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About Georgia home journal. (Greenesboro [i.e. Greensboro], Ga.) 1873-1886 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 10, 1886)
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. 'WHAT IS NEEDED and [ Where to Find It! 0f the ?* r> ' :GI4 ,IoME JwnMA!. Will acme wiih us when we assert that pwrliat has bees long needed ia a bouse that maks a specialty of First Class Man am suitss Sf n 0 /n, BO< i dS i^ ld '. D co ’?, t ? cctio:> will > such business. For several years the tendency has ! he,r value, and then when customers billed wefeTn Tk d T p l KJ "’ t f d 10 “ ,e oods or • met with the information that they fTS"* to catirp| y shoddy work. He intends ► “2 Ilel, ablc Goods, ahow no misrepresentation to hia customers, and to guarantee to yWtota, whether purchasers or not, that courtesy and attention they are cn . ,^ n experience of Fourteen Years iu the business makes me confident that 1 3”? ld ? hoast in asserting Hint I will bo able to show visitors the best assorted ~ K° ods ? f any house in the city of Augusta. I have also instock the m , anufa c'ured by Drown & Cos. These goods advertise themselves. A e Goody car Glove Ilubber Cos. celebrated brand of Rubbers will be carried in ‘I 10 bra l? d k S? wr L w U l,e trade, A full lino of trunks will be kept in •toca, and sold at small profit. Mr. P. Keenan, so well and favorably known to the read -2 thf. V hVJ JRSPST* a ? d wll0n ? ‘here is no better judge of goods in the State, will bo found ir Is n lB , Btan( i* and will be pleased to meet his many friends. I say to the readers ™ me Home Journal: Give mca trial and if I don’t please you don’t try me any more. ; .A,® Jf® C3pCfc-ti,lL© , y® ’22 BROAD ST., OPPOSITE MONUMENT, AUGUSTA, GA. ‘ WXate of Wm. Mulberin & Cos. NEW CARPETSiHOUSE FURNISHING GOODS! "™ AKE 088 TO OUR CUSTOMERS. JR*. Carpets. Armioster Carpels, Wilton Carpets. Venetian Carpets, Dundee Carpets, Bt %™ pet X ( & o *, * latt,n ? B Body Brussels Carpet, Tapestry Carpets, Three-Ply I S^ I v^r > n BCO ,V ;h .> Carpe T ®’, Vionna Car P®ts, Hemp Carpets,Napier Mat- 3 H tin^ l °7, v^ a 1^ e ? r ‘ h li m Velvet and Brussels Rugs, Velvet and Brussels B JJoor Mats, Irish Cocoa Mats, all sizes. Lace Curtains, Madras Curtains, Loops, Tassels and Pins, Window Cornices and Poles in Walnut, tiiit, ash, cherry, ebony; crumb cloths iu all sizes; art squares, window shades in all sizes and colors, and designs in from 0 rt to 10 ft long ; raw silks, Terrys and Mohair cloth for covering furniture, floor oil cloths, linoleum, stmr rods, engravings, oil paintings. Chromos, Porlier Curtains, Baskets, etc , etc. JAMES G.BAILEY& SON, Agts. ' HODGSON SHOPS. WHS, CARRIAGES, MIS AND HARNESS. • -vgK ♦ '4r| A Manufactured and Repaired. La- CTfcCfffr be9t Style and improvements. Good Stock always on Hand All work guaranteed and prices if x jlTMpii ' reduced. Call and see us. ' KLEIN & MARTIN, r^A^^***** - I*^^™™Reference 1 *^^™™ Reference—Hodgson Bros. ATHENS, GJ , HILBDRN WAGON CO., WZ 39, 41 and 43 Decatur Street, ATLANTA, CA* ■ n-.-.