The People's party paper. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1891-1898, December 09, 1892, Image 6

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WOMAN’S WORLD. YOUNG WOMEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSO CIATION OF BROOKLYN. Boston’s Mixed Club—The Daily Morning Scrub —Women and Theology—The Rust ling Underskirt —Children’s Ailments —A Woman Arctic Explorer. Brooklyn is celebrating the completion t>f the building of the Young Women’s Christian association, an institution which promises to do an important work for Brooklyn, where so many working women reside. The building, which is erected on a site partly purchased and partly given by the late Congressman S. B. Chittenden, is the munificent gift of Cornelius B. Wood, and is erected as a memorial of his wife, who was a sister of Robert C. Ogden, of the firm of John Wanamaker. Mrs. Wood was a woman of an exalted type, and her life was nota ble for its spirituality and charity. Mr. Wood is a retired banker of wealth. In December, 1890, Mr. Wood offered to give $125,000 to erect a building for the association, provided SIOO,OOO additional was raised, as a permanent endowment. “This gift,” said Mr. Wood in his letter, “is made to honor a life of charity and love by husband and children in mem oriam of one who was a friend of work ing girls, who rejoiced when the associa tion was organized, who labored for it and had faith in the grand work it would accomplish.” Mr. Wood not only gave $125,000, but increased this to $142,000. The endow ment fund now amounts to $122,501, and the association is aiming to increase this to $150,000. The building is cen trally located, and architecturally is an ornament to the city. The vestibule contains a big open fireplace. Opposite to this is the secretary’s room. On this floor are also the cloakroom and the en trances to the elevators, and through a great well in the center one can look up through the six stories to the roof. In the basement are a medical department and a fully equipped pharmacy, a gym nasium and the intelligence office. The library, already filled, is on the second floor. It is a light and airy room and is furnished with a gallery and storage apartments. A room for typewriters is off the library, and from this floor access is had to the gallery of the memorial hall. Over the hall on the third floor is a large lecture room with a seating capac ity of 400, and there is a well furnished parlor connected with the lecture room. The fourth and fifth stories are devoted to eighteen classrooms, where millinery, dressmaking, sewing, embroidery, cook ing, language, history, bookkeeping, arithmetic and penmanship are taught by eighty-seven instructors. The memo rial hall which has been alluded to is a beautiful room containing seats for CSO and has been furnished by the Alumnae association of the Brooklyn Heights sem inary. This hall has been named in honor of Mary A. Brigham, who was a famous teacher of her time. —Cor. Phil adelphia Ledger. Boston’s Mixed Club. Among the new clubs of Boston is the Unity, a club composed of men and women whose object is the further ance of art and the promotion of social interests. Its members include a large proportion of the artists of the city, and it inaugurated its second season by a water color exhibition. There are no lack of men’s clubs and of women’s clubs in Boston, as in other cities; but the club where men and Women meet is as rare as are most ideal things in this world. The regulation women’s club is a rather dreary affair, as it is now conducted. Instead of hav ing parlors, reading room and dining room always open, as is the case with men's clubs, where members may drop in at any time and meet each other, and invite friends and enjoy informal socia bility, the women’s club unlocks the doors of its portals for some one after noon a week when its members and guests assemble, and after routine busi ness, carried on in strict parliamentary order, a paper is read and discussed as formally as at any public meeting, and then the club adjourns till another yveek, to go through the same routine again. This may be all very well in some ways, but it is not the social pleasure that club life should render possible. The Unity club here starts out on other lines. It is, first of all, a club for men and women together. It has se cured ideally beautiful rooms on Ar lington street, overlooking the public gardens. It has a fine gallery for pic ture hanging, and it is based on an idea that should develop, as the club grows stronger, into a very attractive and happy social center.