Newspaper Page Text
(The Tienilcl.
J. It. PUCK. - - - Proprietor
*V. 11. HEM Klt, - - liilHor.
THURSDAY. JULY 29. 1875*.
THU OHIO MXVASH.
The attention of political circles is
directed, just at this time, to the can
vass going on ip Ohio, with "renter in
teuiity and interest than to any point
or question.. The main contest thcrtHs
for the Governorship of the State,whicli*
is t.O ,Lo decided the second week in
October. The Democrats are running
their great chieftain —the present in
cut),bent, familiarly known as ‘Old
Uiil Allen,” while the Republicans are
. udeavoring to regain the State under
(he Banner of the facile General Hayes.
The conflict is warming into a high
!y heated excitement. The fiercest as
sault of the Republicans upon the Dent
ocratic campaign platform, is confined
to that plauk in it, which protests
against the continued contraction of the
currency at this time and tinder the
present condition of trade, arid all the
industries of the country, burdened as,
they are by the heavy taxations neces
-ary to meet the expenditures of the
war , . r .
We give our readers, to-day, some
extracts from the opening .speech of
lion 1 Geo. H. Ifendlcton, upon this
main point in the canvass. Mr. Pen
dleton is certainly not only one of the
ablest, but soundest as well as truest
men to tho principles of the Govern
ment now living in the United States,
lie belongs to the oi l Jeffersonian
school of Democracy, and vvp doubt‘not
our readers will be as much delighted
as we were upon reading his noble tit
crances on the subject in hand. To
us they appear to bo utterly demolish
ing to those Ohio Republicans who are
attempting to retrieve their fortunes
by raising the ‘‘step thief” cry against
the Demncrary as the, “rag pioney” par
ty. How scathingly ho algo rebuke*
the New York World , Frank Leslie
and other organs of the New York
Tammany Ring, who profess to be
Democratic journals. 'J he New York
World and Frank Leslie with his pic
torial representations, el id genus omne
v!’. Democratic papers —so-called*— it is
known, have joined the Ohio Republi'
cans w ith all their power in an endeav
or to break down the Democracy of
that. State in this contest, under the
cry of "Inflationists” and “rag money”
party. \Ve think that the World and
- ftc. ccading this speech of Mr - Pcn
ciJeton. The truth is, we think that
tiiose so-called Democratic papers of
New Y T ork, who have joined the Re
publicans in this Ohio contest, are but
acting the same base part they did in
the philosophy of the “Greeley move
ment” in 1872. Their object is to rdd
icalize the Democratic Party in the
United States, or defeat i.t in the next
Presidential etinvnss as they did in the
last. The fight they now make against
“old Rill Allen; of Ohio” is not promot
ed half so much from any feelings of
opjiositjon they have to tho finandud
plank in his Platform, as to bis well
known straight out principles on iho
old Jeffersonian creed. It was 'lslll
Allen” in Ohio, who revolted against
“tiro lliilosophy of the Greeley move
ment” in 18715. lie was opposed to
:t irf jS72, but conformed to the action
and judgment of the leaders of the
Party, when the experiment was made,
ilc was then in private life., lint when
Groc.-beck and Pugh r.ud others led off
on the same line jc 1.87,‘5; and nomina
ted their candidates for Governor and
other State officers, on what was ealied
tho ‘.Libera! movemeut,” or the “New
Departure” "platform repeated, • it w
then that .“old. liiil Allen’ raised a rc
.rs4 against tli.a New York sell of the
year beiiife— jailed a Convention -of
straight out Democrats —proclaimed a
straight out Platform —took the nomi
nation of Governor and swept tho State
against Radicals and Liberals, so-call
cd, all combined. It is for this thc
New Y'ork World aud its alileft ofaho
“Philosophy of the Greeley movement”
cannot forgive him. It is for this he
must now be beaten by foul, if not by
fair means. It is for these “straight
out” principles that the Ohio Democ
racy are to.be beaten this year by the
Now Y'prk World and the Wall Street
money changing Democracy if possible.
Should “old Rill Allen ” s SU-‘- n be elec
ted Governor in tire .great State of
Ohio, these miserable traders in poli
ties will see that their occupation is
gone, and that the “P!ii!osophy,.of Grec
leyism” is buried so deep that the hand
of resurrection can never reach it.,
These are Borne of the reasons whiah
give to the present contest in Ohio that
interest which it is jexeiting. With
the bold lead of Ohio’s Democratic
champion, and the tremendous blows
>f Pendleton, we can but indulge the
strong hope that the bauuer of true
democracy will be even more trium
ph ant in the Buckeye Strrf?- HrptTTStfU’t
than it was in 1872. If so, let the
track be cleared of all time-serving
candidate* f-r the Presidential raete -d
187(5. The Democracy will demand
an Allen or an Raton,' or s6o><* other
standard bearer of like stamp and-char
actor. , f ' 1
THE OHIO CANVASS.