-’jK' . X*\/y{ -X/vV/vA jr \La \ X; / v \j£ Az* THE LARGEST STOCK OF—l - b Carriages. Phaetons, Buggies, Farm and Spring WAGONS in the South will be found at their warerooms. Call and see them before buying. The best good 9 are alwuye the cheapest. It is not necessary to break into i penitentiary to get to work on our goods. H. L. ATWATER, Manager. ALFRED BAKER, President. JOSEPH 8. BEAN, Cashier. Augusta Savings Bank! 811 Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia. OASHi ASSETS 1300,000.00 | SURPLUS $50,000.00 O /i T I ?, nsaCtß a Rcn , eral de P os!t acd discount business and allows interest on deposits of five dollars to two thousand dollars. Accounts of banks, bankers and merchants received \ on favorable terms. | SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO COLLECTIONS, We always have money on hand to loan, and afford special accommodations to oui > MMsers. We buy and sell Bonds and Btocks,and arealways happy to give information. yfiraECTORS: —Alfred Baker, James A. Loflin, William Schweigert, E. R. Schneider. Ectesr B. Derry, Joseph S. Bean, W. B. Young, Eugene J. O’Connor, Jules Rival, J. H. JUredenDcrg. mch2fl PLATT BROTHERS! the largest furniture emporium in the state. JU fils FUSED IF TO SCTISVILLI2 SOLD BECAME OF IST. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY FOR ALL WHO WANT VCTSU i 9P'CT:E*B * Guaranteed to give satisfaction to all p irchaaers, or return the goods. Wo taka great pleasure in showing our goods. Come one, come all and satisfy yourselves We , sell goods cheaper than any other house iu Augusta. [. Platt BrotJaera, f 0041 AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. |, D- R. Wbiout, President. 4. T. Nswasar, Cashier. I PLANTERS' LOAN AND Siivi ngH l-fifinK! CAPITAL, (all paid up) , , , 9100,000. L riIIXIfTIMII ('AO IFNUI AffINPNP fo ABB PlV>llh!l HhmIITRO K'HI ■F W liMAPIM ON Aid. tAtlTa OP TIIKWtiHI O fO/t fiA/.K mu m it#’ luit ii( allow *4 ua oupn.ua iu ih# ttarlags D*|<nm 14 j# HNIREUTOIMi It It WrtgM, W H. Howard, (J K Lombard, \. k |i. u*>a, W M H*du, t MUd ml D 11. Vai !!*<.a. At’li! lA,it A. (JKORCiIA HOMK JOURNAL: (iRKKNKSHORO. KRIDAY. DECEMBER! 10. 1886.—EIGHT PAGES. A HOT FIGHT. AN IM'f IK\T or It.WKH’S Rkl) tttvr.lt ttXPKDiTION. A Fodrral llatllU Atuukel lj O * - f.'Jrrtti 1 Troop*—A Itnttory V.aii.i itercjitioa-l'a tiers Heavy Fire. Carii'igtoa Smith describes in the Dc- ; I roil h're* /Vn a hot tight wliiuli 'the | i aval flotilla that accompanied General I I auk Vs itl starved Red hiver Eipt-di- | tion bad with the Confederates. Says j the writer: We bad at Grand Vcure at! the tiiua large gunboat called the East- I port, which was in au almost helpless condition from having struck a torpodo, j and three smaller ones, anil all the crews j were a mixed set and not too strong in 1 numbers. I was then serving on board the Cricket, which was the flag-ship, and I at lcavt Half our crew was made up of j uog.o refugees, all of whom c .u!d help I ban He the big guns, but none of whom j had the least knowledge of gunnery or ' had ever been in a fight. Wc were left.! to ourselves, and iu what every man real- J ized was a dangerous position. Wc ; were far fr m Alexandria, in the rn'iHt of n hostil ■ country, with a liver full of bends, bars and sunken logs. Had the gunboats moved off at once ■ we might h ive escaped much of the loss j we were compelled to suth-i by the delay, i but the AdnVral refused t; leave the j East port b.hind She hud been tin- j loaded and something done toward re pa'ring the leaks, and he determ ned ’. hat she should go with us to Alexandria. She not on:y had to be towed, but to drag a lighter after her, and such was her draught, even when light, that con stant vigilance had to be exercised to keep her off the bottom. Shcgot aground twice the first day anil in the next fifty miles she was almost literally pulbd by hand over birs,sunken logs and ob tiuate snags. During all this time the gun boats were pumping the water out of her, and a full hundred men were kept busy with hawsers and chains. At length a stiff current at a bend of the river set her upon a bed of sunken logs and s