—Boston Cor. New Orleans Times-Democrat. The Dally Morning Scrub. Soon the days will be crisp and snappy and when you awake in the morning and thrust one bare foot out from under the cover you will give a little smothered “ouch” and cuddle down under the blankets again. Every one knows the kind of morning we mean, when the window paues are covered with delicate traceries left by the artist Jack Frost, and when a compromise is effected by putting on one's stockings and shoes in bed. Now it is just this kind of weather that makes us neglect our toilet. We hurry through our ablutions, giving a little dab at our face—an apology for a wash—and get down stairs as l|uicyiy as we can. When we go out doors we are shivery and creepy; we don't feel more than half awake, and we are very uncomfortable altogether. Os course it is ever so much nicer to bathe in a warm room in tepid water and go through every detail of the day's toilet with a leisure that is a positive luxury, but when the weather prohibits don’t neglect the details on that account. A cold sponge bath, exposing but one portion of the body at a time, followed by a quick, brisk rubbing, sets your blood to tingling, your flesh glows with a warm pink tint and you feel like a bird, not a half awakened creature who has but one aim, and that is hug the fire. If the sponge bath seems too lengthy an operation, at least bathe neck, arms and face well with soap as well as water. There is nothing so good for the complexion as a regulation scrub, and nothing that will so soon make it muddy as a little dab that many women con sider equivalent to a genuine bath.—■ New York Journal. Women and Theology. “Women in the Pulpit” was the sub of discuasion at a ‘Jmoruimz lecture” EOPLE’S PARTY PAPER, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, DECEMBR In 'Boston recently. 'The “drift" of opin ion among the speakers seemed to be that women should be allowed to preach. The Rev. Lorenzo Haynes, of Waltham, said: “It is generally conceded that women are more religious than men— certainly they form by far the larger proportion of church members. In every church today they do a large part of the work. Take out that work and not a church could stand. As three-fourths of the church members are -women, I know of no reason why the same pro portion of ministers should not be wom en.” Mrs. Jane L. Patterson, of Rox bury, spoke of what is being accom plished for the development of women since Tuft’s college opened all its de partments to them. “There is no cir cumscribing annex,” she said, “no speci fications to hinder their progress. A woman may enter as a man does. If she wishes to study electrical engineer ing, she can have thorough instruction; if she desires a course in the divinity school, the chance is given her.” The Rev. Mary T. Whitney, of Cam bridge, could not give the same account of Harvard. She had applied for ad mission to the divinity school and re ceived from President Eliot a letter of regret that her application could not be favorably considered, precedent being against it. A Miss Spofford, of Sioux City, told her hearers that she had built up a congregation in lowa, and thought that as a woman she enjoyed superior facilities of making her influence felt in the home life of her parishioners.—Bos ton Letter. The Rustling Underskirt. There is no more melodious sound on earth to the shell-like ears of the wom an of today than the frou-frou of silken skirts. It is as soothing to her senses as the plashing of limpid waters. She is content to wear a gown of last year’s serge, and during the summer she was satisfied with cambric or gingham, if only the petticoat underneath, from which her little feet peeped in and out, was composed of the proper material, which material is taffeta —changeable, striped or even plain. Pinked ruffles are giving place to flounces of lace, fes tooned and caught here and there with knots of velvet or ribbon. So widespread is this tendency to rus tle that the shops are offering petticoats advertised as “rustle skirts,” and the term catches more women in fifteen minutes than a placard bearing the sign of “silk petticoats” in letters a foot high would catch in a week. While the rustling craze lasts it is an excellent opportunity to lay in a supply of white maslin underskirts, which are bound to return sooner or later, and the dainty ones, with their frills and em broideries, make one wonder if, after all, it is not more refined and fitting to wear pure white underclothing, upon whose surface every spot can be seen, and which can be restored to its original purity by a flying trip to the laundry. What would our grandmothers—those dear departed dames—have said to our wearing undergarments which did not show the dirt?—New York Herald. Children’s Ailments. It would be a great help to mothers and would save not only much needless anxiety but also many a doctor’s bill and sometimes even a life, if the dis tinction between a slight and a serious ailment were more generally understood. Overcaution and not undercaution is apt to be the prevailing tendency. A child or young person complains of se vere pain in the chest, and the mother at once fancies it is pneumonia, or if the trouble is in the bowels peritonitis is the dreaded enemy, and so on. “Pain without fever,” said a well known physician, “may be very severe and may cause much suffering, but in acute attacks it is not dangerous.” “If you had this amount of pain that you complain of,” he said to the patient who had hastily summoned him, “in any in flammatory disease, you would be in a raging fever; if you have no fever you need never worry.” Most serious illnesses are preceded by a chill. This is a symptom that should never be disregarded, and it is always safe to put a child to bed and stop his food. Warmth and dieting will be found to be the best remedy for any ordinary indisposition, while for the beginning of serious trouble it is often the only thing that can be done until the disease de clares itself.