* - <* . ‘
Extracts from firorge 11. Pen
dleton's Sipeeeli at
jtolisi— -The Finnneinl
, Question. IMseussed.
"A.MIDDLE I’ATII THE SAFE ONE.”
When (he Republican convention
met in 1874, it spoke in the language
of triumph and with the pres.nge’of vic
tory. It congratulated itself upon the
history and achievements of its party,
of its great services and great successes,
the wisdom of Us financial policy-, its
protection of civil right*; the economy
of its expenditures, the - purity of its
administration. It declared itself in fa
vor.of a-epeody • return to specie pay
meets, of further contraction of the
currency, of the withdrawal of legal
tender notes, of rße banking, of inter
nal improvements, of sumptuary laws
to the full extent of the legislative
power of the State, aod promising
ii wor taxation, greater economy and
increased prosperity, it saw, or thought
‘it saw, many years of‘continued and
even enlarged power.
The convention of this year las
tuned its voice to a different key. De
feating a candidate for Governor be
cause he is broad and lib. ml in bis
views, it abandoned its triumphant
stramp, abandoned its sell-laudation,
boasted nothing ot it;;.economy in the
past, promised nothings fur the. future,
for"ot to recommend" free bonking, but
c,' ,
(lid declare itself in favor of our publid
school system and a separation of
Church and State! Gentlemen/on
these two points Democrats can have
no argument with the Republicans
.Democrats established tho free school
system; Democrats have perfected it;
and Democrats put into the constitution
that there should he no division of the
School Fund. Appeals will -ho to
your prejudices, wicked efforts will be'
made to awaken the fervor of religious
zeal and the bitterness of sectarian dif
ferences; you will be told of an alliance
between the Democratic party and the
Catholic church ; but remember there
is the full and complete refutation in
this, one fact that Democrats have
made division of- the school fund for*
ever iuibiw,” -•nd 4-
.jrrae xifopraeuce areßami always hare
been, “ religious-iudepoiidetice niid ab
solute freedom of opinion.” In strik
ing contrast is the declaration of prin
ciples by the Democratic convention.
Read it: Adherence to the principles
of Government established by the
fathers; opposition, to all .cue,roach
meets of one department upon anotlief,
or by the Federal power upon the con
stitutional rights of the States; equal
ity before the law of-all citizens ; one
term for the President; retrenchment
wherever there is extravagance; re
form wherever there is abuse ; no sub
sidies; public land for actual settlers ;
a tariff for revenue only ; equal and
exact justice to all religions; free secu
lar education in the public school'?-;*
opposition to sumptnpry laws, to inter
ference with social habits not criminal,
to malignant espionage. Aod on the
financial questions : Cessation of con
traction ; a souhd-and sufficient cur
rency; promote n of tiie 'industries the
sure.-l road to tho aj-preciatbHibf Jaaper
to par with with gold ; . proon'racks in
stead of national bank notes; green
backsfor customs to the extent thqt the
necessities of government will pgruiit.
MEAN IN (i OF THE OHIO DEMOCRATIC
financial flank.
I have been amazed at the misrepre
sentation*. Newspapers and public
■men, agio, influential and generally
candid, understood to be generally
(ruthfill, not given to lying for lying s
sake, have denounced this platform in
terms whose bitterness is equaled only
by their falsity. - 1* would be a charity
to believe they hud- never read it.
Their choice Ires between ignorance
and malice,'unless - they should take
refuge iu blind prejudice ond--bigotry,
which doer greater injustice l<v their
intelligeaesj-than wither. “Rag money!'
“ Infinite inflation “ Paper manias!”
“ Repudiation !’’ Indeed! In behalf
of two hundred niul ti I ty* thousand
Democrats of Oliio, I denounce the
falsehood! I resent th.e aspersion!
Gentlemen, we are entitled to truth;
but if that be impossible with them,we
are entitled at least to decent exaggera
tions, In anv event, however, we re-"
member that “ tlie lip of truth shall be
established forever ; a lying tongue is
hut for a moment.” Whenever they
condeseend to reason at all on the sub
ject, they tell us thfit the government
should not fflto-vfere at all with the
currency; but government doc* now.