umps, and she was there to stay. She could be lightcued no more, and any at tempt to pull her off would have torn her to pieces. Thirty hours were speut in trying various plans,and she was then filled with powder and blown up. The Confederates had been given am ple time to concentrate between us and Alexandria, and we had scarcely gotten rid of the Eastport when the woods seemed * to swarm with sharpshooters. They tired on us at every bend and from every bank, but fortunately did not seek to obstruct the way by felling trees. Wc had a s':arp fight with infantry before leaving the scene of the Fastport’s de struction, and were made to realize that we should meet with more serious diffi culties on the way down. Our three gunboats were guaranteed only bullet proof, but they were not even that. Our guns were of old pattern and small cali ber, and, as I said at the outset,the gun crews were made up from a miscellan eous lot of stragglers. When we left the spot where the Eastport was blown up. the flag-ship took the lead <fown the river, with orders for tho batteries on every boat to be iu readiness to open lire at any moment. Wc had, if I remember rightly, eighteen guns in all, and tho largest one on the Cricket was a twclvc pounder. Wc had been under way about three hours and had just reached the upper end of a bluff a mile long, when the pilot blew a .sharp blast on the whistle ns a danger signal,aud the next moment there was a roar and a crash which seemed to shake heaven and earth. The Confed erate! had planted a score of cannon on the bluff,trained them all on the channel at short range, and as we came opposite the whole battery was discharged as one gun, and the Cricket received every mis sile. Whi o the guns were being reloaded several hundred infantry opened fire,and the e was not a square foot of the gun boat above water which was not chipped by bullets. The fire from the battery killed the engineer, pilot and ten other persons, and wounded twenty-one, in cluding every fireman and the best gun ners. Inside of two minutes wc lost in killed and wounded over half .our crew. We were five minutes under fire before returning it, and in this time were struck over forty times. The following gunboat came in for almost as many hard knocks, having twenty killed and wounded, and she got out of range by returning up the river. Meanwhile, we in the Cricket had floated down to a point from which wo could take the Confederates in reverse, aud wc soon silenced half their guns, though they worked a sufficient number to sink one of our tow-boats and drown her whole crew, and to bluff the other gunboats from attempting tho passage. They left us below, and two gunboats and a tow-boat above. Wc ran down aboui ii! ven getting aground and off again tvl’k-e, and then fell in with olio of our ironcia.l?- The latter was at Once ordered tip the strea? n * hut ran her self aground after going a c b' l ple of miles, and before she got off two gunboats came down. They had left oiher tow boat above tho battery to fall into the hands of the Confederates, and they also raised the one sunk in the river. Wo lost in kill and and woundeef on the three boats nearly ninety men, and while ono had two and tho other three guns rendered helpless, the flagship had only ono which could be used after the fi ht was over. Many of tie missiles passed through both sides of the boats, and dozens of them fell into the engine room, and it has always been looked up -n as a mirae’e that the engiut sand b.iilcrs es cap (1 ln„ury. The Polite Children of Norway. The village of Egcrsund b'-neatir us nest.es close to the base of tho hill m though frightened by tiic threatening bowlders ult about, writes a correspond ent of tho Boston JJeialf. 