—New York Tribune. Another Woman Arctic Explorer. Travel in the far north has hitherto been attempted only by men, but the year 1892 has witnessed the breaking up of this monopoly. Mrs. Peary accom panied her husband to a point farther north than any white woman has ever before penetrated, and early last sum mer Miss Elizabeth Taylor started from Winnipeg for the McKenzie river delta, and from this expedition she has just returned. Miss Taylor is by nature a traveler and by education an artist, and is greatly interested in natural history. She started on her trip alone and made it alone successful to the end. She is the first woman explorer that has ever ventured into the polar regions On her own account, and with an amount of pkick and steadfastness that would have done credit to a strong man she has carried out her programme and completed her round trip to the far northern forts of the Hudson Bay com pany. Os the results of her trip we can as yet know only in a general way. This much may be said, however, her sketchbook is full of drawings which are not only of great historical and topographical interest, but also of a very high order of artistic merit. —For- 3st and Stream. Woman Suffrage in Vermont. The great event of the day in politics for women is the passage of the munici pal suffrage bill in the Vermont house of representatives by the large majority of 149 to 83. Laura Moore, secretary of the W. S. A., writes that the Vermont men are as kind and generous as are the men of Wyoming or Kansas, and when ever -we can get enough of the right sort into a legislature Vermont women will receive justice at their hands. Close upon this success, however, comes news of defeat in New Zealand, where the long agitated bill to give full suffrage to women has failed again to pass. One of the main points in the dis pute was the unnecessary proviso in serted by the upper house allowing women to use voting papers instead of going in person to the booths; for when ever women are allowed to vote they are ready to follow the rules. Orchid Tea. French women, it appears, have been drinking orchid tea for fifty years, and the consumption of this expensive deli cacy has much increased of late. The orchid from which the tea is made is a member of one of the handsomest and most expensive families which grows in the forests of Bourbon and Mauritius. The decoction is easy. You just lay the leaves and stalks in cold water, about one gram to a teacup—more or less, according to taste—close the vessel tight and boil for ten minutes. The tea may be sweetened.—London Society. Exhibits of Woman’s Work. The industrial features shown at the Mechanic’s fair in Boston include the establishment of a woman printer in ac tive operation, an exhibit from the laun dry of the Home for intemperate Wom en, a display of factory work by women, of silk culture from the woman’s prison > and other industries carried on by wom en, such as the culture and preserving of small fruits and of beekeeping.— Boston Letter. A Year’s Work of the W. C. T. U. From the reports of the W. C. T. U. in Denver it may be computed that more than $300,000 has been raised and ex pended by the different societies through out the United States during the past year, and more than 150,000 women are united in the cause of temperance. Two hundred and eighty-two coffee houses, friendly houses and feeding rooms have been established and are maintained by the society. A Club Without a Debt. The Ladies’ club is the only clab in Sydney, Australia, which is not in debt. Their rooms are in a central and conve nient locality, where tea, coffee or cocoa are served at any hour, where dainty lunches are enjoyed by the members and their friends, and where private recep tion rooms are furnished to ladies who wish to entertain their friends. The club numbers nearly 100 members. —Ex- change. Co-Education in St. Lawrence. Co-education is carried out to the most practical details in the St. Lawrence col lege, one of the earliest of co-educational institutions. During the recent cam paign the Republican club included both young women and men in its member ship, and together they marched from the college to the town hall through a pouring rain to listen to speakers on the issues of the campaign.—Exchange. What Suffrage la. We are often asked what suffrage is, and what it will do for us. It is the standard that leads the way, and the want of it is the bar that stands in the way of everything else. It is the demand for suffrage that has helped to bring all the gains we have already won, and these in their turn will help to bring suffrage.