’ has always,: under our present eiviiiza
ion. must interfere with the quantity
fiFTth* Ciirippb v. It declare! whatahalf
lie legal tender, stamps the coin, pre
scribes its weight and fineness, regu
lates the number of bauks, limits their
i i.-sues, prescribes the security for civ
| culatioji and punishes counterfeiting,
and these objections approve the legis.
lation.
They raise a cry of holy horror at
the words, “ We demand that the vol
ume of currency bo made and kept
equal to the wants of trade.” Well,
gentlemen, if the wants ot trade are not
a fitting measure for the volume of
currency, pray tell us what amount
would you Wve?' A volutne'lcss than'
the wants of trade demand ? A vol
ume greater than tho wants of trade
-demand? If you will have the volume
of enneney neither greater than the
wants of trade, nor less than the wants
of trade, nor equal ’ to the wants' T of
trade, perhaps v&u Whuld lißq to re
verse the proposition, and say that the
volume of trade shall ba made and kept
equal to the wants of the currency?
The statesmanship of the civilized
world has always been directed to this
very point. It has recognized the ne
cessity and ability-’of curreWSy *only as
an instrfltneut'of trade, and its inces
*i>nt; -unflagging effort has been to'
“make and keep” the amount equal
to the wants of trade. Every is-ue of
government paper, whether legal ten
der or i not —every restricted banking
system —lias been an effort to make and
keep a currency equal, according to the
judgment of the government, to the
■wants of' trade. E-ery free banking
system has been an effort to make and
keep a currency equal to the wants of
trade, according to the judgment of
trade itself. The foundation idea of a
free banking system is that circulatibn
-will be expanded or contracted as the
uses of trade -will increase or diminish
it Devalue.' ‘The Republican platform of
1874 declared that “banking should
b'e made free, so that the circulating
mfcdiutti 'maybe expanded or contracted
according to the demands (if commerce
and trade.” And Amasa Walker, the
hardest of hard money men, speaks of
the natural volume of currency, and
the volume of currency regulated by
ahe laws of trade. A"vay, then, \Vfth’
this' fl >1 ’y* that the wants of’trade are
not the true measure of a just and use
ful value uf sound' currency, an l can
didly admit that the objection is hot to
the rule, but to the power which shnH’
apply the rule. You fear to commit
the application of the rule to Congress,
lest the temptation to make “good
times” and' "plenty of money ” may
inJiii'O.X'Juj-'—-- - 1
volume oT currency greater than the
wants of trade demand. I admit ’there
is danger in the temptation. Rut
would the danger be less if the trust
were confided to two thofisafid’ national i
banks ? ' * *"* '
Point out. a power better fitted to ex
■ CrciA; tiji.sMi'tifd.’h'hd I will adopt it
Whenever they leave tho realms and
vocabulary of “ rag money,” “ Confed
erate currency,” repudiation, they say
the Pemocra's lavor a depreciated cur
rency. This is not true. There is
neither in the Ohio creed nor any other
Democratic creed, a word or policy
enuntcnaßcing the charge. Are green
hacks a depreciated currency Ts com
pared with hank notes ? Does it de
preciate tho currency for the govern
ment to receive it for all-dues? . Doc*
it argau'desire'for a depreciated, irre- 1
deemable paper, to insist that all the'
paper money of the country shall have
ns the guaranty of its 'value the liiith
cf the government arid the entire
wealth of the country,‘rather than the
j faith mid property of any five men who
| tuny set up a bank ? Is a currency,
composed of greenbacks exclusively,
! more redundant than a currency of ex
actly equal volutiiP, composed exclu
sively of bank notes?
The Ptmiocratic patty has again, in
the" Ohio platform, for the thousandth
time. lcc!red agri-.-t a depreciated, ir
redeetuable raTi'encV, and in favor cf n
sound currency redeemable at par, con
vertible at par, itito every known ‘arti
cle of necessity hr' lufirry* or utility—
whether gold or ito‘ n , Fed or clothing,
lands or houses debts or tax A-t-nnd
in sufficient quantity for the' demands
of active trade and the highest cflotts
of industry and invention.
REPUBLICAN INFLATION AND CON
TRACTION, AND THE RESULT.
