent, in Farmers can treble the value oi their wool, by converting it into knit goods. in Agents wanted every State, County, Citv and Town, to whom very low prices will be made. Eor full particulars and lowest prices send for the best Family Machine to BICKFORD KNITTING MACHINE CO., llrattleborro, Vt. npr21,18S0—lv Li. /(. Jllen's Horse and jYTule MILLINERY STORE. Cor. Clayou anil Jackson Sis., ATHENS, GA. I have in Store a good assortment of Sad¬ dles and Harness, Bridles, Collars, Whips, Saddle Blankets, Horse Covers, <Vc. You will find that iny harness is made of the best Western Leather, all hand made. 1 cut and fit horse collars and do all kinds of repairing at short notice. better Buggy whips l make a specialty and a assortment cannot be found in the city. Saddles town at rock bottom. My harness camrn * be beat in prices and quality. When you visit the city please honor me with your presence. Thanking continuance you for past favors, 1 hope a in the future. apr.7,1880,fiin Li. £. J brasher, ATTORNEY aT LAW, Watkinsville, Ga. Dj?* 1 Will practice iu the Courts o Oconee and adjoiuing counties. marl7,’8tMy Oconee Mortgage Sheriffs Sale. GEORG I A— Oconee County. M ill be sold on the first Tuesday in October, next, between the legal hours of sale, before the Court House door, in the town of Watkinsville: Oconee county, the following described pro¬ perty to-wit: All that tract or parcel of land situated, lying; and being in the County of Oconee, and State of Georgia, known as the Reuben T, Dur¬ ham home place, adjoining lands of George C. Thomas and Saffold Bar wick on the North, Reuben T. Durham on the V est, Milledge S. Durham ou the South, aud R. T. Durham on the East. Three miles South of the town of Watkinsville on the Road from Wat kiusville to Scull Shoals Factory or l’owell’e Mills. Containing one hun¬ dred and thirty six acres more or less, leyied on to satisfy 'Court a fi. fa. issued from Oconee Superior returnable to January Reaves, term Reuben 1881 in favor of Marsie vs. T. Durham. Levied on as the orooerty of Reubin T. Dur¬ ham. Writen notice given tenant in possession, pointed A. L. Smith. Property out bv S. P. Thurman plaintiffs attorney. This 28th Aog. 1880. B. E. OVERBY Sheriff Oconee Co. Ds A F DURHAM, | Du. W M DURHAM, Late of Sparu, Late of Maaey>, Trs. A. F. & W. M. Barham, SPECIALISTS, urgery, Chronic Diseases of Male and Female, and VensriaJ, Operate for Cro!9 Eve , Cataract, Ftone in ,b e Bladder. Harelip or Cleft Pal au . 8) iVe . WiU visil paUents in any P art of * laU, > >» consultation or AJ ' * ,Ui ,wm P. Drs. A. K «k Wi M. Durham, utrSl.’&Mf Athens Ga. “ v!“ ‘ ~yqyyi‘y3; hunk-0‘ y ‘y', .31.)im. iv . \ .‘ '1-1’ a. yj‘ my:}.} ['5,’ 4 5:“ -,..w .'*,"‘»-'_L’/“uy, :5; twu‘rrfl‘ , I: ‘ , BEST 515‘.“qu m: RABLE, CHAFI‘. m \EtII-BSARY in MACHINE. cvvrv Eml ily .u. a 512'“ ING JA F\S- Jf- p. JSuLLIVAN, Fasltioable ] | HZSSMAzisard MILLL\ t e ]| Watkinsville, Ga. Begs leave to offer her services to the ladies of Watkinsville an! vicinity as a dressmaker and milliner. Hats and Bonnets re-trimmed and renovated. Dressmaking and fancy work neatly and cheaply executed. All the latest maga¬ zines and patterns a’ways oa hand. Satisfaction guaranteed. Prices liberal. Give her a trial. aug24 2 . . 