—Mrs. Ednah D. Cheney. Suffragists Ar® Not Agitators. The advocates of equal rights for women are called agitators. But the people who oppose progress oppose the divine order, and it is they who make the agitation, just as a stone motionless in the bed of a brook makes more agita tion in the water than all the boats that move along with the stream.—Mrs. A. M. Diaz. Eucy Booth to Dive Dike an East Indian. Lucy Booth, General Booth’s youngest daughter, is about to go to India to be at the head of the work among the women of that dark land. Like all the women of the Salvation Army in India, she will go among the native women ia their own costume arid live in the same manner that they do.—Woman’s Journal. In millinery violet shades seem to be prime favorites. A bonnet for an elder ly lady is made of violet velvet and ca nary velvet folded together in a skillful manner, with a jet ornament and a yel low feather. Mrs. C. K. Garrison, widow of the millionaire and “commodore,” has bought Lord Dowington’s house on Gros venor square, London, which will hence forth be her residence in the season. A band of twelve women in New York city started and supported by their own personal effort a free kindergarten for one year at the expense of S7OO. Miss Eunice Ross Davis, at Dedham, Mass., aged ninety-two years, is claimed to be the only surviving member of the Women’s Antislavery society. On a single Sunday in October last in the city of Denver thirty-five pulpits were occupied by as many regularly or dained women ministers. The nurses’ pension bill has received the president's signature, and will re lieve many feeble women unable to earn a living. Two women have been elected to the vestry of St. Paul’s Episcopal church at Hickman, Ky. Ghost Story Party. My dear, have you heard of the very latest fad? Probably not, because it is so new it has not reached Detroit yet. Well, it’s a ghost party and its just lovely. In order to give one successfully you must have one of those big halls—a hall, you know, that goes up two or three stories and has a great old fash ioned fireplace in it? First you invite about eight or nine people and assemble them in the hall. All the portieres are drawn, the lights are put out and the fire .allowed to burn low. Then each one is obliged to tell a ghost story in his or her most blood curdling manner. Sounds awful, doesn’t it? Kind of makes your flesh creep and horrid little shivers run down your back, but it is really awfully nice, because, you know, it is really necessary to hold hands so you will not be too frightened, and sometimes they say that even that is not enough and stronger measures have to be adopted. Os course I don't know, because I have never attended one, but in the east they are called engagement parties, because so many engagements have resulted from them. You know how easy it is to be —well, to be affectionate in the dark, and when the fire flares up the girls look so appealing and so pretty it is no wonder the men lose their hearts. When everybody has had his turn lights are turned up and refreshments served and then the guests go home. The ghost story party is sure to be a success with the Detroit girls.—Detroit Tribune. The Queen in ttvnrr.alism. The queen’s appearance in the pages of The Strand Magazine as the editor of an article written upon information sup plied by her on the dolls of her child hood is an interesting event in her long reign. It will be followed un bv another and even more directly personal contri bution. Her majesty, it is well known, has for some time been a student of Hindoostanee. Her tutor is a native gen tleman, who has another interesting pupil in the head of the Mahammedan faith. According to his testimony the queen in her faculty for acquiring lan guage far outstrips the sultan. Her majesty, though coming late in life to the study, takes a keen interest in it, and delights in communicating with her Indian servants in their native tongue. Her contribution will consist of a translation into Hindoostanee of two let ters. One was written some time ago by her majesty to the shah of Persia; the other is a letter addressed to the English people and was penned shortly after the death of the Duke of Clarence. The latter is certainly the most charm ing of the many simple and unaffected messages the queen has from time to time penned.—London Letter. Pretty and Picturesque. It seems as if there were never so many pretty girls as there are today. Their youthful loveliness is a pleasure to every one. Even the most cross grained, soured mortal must feel a thrill of exultation in life when one of these fair girls, bubbling over with gay spirits and animation, passes by. They have a right to be clothed becomingly, as, in deed, the city girl usually is. Bright plaids are made into plain skirts and worn with silk waists and girdles for common dresses, the very simplicity of which is a strong recommendation. Sultana reds and Santa Maria blues are colors particularly suitable for school girls in fine faced fabrics which may be used for nice dresses. I saw a cheviot the other day in a new shade of navy blue which was made up for a girl of seventeen or so, with yoke, sleeves and skirt band of broche silk with a dash of red. Other blue dresses are neatly trimmed with pinked cloth, combining the two colors of red and blue.