I cannot foresee what truths invest!
gation may evolve in the future. For
the p'resoat I repeat that I am a hard
mCney man. I believe that a return
to specie payments should be kept
steadily’in 'flew ir. our legislation and
action, tfndVniU wise statesmanship will
seek tliet means o‘i' reeonciiitig such a
rdlurn with the true interests of labor
and'husiuess, and justice to the debtor
Resumption cau not safely be forced,
ft must be the proper 'outgrowth of
surrounding healthy conditions, or it
will be neither beneficial hor perma
nent. The gardener may cultivate and
stimulate the tree, but it is the tree
(bat produces the fruit. And if I
(pay -do it without egotism, let me say
| I was fn’Cbngress when the legal ten
der act wits passed. I voted against it.
I believed" the law unconstitutional,
and the policy unwise. I have never
changed that opinion. Rut in spite of
my efforts the policy was adupted and
became interwoven tfith our system of
finance and trade. I will seek all the
good I cab find in if. I would not
abandon’’specie payments, because I
thought it unwise and a great wrong
to tire creditor. I will not rush reck
lessly back to specie payments over the
prostration ot all business aud the
utter ruin of the debtor. Specie pay
riienis are a means, not an end. I find
no mystery either in our condition or
in the remedy. In 1861, when the
Repub.icans came into power, they
found gold and -silver coin the only
’ goVeth merit currency and the only
legal fender. A few government notes
Were outstanding, but only Because
they had not been presented for pay
ment. The Aib-Treasury system was
in lull operation. The Democratic
party Had, alter twenty years of strug
gle, established the system and fixed,
it as they bad supposed firmly. The
government received and paid nothing
bat gold and silver coin. At that time
the coin currency was one hundred
millions, and the paper currency issued
by State batiks was about four hundred
and fifty millions.
A Republican Congress parsed the
bond act, the legal-tender act ! and the
National bank act. The effect was in
stantaneous. Gold and silver ceased to
circulate. The obligation to pay inter
est in coin, and the demand to pay cus
tom duties iti coin, made tlie govern,
ment the only purchaser for home uses
anil increased the premium.
The' various issues of paper —bank-
notes, greenbacks, certificates, arid
■other nVes-Asouie bearing interest
'Others net, but all serving as currency
llr cue way or another, either as circu
lation, surplus, reserve, or otherwise, in
tlie year 1865, reached an enormous
sum, stoted by some authorities to “be
more than twenty one hundred million's.
The bonded debt of the government
was then twenty-five handled millions
of The floating debt was fif
teen hundred millions. The totals were
sixty hundred millions.
The whole South was opened up to the
currency, which had been confined to
the North anu West alone, and one
million' of men who, as soldiers, had
heeii consumers, were returned to the
field of active production.
Then commenced the Republican sys
tem of finance. It was plain and simple.
ry to this end’,increase (he interest-pay
ing debt. And from that hour to this,
with occasional brief respites, there
lias been steadily, grinding, contraction
of the currency. Down, down has come
the currency, and down, down, down,
also, have come the’ prosperity and hap
piness of’the country, the fortunes and
credit of*the wealthy, the vigor and ac
tivity of enterprise,the rewards aud com
forts ol the laborers, until now we arc
confronted with a condition ol affairs
which you. my fellow citizens, feob tho
keenlyVi make description necessary.
REPUBLICANS ARE CONTRACTION ISTS,
HARD-MONEY MSN.
The Republicans say,continued con
tcraction ; that this oyjy will bring
gold and paper to par; that this only
will produce specie payments, that if
necessary, wo must sell bonds to buy
gold for legal-teuder note*, and silver
’forfr&etionarcurrency, and thus reach
specie payments through the still great
er prostration of all Lustness, the still
more absolute idleness of all laborers,
the still greater poverty and suffering
of all the industrial classes; and the..,
they tell us, business will instantly re
vive, and profits’ will accrue, and labor
will be rewarded an J smiling prosperity
return.
’ The Congrcs.; has passed a !a\V de
claring absolutely that resumption hall
take place in January 1579, and to
prepare for it has authorized the See
.rotary of the Treasury to issue gold
bonds with gold -interest to buy gold
and silrer; and it it is stated in the pa
pers that he has actually sold §15,000,
000 silver, No man will engage in bu
siness aud undertake enterprise? when,
by law, the money is to be' appreciated
had his indebtedness is to be increased
seventeen per cent in three years.