'lho tlaj is cloudy; the wind is strong, hut cot un comfortably cold, and we sit In a shel tered nod* and write a letter to the home folks, or gather some of the wild bow er-, bluouiiug luxur nntly everywhere. But u ft w drops of rain fall by and by. and wc do not wish to risk a wetting, so we descend leisurely to the town, and on the way must nuial e-j of school clill drtn. Tho boys poltia ydo t their cap*, while th • girls shyly drop a demure c ur t y to th-i "I- gli*mn, for nil .inngert ar• I-.gli m.-u ‘ in,ti! known to ho of another tiatlou. The. h Idrun have l oco well tlUgblin the rehool < f good mm iters, ns a 1 Norway an child run so, nd reed ed to our unnd* an incident th<t ha|ipemd In Bmitiurbof llum'mrg. wm-re thn irvet.are only nsmw Isms, twld mi in and mu bet •<> th* tioy r*d-iiu4| h -Hi* n tl e •<•< ■* hibaid* lh.wn i I ollli’* byway* *a war* wulk|giowly when abut g .ld > hir.d* .M ban i t t us. and a the m-*t win. -ot- w* l.ald j wot bar bm I ami g *,ie4 uaah an*, nat aayiug a w-.rd, b .“**, K M ,.j M f rlii if mnw4U Wibinua t Ib. vtl I I'tnuiMS, Utr Ihml ml Arctic liai rim. Ti e meat, cat in long fluke* fmm the warm r rers. of the lm**lo and dried in thc.un, l afterwards beaten into.herds by flul'i* upon u floor f buffalo hide on j the open pi aide The hide i- th Di-cwid ! into a bag. the meat jammed in, the top st wed up nil Imt or.e comer, into vhirn mote uir.tt is crowdvd. and then the tat, whi li has m-aowliile been tried, is poured in scalding hot, filHng every crevice. A species of cranberry is often added aith the meat. The whole form* a boUter-shapcd bag, as solid apd as heavy as atone, and in this condition it remains, perhaps for years, until eaten. Each bag weighs from 100 to 120 pounds, i ii: who has tried it will not wonder that it w*as once used in the turmoils of the contests between the Northwest and liud-on Day Companies to form a re doubt, armed with two swivel guns. There are two ways of preparing this, one called "rub-a boo,” when it is boiled in a great deal of water, and makes & soup; the other more favorite di-h is ‘•rousseau,” when it is thrown iuto a frying pan. fried in its own fat, with Jhe addition, perhaps, of a little salt |Kirk, and mixed with ft small amount of flour or broken biscuit. But some times, when philosophers are ha: and put to it, and forced to take their meal in the canoe, the pemtnican is eaten raw; ; chopped out of the bag with a hatclu-t, I and accompanied simply by the biscuit, I which has rcceircd the sobriquet of ! ‘Reel I River granite.” These wonderful ob- Jects. as large as sea-biscuit, are at least hree-quartcri of an inch in thickness, ! and against them the natura'ist’s geo i logical hammer is always brought into requisition. But the “iafidcl fish,” as rousseau is termed, is by comparison with the others palatable, though it is even then impos sible to so disguise it as to avoid the suggestion of taiiow candles; and this and the leathery, or india-rubber, struc ture of the meat are its chic-f disqualifi cations. But even rousseau may lose its charms when taken as a steady diet three times a day for weeks, especially when it is served in a frying pan, and, break fast or dinner over, one sees the remnants with the beef or pork all hustled to gether in the boiling kettle; the biscuit, broken bannocks and unwashed cups placed in the bread-bag; the p’ates, knives and forks tossed into the meat dish; and all, combined in the ample folds of an old bit of gunny cloth, which