—Brook lyn Eagle. One of Patti’s Maids. Patti is hard to please in the arrange ment of her hair and her maid has a hard time of it in consequence. When last in Philadelphia the diva’s attendant burned her finger and it looked for a time as if Adelina’s coiffure would be a wreck. In the emergency a young woman employed about the hotel volun teered her services, which were accepted by the queen of song after some hesita tion. The result was so pleasing to Patti that she made herself acquainted with the girl’s name and history and of fered her a place in her service. The proposition was not accepted on account of the young Philadelphia woman’s ill ness. But her malady lately took such a turn that the doctors ordered her to travel, whereupon she wrote to Patti stating the case and last week received a cablegram embodying a favorable re ply to her request for a place among the servants of the songstress.—Philadelphia Press She Saved a Eife. Maggie Gallagher, a girl employed at Frazard’s Woolen mill, near Conshohoc ken, Pa., saved the life of the wife of her employer. A fire broke out in the Fra zard residence, and during the excite ment it was forgotten that Mrs. Frazard, an invalid, was confined within the burning building. Finally Maggie rushed in and carried her out in her arms. The deed was recognized by Mr. Frazard, who immediately made Miss Gallagher forewoman of one of the departments.— Cor. New York World. WOMEN WHO OWN DIAMONDS. A Constant Source of Worry, They Are Concealed in Strange Places. Women who own diamonds have them always on their minds and generally on their bodies. They go about the streets like traveling safety vaults. The shrewd observer will frequently see a placid, decorous looking woman suddenly press her hand on some part of her body not apparently claiming attention and a look of anguish pass over her face. This is not caused by a casual spasm of pain, a momentary dereliction of some physical function, but by the horrible thought that her diamonds may have slipped their moorings. Some women carry their diamonds around their necks in chamois bags, like scapulars; others ad just them like porous plasters around their waists. Mrs. Thomas Winans, of Detroit, pinned SI,OOO worth of diamonds on to her corsets and now is bewailing their loss. Women seize the most unlikely places to stow away their diamonds when not in use, but do not seem to lessen the chances of loss or anxiety. Last winter a young woman pinned a S6OO diamond to the bottom of a silk skirt for safe keeping. A week later, forgetting this, she put on the skirt and merrily promenaded the town. When she sought to wear her diamond it was gone. After a week of anguish it was recovered by the offer of SIOO reward. She dropped it where it had been picked up. Not two weeks after she sent it to a strange washerwoman pinned inside a corset cover. The mental agony which accompanies such exploits tends to whiten the locks. A woman with solitaire earrings of unusual value wore them concealed in gold balls. In a sleeping car these were removed and she was brought back home in a piteous state of collapse. Another woman, believing that her per son is in danger from the possession of such valuable diamonds when traveling, pins them in the folds of the window curtains and hides them under the cor ners of rugs. The next morning she has forgotten the precise spot and after ransacking the room in a state of com parative frenzy and perhaps losing a train the missing jewels are found. The same woman in Paris hid her dia monds in a slit in a mattress. The dia monds after a week or so had made a considerable tour of the interior of the mattress. Not being found the maid who attended the room was charged with theft and detectives were called in. A pretty imbroglio was set in motion, when the enterprising landlady had the mattress opened, and the diamonds were found. People who do not own dia monds have this compensation and it should not be lightly valued—they do not have to take care of them. —New York Evening Sun. Milk an Antidote for a Dose of Pepper. A fact not generally known is that milk is a sovereign remedy of almost instant efficacy in neutralizing the pain ful burning sensation caused by an oven dose of cayenne.