Every dollar of gold;purchased with
bonds for the redemption of greenbacks
adds to the annual intgrGT,:. If fifteen
millions have been issued and sold for
silver bullion,this one item alone adds
s ven hundred and fifty millions in gold
annually for thirty years. Last month's
report showed about fifty millions of
gold in the Treasury, and some what
less than four hundred millions of out
standing greenbacks. The Secretary
has the power to issue bonds to buy
gold to the amount of every dollar of
greenbacks." If he means to make re
ueiuption in coin absolutely certain he
must doit. And if he docs, he will
issue more than four hundred millions
of new bonJs. at an anuual interest of
more than twenty millions in gold It
it the satno old weary story of funding
a debt which pays no interest in bonds
which piy large interest; of borrowing
money on long time at high rates to
make investments which yield no re
turn. It a private man should act so,
your courts would adjudge him a luna
tic, and unfit to be trusted with his Qwn
property. This policy has been pursued
strictly for the last year, and what has
been the result ? Business, instead of
reviving, has become more stagnant ap.d
less profitable. Labor has suffered as
it never suffered before. Gold has
become dearer Last Julyrh.e premium
was 110; it has beep during this month
117; it is now 111. Gold lias become
scarcer. Last year we exported SSO,
539,12 G; this year we have escorted
SBS 507.411, an increase of more than
thirty-four millions. Gold has fluctu
ated more. The premium has changed
seven per cent, within a. year, three
per cent, within a month. The supply
of gold in the Cincinnati banks has
varied within one . year $353,000 to
$37,000. The supply in June, 1804.
was $253,000; in June,,1875, SIBO,-
000. lu June last the circulation'was
$3.16J, 000; their gold was $’89,000.
A pretty condition for forced resump
tion !
Exports of other articles than coin
from the port of Very York alone have
fallen off more than forty-seven mil
lions of dollars.
Farmers of Gallia county, consider
this table. In eleven months, in these
nine articles, the production of farmers’
labor or land, theie has i>een a reduc
tion of exports to the amount of eight v-
miijions of dollars :
expo ins. 187. , 1874.
Flour.. :. . S 21,881,878' $ 26,5(12,804
Wheat', 50,115,185 88,507,703
Cotton 181.874,012 205,000,032
Petroleum ... . 23,99d,3.i9 33.724,527
Bacon & Hams 27,015,359 24,170,230
Sp. Turpentine 1,704,402 2,373,240
Tallow 5,168,445 7,240,104
Leaf tobacco.. 23,125,723 g;8,l 11,981.
Timber 2,030,347 ’4,045,310
Total $339,91:7047 $427,311,702
Wc have burnt the candle at both
ends. We have ex pot ted more coin
and less produce. We have paid higher
duties and collected less revanufe. We
have suffered all the evils and realized
none of the promised advantages of
contraction. And yet the Republicans
tell you to continue the spqie,p. dicy
They are simply contraction^',is; they
are not hard-money men. ■;
a mi pole r.yni safe.
The Democratic party points, (0 the
middle path as the way of safety.
Abandon this policy of contraction.
Stop this tinkering with the curretvcy.
Stop this effort at forcing resumption,
1C r'fnt’lliry IGT tl l sure. aji. w,
ne.-s a moment to revive. Remove
every. obstacle to reviving business.
Promote industry. Promote produc
tion, Stimulate enterprise by the pros
pectofgain. Invite labor to exertion
by the certainty of reward. Labor
more and spend less. Produce more
and consume less. This is the true se
cret of wealth.
The country is new. Tts jigjfienlti'.ral
and mineral wealth are incalculable.
' They are undeveloped. . The variety 0!
soil, ami climate, and pco,p!p give to it
an infinite power of production. Its
great want, its pressing necessity, is an
entire freedom for labor, an absolute re
moval of every obstacle, the positive
presence of every aid. Falling prices,
uncertain markets, precarious rewards,
public debt and high interest are obsta
cles. Fair prices, ready
?ales, are aids, and to secure these a
sufficient and low inter
est are indispensable. These will put
in motion the vast and complicated man
chinery of producing and consuming in
dustries. And if there be snperadded
low taxes, rigid economy, simplicity of
government, purity of administration,
that motion will bo continued and accel-.
era ted.
Active and prosperous an•] increasin':
busittesj will increase our production,
increase our capital,increase our ejtpnr*.
tations. increase tjie influx of coin, aud
thus brine greenbacks to a par with coin
Southern Masonic
. .FEMALE
V O !, I„ Id fJ Id !
COVINGTON, GA.
rrniE INSTU
tuiion
COMMENCES SEPT .lst. 1875.
A competent and experienced corps of
TtiW-iiers will life employed, which, with
the discipline maintained, gbfes assurance
to patrons that their daughters will be
-welljtAreii for. Mental, moral, and physi
cal culture arc all Attended to in this
School. With the thorough training of
miud morals free calisthenics are given
daily.