ha< served daily at once as dishcloth and tablecloth, thrown into the canoe to rest until the next meal, when at last Billy finds time to wash the dishes —the table cloth never. Why Men Become Bald. “Did you ever notice what classes of men aro most commonly bald?” asked an expert hair-dresser the other day. “That throws a good deal of light on the causes of balduess. People give all kinds of explanations for it—dissipation, cutting the hair too short, letting it grow too long, smoking, drinking strong coffee, j worry, wearing high hats, wearing low : hats, wearing your hat indoors, not wearing it outdoors, lato hours and n hundred other things. Now you will notice that there are no classes of men more frequently bald than retail sales men, bookkeepers and office clerks in certain line? of business. Why should baldness affect them more than others? Because they habitually stand or sit nearly every evening under gaslights. Bookkeepers always have a strong light right over their heads or just in front of them. So do clerks who have to work at night. Retail salesmen sell goods at night directly under two powerful burn ers, and most of the time their heads are not more than two or three feet from the flame. The artificial heat dries out the hair, makes it brittle and unhealthy and finally kills it at the root. If you will pass your hand through your hair after you have been stnnding under a gaslight for a few moments you will see at once how it is. Although you may not have noticed the heat on your head, your hair, if you’ve got any, will be hot to the roots. You’ll be surprised to observe, too, at what a distant from the light the hair wi l absorb the heat. Now there is nothing so bad for tho hair as getting it dry. That is why the use of water on it i? so injurious—because it evaporates so readily and takes with it the natural oil of the hair. Your hair should be moist all the time and with the oil th..t is secroted by the little cells at the roots. When the oil is continually and rapidly dried out, as it is when the head is kept heated by gaslight, the cell dries up and , the hair falls out. People who sit under tho gaslight should wear some kind of a cool, non-conducting headgear to pro tect themselves. I have an idea, too, that after tho electric light has been in universal use for a generation or two, baldness will be as scarce as it was before gaslights and night-work got common together.- New York Mail and Exprm , It Is Unlucky To bj struck by lightning on Monday. ! To sit on ft buzz saw in motion on ! Friday. ! To break the mirror your wife's moth j f r irave her. | x 0 f a ; t £own stairs with tho parloi 1 stove on TuesdSjf, ' To speculate with otiijr people’s mon ey. get caught. To gel wet when you fall while boating on Thursday. To see a bill collector over your right shoulder ou Saturday. To sec a bulldog over your left shoul der in your neighbor's orchard. To see your overcoat over eithci ' shoulder as you pass out of the shop ol your uncle. To spill salt in the coffee of the mac who has the carving knife. 'fp be one of thirteen at table when thef;? i o> ll 7 food enough for six.—Fid Nit . Tlis Menss miff the Hare. | A Hare who was Seeking Ms Dinner ja Stubble ouc day came across a Field Mottso and thus Addressed him: "Well, well, but who on Faith ever heard of y u before? I wouldn’t bo ai Small and Helpless at you are if I could livo iu Idlona?s all my Days:” At that m uuont the t-houta of Men and j the Hoi king of Dogs were heard and the Hare began to trembio and gasped out "Th y are Hunting for Mu, un I I feel that I shall Certainly bo Captured!” “.cry Jikoly,” r-plio-l the Mouae. “Whilo I, win am to Intigiiiiicant and i(el|,l<i*. will be run over am) left Uu noticed.” Moiui,—The Greater tho 81/e of thi Uauto t iu tno.e the Auiiutyof tho Hum or to -enure it. A Drayman ►!