—Ford. Resolutions. The following resolutions were unanimously adopted by Cedar Creek Alliance, of Tattnall county, at its last meeting: Whereas, The Hon. Thos. E. Wat son has made such a gallant fight in behalf of our principles, and in con sequence has been slandered and abused by our enemies, and, Whereas, In order to compete against the terrible conglomaration of the hosts of bourbonisra he has been to considerable expense, there fore, Resolved, That we, the male and female members of Cedar Creek Alliance, do hereby contribute ten cents per capita for both male and female members to start a fund to raise a suitable testimonial for our noble leader and brave defender, Thos. E. Watson; that President C. 11. Ellington be made custodian of the fund, and we request every sub- Alliance in Georgia to follow our example and send the amount to C. 11. Ellington, Thomson, Ga.; that said fund shall be left to the choice of Mr. Watson as to nature of testi monial, or, if he prefers it, the money. Resolved, That our secretary at once send on our assessment, and that we call upon all lovers of re form to come together and let us show to the enemy that though our gallant leader may be slandered and abused by them, that he still lives in the hearts of the Aliiancemen of Georgia. Ordered sent to the People’s Party Paper for publication. J. L. Gilmore, J. S. Stanley, W. Rogers, Committee. The Volume of Currency. In an exhaustive review relating to the amount of money in circulation, N. A. Dunning, in the November Arena, concludes as follows: The whole amount held in the United States treasury is $712,416,- 883.36. From this should be deduct ed $375,272,794, being the amount of gold and silver certificates outside the treasury for which coin is held to re deem. This leaves $337,144,089.36 as the amount to be taken from the Christmas Presents ! Toys, Silverware, Chinaware, Plush Coeds, I BASKETS, BASKETS. THE LARGEST STOCK OF HOLIDAY GOODS ITT TZETZEI SOUTH. THE FAIR, 74 and 7 6 Whitehall street, Atlanta, Ga GEO. R. LOMBARD & CO. ■ ' l ISS!* 1 ° f_ Fwmry, lactiie, Boner A. ANO GIN WORKS, (-HIS I’-M 11 LS, 8 »> w §4B. Railroad. Cotton Factory l FEED MJ 1 L •, sf.O to §IOO. Mill. Kngin® and Gin Saw Gins, Roller Gins, Furnace Grates, Suppiiea. Ctt|)e Kettles, . Evaporators, AUGUSTA, Stacks, Fronts. Building Castes, GA. Grates, Stacks, etc.. Bolts. Shafting, Pulleys, liagrs. 4 -Belting, Packing, Injectors, s K Jet Pumps, Piping, Valves, [sizes. W?!? ™ANI Ft ting.". Saws, Bar Iron, all All kinds of Ma< hineiy Work, new, and Re jjsy v v pairs promptly at.endeu to, ' Write US before you buy and get our prices .p RIVERS JAMES STAPLETON, Formerly Rivers & Arrington. Os T. D. Stapleton & Co., Spread, Ga RIVERS & STAPLETON, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL GROCERS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS, plantation. Supplies, Tobacco, Cigars, Eto 745 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. Will be pleased to have our friends arid the public generally call on us. We sell everything in the Grocery line at LOWEST CASH PRICES! We handle all kinds of COUNTRY PRODUCE on commission, and wil be pleased to serve our friends. THERE IS A WIDE DIFFERENCE between a Piano that is not right in any one essential and one that is right in all respects, particularly in tone, touch and durability. Viewed apart you may not notice the difference Buy the one lacking in essentials, and compaie it wit i ©7ebeit PUNO. and then the difference will be apparent. Ihe strange thing about it is this: You are sure to be asked nearly as much for the cheaper as for the better piano. This seems incredible. It is true. Why? THE JOHN CHURCH COMPANY, CTinOITVTT-A-TT, OZETTO. sum outstanding. During the year 1889 there was a net loss oi gold and silver of $61,591,504. (Sea Mint Report, page 30). As the amount of bullion remained the samey this was a loss to the circulation. It only remains now to deduct the $6,« 916,690 of fractional currency that is still counted in the statement of de ductions, that I consider fair and reasonable, will be complete, which is « follows: Amount outstanding as per treasurer’s report, $1,066,004,420.47 Amounts to be deducted: Loss in gold coin, $200,000,000.00 Loss in silver coin, 20 000,000.00 Loss in paper cur- rency, 50,000,000.00 Held as reserves. total, 603,008,707.00 Held in U. S.Treas- ury, 337,144,080.36 Coin sent abroad, 61,605,504 00 Bullion counted as currency, 76,439,588 00 In circulation $ 310,889,842 11 The balance in circulation divided among 61,717,936 people, gives $4.97 per capita. While this ‘small per capita may appear unreasonable or even absurd to many, I would sug gest a careful revision of those figures item by item, before hasty conclu sions are made. The subject" will bear a much closer investigation than at first seems probable; and since nearly every political economist de clares that the volume of currency in circulation determines the level price of labor and its products, this article may be of some service in locating the difficulties which to day surround every species of industry. Wanted —The post-office address of 11. 11. Vansickle and M. W. Merk. Mr. Watson’s book, “ Not a Revolt; It is a Revolution,” now sells for 50 cents a copy. ADKINS HOUSE, Northwest Cor. Bread and Campbell Streets., Augusta, Georgia. Centrally Located. Five Minutes Ride on Electric Cars from Depot. Will be pleased to have friends from the country. TERMS, $1.50 Per Day. A. J. ADKINS, Proprietor.