11 . White, Jl. 2 ., f HACTICINjj j^HSYICIAj^, Watkinsville, Ga. 27r“ B ill be found at his office when not called off. ruarl7,’80- tf Levi Walker, CoL, BARBER) Watkinsville, Ga. Can be H. found Durham’s at his Shop Con¬ next door to C. and fectionery, Sunday on mornings Saturday evenings, until 10 o’clock, a. m. marl0’80-tf larke (eiinj A^iiciiltraa Fall 1 Association. LEGAL NOTICE TO STOCKHOL¬ DERS. Honorable By virture Superior of an order of Clarke the Court of County, Ga., fllis Honor E. H. Pot¬ tle, Judge of the Northehern Circuit presiding). claim Notice is hereby Stockholders given to all who to be in the original “Clarke County Ag ricu tural Fair Association,’’ to fill their claims fora distributiveshares of the proceeds of the side ot the “Fail Grounds” in Athens which has been sold under and by virture of a decree of said Court, Stockhold¬ ers must verify their claims by affi¬ davit, and file them in the Clerk’s Office of said Court on or before the second Monday in November next, the first day of the next term said Court. July 23d, 1880. John I. Huggins, Clerk, Clarke Superior Court. New Firm. Good Work. (o‘arriaae, Qiuqay (Wagon, ,A-g ‘ \;‘:; i" ,\ u ,;,~'; .g, flat I’lmthntion, H’ork, at the 01d stand of W . I3, Langford. Watkinsvillc, Ga. The undersigned having rented the shops method of Mr. Langford, we take that this of prepared informing the public kinds we are to do all of in Wagon, first-class Buggy and Plantation short notice. Work a manner at Give us a call, and be convinced. TvOBERT DAVIS, WARREN HILL. sept. 14,’80 2m Ordinary’s Office, Sept. 6th, 1S80. GEORGIA— Oconee County. Whereas, William Poulnot, ap¬ plies to me for valuation and setting apart a Homestead of reality, and I will pass upon the same at 10 o'clock a. m. Sept 29th 18S0, at my office, in Watkinsville. Given under mv hand at office this Sept. 6th, 1880. JAMES R. LYLE, Ordinary. GEORGIA— Oconee County. Whereas, Barton E. Thrasher, Executor of Isaac Thrasher, repre¬ sents to the Court, in his petition duly filed and entered on record, that he has fully administered Isaac Thrasher’s estate. This is therefore to cite all persons concerned, kin¬ dred and creditors to show cause, if anv they r can, why said Executor should not be discharged from his dismission Executorship, the and receive first Monday Letters of on in December, next. J. R. LYLE, Sept6th,lS80.3-m. Otdmary. GEORGIA— Oconee County. Whereas, Mary C. Thrasher ad¬ ministratrix of Barton C. Thrasher, presents to the Court, in her peti¬ tion, duly filed and entered on re¬ cord that she has fully' adminis¬ tered Barton C. Thrasher's estate This is therefore to cite all persons concerned, kindred and creditors to show cause; if any they can, why said administratrix ’should not be discharged receive from her Letters admin¬ istration, and of dismission on the first Monday' in December next. J. R. LYLE, Sept.6,1880.3-m. Ordinary. A liberal reward will be paid for the arrest and apprehension of one George bond for Parks, coi., who is under his appearance at the charged County Court of Oconee county, preacher, with adultry. has fled He hails as a and from justice. “ginger-cake” Description. He is of a rather has burnt color, quick spoken, a mark on the right side of his forehead near the edge of his hair, and near where he usually parts his hair, is near five feet high aud would weigh near 175 or 180 pounds, harboring and is about 35 years hereby of age. cautioned Any under said Parks are Any information penalty of that law will for same; lead his to arrest will be thankfully received, or wo will pay a liberal reward for his deliver)’ to as. Address, FLERN ELDER, EZEKIEL WALK SB. { ({ I- ii I -l-j 1 / h { / bLM . K r- F i V.V liil X ETJPRES BLOC &TH£3S[S, small for rapidly increasing business, Having found their old store too their LYNCH &FLANIGEN, take pleasure informing their friends a r, d customers that they have secured the eoimuodiaus store in DKUPREE OPERA HOUSE, where they will keep ia stock full lines of CHINA, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE LAMPS, PLATED WARE, CUTLERY Tin Wooden and Willow Wares, Whips, Bird Cages « brushes and Household Goods Generally, At Prices Loner thau Ever! LT.YCH A * FLJtXlGE.X, Dntpre Block, Broad Street, Athens, Ga. 53p“ To Merchants they offer extraordinary inducements, in Crate, Hhds. and small lots that cannot be surpassed. aug27 tf ORDER YOUR Saw Mills, Grist & Cane Mills. Plantation Machinery, Shafting, Engines Hangers’ Boilers, Cotton Screws, Pulleys, Journal Boxes, Mill Gearing, Gudeons, Turbine Water Wheels, Gin Gearing cheap, Judson’s Governors, Diston’s Circular Saws and Gummers and Files. Belting and Bab bett Metal and Brass Fitting, Globe and Check Valves and Whistles, Guages, Etc., Iron and Brass Castings and Gin Ribs, from Geo. R. Lombard & Go,, »*• 7~T ~ FOREST CITY FOUNDRY & MACHINE WORKS (Near Water Tower,) 1014 to 1024 Fenwick Street, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. <S£5“ Repairing promptly done at lowest prices. More Popular than. Ever! THE G e *NE S in ®> new FAMILY SEWING MACHINE! SpT'The popular demand for the genuine Singer in 1S79 exceeded that of any previous year during the quarter of a century in which this “Old Reliable” Machine has been before the public. In 1878 we sold 856,422 Machines. “ 1879 431,167 Excess over any previous year, 74,745 Machines. I&ff-Our sales last year were at the rate of 1,400 Sewing Machines a Day for every business day in the year. The Reliable” Sinner ?-« Is THE STRONGEST THE SIMPLEST, THE MOST DURABLE Sewing Machine ever yet Constructed. Remember Mark” k m Inch and in embedded e ’has the “Trade in the Arm of the Machine. The Stager Man! ? «* Co. S 3 * PRINCIPAL OFFICE, U S©wi.:&2, nSTew York. DISTRIBUTING OFFICE, for Georgia, Florida, South Carolina and Alabama, Atlanta, Ga. J. B. TGOMER, Agent, Athens, Ga. 1,500 Subordinate Offices in the United States and Canadas and 3,0s' 11 Offices in the Old World and South America. julylSSO ly JAMES E. MURRAY. I I. W. THRASHER. Murray&thrasheR, Watkinsville, Georgia, In returning our thanks to our friends for their very liberal patronage du rsr-i; 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 Dry Goods Our Lines OF JEANS. BLEACHED and BROWN DOMESTICS, STRIPES and CHECKS, PRINTS, of standard makes, from 6c. to 9c. per y ’ LADIES TIES, DRESS GOODS, ETC.. ETC.. ETC. GLASSWARE, CROCKERY, MOORE S SCHOOL INK. FINE CIGARS and TOBACCO, STATIONERY, is full and low prices. Our at fflMDSJWPIT We have the best line of Boots Shoes Ladie’s and Mens’ Hats Caps, We have e ver h ad, and at prices that defy competition. Our stoeK of * ' Heady-Made Clothing Is large, of the be«t styles and material, and bought with a view to meet the wants of all class of purchasers. Suits from $2.75 up. The Departments of Drugs, Hardware and Staple and 3 FAHCT GROCERIES, always full, with prices as low as rhe lowest. This largo stock i» in slot V* I transit and in a few days will be fullaud complete. Wo auaut ask you and examine. MURRAY & THRASHER. Watkinmlle, Ga.,