#jp un doturlied o’ Nights; tliu Cos gn-oaniNt inut iu Awake lo ctiuckmata Hiu Plena 01 hie Emu /W prai. J U Well*, of l(i| Blu f, Cel., rt down a sound oak, oil lour fn-t from ilia bull, la a little • avliy ru tho ho-iie o* 4>U9 lii#, Vim rtv# ti mil 9|i| Jm.hl) j IIk)f |9 | 1.14J0 itlJ 141 mil,f N* | • m mlm • •>1 I# ftktr* Ml mp -■’ AURANTII Most of the diseases which aJUct nunkind are origin• ally caused by • disordered condition of the LIVER* For all complain: s of this kind, inch as Torpidity of the Liter, BUimisnee*. Nervous Djbpepiu, Indiges tion. Irregularity of the Bowela, Constipatioif. Flat u lenrj. Eructations and Burning of the Stomarh (sometimes calk'd Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria. Bloody Flux. Chills and Fever, Breakbone Fever, Exhaustion before or alter Fevers Chronic Diar rhoea. Loss of Appetite, Headaehe, Foul Breath. Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-dor n SEfffrSTftOIGER’S ftUBiMXH H invaluable. It not a panacea for all diseases bur /> I ID ET all diseases of the LIVER, will WUM STOMACH and BOWELS. It change* th** complexion from & waxy, yellow t iago, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely maon* low, gloomy spirit* It in 0:13 of the BEST AL TERATIVES and PURIFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC. STADICER’S AURANTII Fir ea!s by all Drafgfet*. Pnce Bt ,00 P rr bit 1 .!-. C. F. STADIGER, Proprietor, >43 SO. FRONT STPhiladelphia, Pa. ;g||s..oo BEST REMEDY KNOWN FOR CATARRH SORE MOUTH OR SORE THROAT In all forms and stages. PURELY VEGETABLE. REQUIRES NO INSTRUMENT. USED and ENDORSED by PROM. XNENT PHYSICIANS. Dr. B. B. Day Is, Athens, Go., says: “I suffered with Catarrh tire rears. But since using CERTAIN CA TARRH CUKE am entire! jr free from the disease.” Dr. O. B. Howe, Athens, Ga., says: “CERTAIN CA TARRH CURE cured me of a severe ulcerated soro throat, Hnd I cheerfully endorse it.” Miss Lucy J. Cook, Oconee Cos., Ga., writes. Sept. 17th, 18S5, “One bottle of your remedy entirely cured me of Catarrh with which I had suffered greatly foi five years.” J. H. Allgood. Athens, Gs., writes Sept. 25,'88,'T had severe sore t hroat more than two weeks : was entire ly cured by CERTAIN CATARRH CURE in one day” CAN YOU DOUBT SUCH TEBTIMONY? WE THINK NOT. Only n few of our many certificates are given here. Others can be obtained from your druggist, or by addressing 3 C. CO., ATHENS, Ga. I OR S ALK AT Griffin’s Drug Store. JAMESBrPABKr ATTORNEY AT LAW, QREENESBOBO, GEORGIA. Hancock, Taliferro, Oglethorpe, Clarke. Oconee, Richmond, Warren and McDuffie Counties. may 22nd, 1885. "CLINGMAN’S Tobacco REMEDIES Th Greatest Hedlenl Dlscaiery of ttenv. to family o*ht to ft* without tncm. THE CUTON TOBACCO OINTMENT Ws ZSSSJBB&fiHWMi for Itcliiiur Film. Haa never failed to give prompt relief. Will cure Anal Ulcers, Al sctss, Fistula, Tetter, Salt Ilhcnm. Barber’s Itch. Ring worms, Pimplea, Sores and Boils. Price .>() cl*. THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO CAKE NATIIUKI.-S OWN REMEDY,. Core. S Wouads. Outs. Bruises, Bnmins. Erynpelna. Boils, fCarbuncles. Bone Felons, Ulcers, bores, boro Eves, Sore 'lliroahßuniom Corns, Neuralgia Rheumfit ism, fV-LSS tiont. Rheumatic Gent. Colds, t ouyhn, ilrinchitis Milk Leg. Snake and Dog Bites, ht mgs of lSsccts Ac In fact allays all local IrnUtum and Infiammation from whatever cause. I rice - cf . T HE CLINGMAN TOBACCO PLASTER PreF^: 4n^Sll. n V I fRHS'? ,0 4^?{^ frincifrc<. -s, compounded with the purest NtißEfll^N’i.. specially recommended for übacco iiouf, sjfu T ’roaet. and for that claes or h dice .Achesi Wid of i.-rftsnt of Pains wSw. ffoiH (on 4*. tbe stronger .ipplifAtloa tho patient fe unable 4<>>eaa hLhcor tdher Aches of the Tobacco Cake. Porllsw >|, c 15 cln. rod Pains, it is invaloftbß k w#, or write to the Ask your druggist for those remedy <mr pf| CLINGMAN TOBACCO Cu, RECO - DURHAM. N. C.. U. S. A.— jjus i N E■ J S y N IV E R S IT Y - r n coir work m J! And all Übt o f Mu- /ywt Phinery. Ai low prtow./ttejP'Jf ’ Hi.hU.ry (V ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising in American pajjers by addressing Geo. 1\ Rowell & Cos., Howapaoar A<vaM>a it(| Ruifw, 10 l|rwf M , Haw York *•<*4 l(w M lOO'Haf* ta* NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. NEW MS! HEW GOODS!! MRS. N. BRUM CLARK, 810 Broad t., AUGUSTA, OA. , Hu put In a beeaUfnl new Lin* of MILLINERY AND FANCY GOODS, HATH, BONNBTB, LACES, FEATHERS AND FI-OWERS, AND ALL THE SPRING NOVELTIES, la Greeter Vert## end Lower la Trice tban ever before. Examine before you porebaae elaewhe-e, we win sal* JOB. rw- DRESSES also made In the very Latest Stylet. The ladket ere reqnested to writs for colalecaß and price*. MRS. N. BRUM CLARK. Oct. 22,-0* _ Ferris & Son Fall and Winter of 1886. OUR STOCK OF FALL AND WINTER Suitings , Overcoats ! *S? AND OTHER SPECIALTIES‘S# ARE NOW READY FOR INSPECTION. WE DESIRE TO STATE THAT IT IB THE MO3T COMPLETE EXHIBIT FOR VARIETY, EXTENT AND GENERAL EXCELLENCE EVER OFFERED. Reserve your orders until you have examined the same f Very truly yours, MERCHANT TAILORS and GENTS FURNISHERS, 820 Broad St., Augusta, Ga. sept. 24tb, 1888 . C. V. WALKER. W. F. PARKS. G. V. WALKER & GO., NO. 220 SEVENTH STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. SELL REAL ESTATE IN THIS OR OTHER STATES. EXCHANGE PROPERTY, NEGOTIATE LOANS. ETC.. ETC. SPECIAL ATTENTION PAID TO THE SALE OF FARMS IN ALL PARTS OF THE STATE. tiT Refer to tbc Bankers and Merchants of Augusta, Ga. New Standard Fire-Proof Warehouse. STEWART PHINIZY. JACOB PHLNIZY. JAMES TOBIN. <Do„, &OTTOI FAGrTORS, Augusta, Georgia. g*T Liberal Advances made on Consignments W. H. HOWARD C. H. HOWARD. S. P. WEIBIGER. W. H. HOWARD & SONS, Cotton Commission Merchants. NO. 20 SEVENTH (McINTOSH) STREET, AUGUSTA, - GEORGIA. CONSIGNEE A T 8 0F COTTON AND OTHER PRODUCE SOLICITED. C-S" Orders for Bagging and Ties filled at Lowest Market Prices. FRED. B. POPE. LAMAR L. FLEMING. POPE Jfc FLEMING, COTTON FACTORS, - G-eoxgria. AND AGENTS FOR IjUMMUS C3r 13NT. llxc mode Rome of the Most Won derful fores on record. X„ JML - B-u.ix2.ell, COTTON FACTOR AND Commission Merchant. CONTINUES BUSINESS AS HERETOFORE AT FIRE-PROOF WAREHOUSE, NO. 19 McINTOSH ST. - - AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. Strict attention to all Consignments and prompt Remittances. GEO. R. SIBLEY. ASBURY HULL. P. B. TOBIN. CEO. R. SIBLEY & CO.. fSTTHN LUI luit iab i!!, 847 t 849 REYNOLDS ST., ATjea-rre, ' rAi — geor °ia. OH AS. LOMBARD, -on or the - •nonut. PENDLETON IllDtt Jilt JPIWIKS >■> „ CtM. t Itarm* arcuM tl* •*#•' t f tirmtH *" ’ A Oan.liß* far lit* l> Htiralti.iu l 'PuiM* W„m . la m>w ia off. ri* l tti.Ui.. uh ala iw milt * t hZ Uti|B< Itilmprava Mr a.W j-nir. || U* X* r - agatu >fu lUa Wikml. l aliar 4 Miaa-. VUIUAUUS, Hi A i HtXAHY A Ail THACTiOM KAOfMgg V atmUlawM til.* *..> .HM4i. nl |. . ,*. A*. Mill V •“'*”*** iWtrc wSEO, Clxarloo 3 T. X.OKVtea.r,a. a>l .!< I'iarfl 'h•, V ..ulr atf ;*.t Im Won.. i| *| .. ,