FRENCH, MUSIC,
DRAWING ,Y PAINTING,
are tupied io the regular curriculum’and
are laugh* with great success.
TUITION is at medium rates.
BOARD in good families can he had at
from $16.00 to s2o.oojer tponth, washing
extra. ftpecikl arrangements at much
lower rat:? can tc irqjc the Principal
by furnishing roolhs.
For (Walogues and special information
send to the undersigned.
■ " J. N. BRADSHAW, Prest..
July 22ml Covington, Ga.
fcj’Job w ork done here.
tOOiff BLASS & PICTURE FRAMES
HOME industry !
rpHKBK., nLej- u •wj-s-wj lei i? .*•
I Vrams hit and Ks*poirel, when t thej' “ • h) t , )B Unitc d States,
ns 1 ,‘W APIUP. for the -.amfi. WOth .. ..■ a < . .j r at short notice.
TOUTRufIUMKS 0, of furnished.
LOOKIWf.ASSKS both f rench a , rIIIiOMOS of cveryiiescripSioL
, ° IL "ff'StK'TlrSiS.S&oN urAUAXm*.
j„„o 10, mr 4p.Bra j*. =
SffM au tateous Books aci, ■Stationery and Everything
, u„, u —’tore 330 BSroajl Si., Augusta, ;.
Usually ki na ftral-G^g ßook btora
t>ia\o PORTE nt a reasonafde price, will do
TAERSONS sliing to buy a superior “ . ( ,j all>r in (Borgia : and fhe owners
I well to con the subscriber, ‘ ... tO o t jf V -1 0 their durability. Be Ims made
of hundreds Pianos that he has so , v f.j; urc h & Cos., of Boston, whereby he
arrangements ith the celebrated ma • - B .v rt ‘ C nsh, and the balance in" instalments,
can sell a it-class Piano at ah' P hJ^|he mabePa names and warranted for fire
No Pianos wf fancy names sod, ‘ , lllßl ,„f ac tui ies of Stein wav & Son Baron ti
years. Ifo.ilso agenPfar the cele 1 . ~u 0 f which will be soldfat factory
GEO. j. OATBU, 240 Broad St. Angu.,te._ Ga.
[X7”Piajs Tuned and Ropaire L [ | l - - _ jj^
fiRMf INDUCEMENTS OFFERED!!
I :00: r-
Af.; COST.
The Stockif jCooils *u*c
W-* -E" o ia ELa ."HfC®. -- b'Blf
And conjsts in part nt ,
~ , .. , . r.ewre*. F.ritiifly ifrflits, fickles. Catsups. Sauces
Candies, Niitij L.ti'..is, • -• iv-wfler*- Toilet Stfeps, Perfumery, Lackers,
Kl 2 V( ?^rft' l 7vi^ P ’'Phvs 'ri-.-ae, ' Candles, Matches. Paper, Irk, Em
.. Scotch oiuft, <'• '.; ', v-. Lies Sardines. Ot store and Lobsters,
TI S ' ' Albums. 1 hoto-
AS ° 't Fa .ee Bonos. Walnut Wiiting Desks, Toy Books,
Paper Dolls, beautiful t'bina and Wax Dolls. Ll.il.a lea
' * Sets, Violins, Violin Timvs and Strings, ' ambonnes,
Areovdioas, Toy J)r..ms, Wood Carts, Wagons and
Wheelbarrows. Also a good assortment <4 I ock
*u (Tuttory, ilazofs 9111! Straps,Pocky! Books
Lead Pencils. Jewelry, Pi: Sr Needles
and Thread, •
Asjil nmti.v ot-licr Arlilt“S- t iM'ron l awnlioir.
! ivcpertfullv'.invifo ■ 1! to call soon and make a selection, feeling assured tl -J thej w i
be ASTONISHED at the 1.0 IP PRICES.
Will. 11. BIIASCII. Assignee.
Groenw^oroniiTi,Qa., 1
’ ”a3TJ Y TT'H 7 ! BEST 2
THIS IS TIIF ON LY QUALITY OF
WIiITIi wf ’ | oIf|
?! lit lll o[ijrk “ 'h~hii\v
. flade • BY
JEWETT & S4KSS
FOR THE LAST SIXTEEN
Oils, Varnishes, (jJSass,-
r. Ilriishps. All iai i‘nH AsMirtlMont.
, J. H. ALEX ANtTFR,
TJ'O
• A frill stock-of DP,res and CHEMICALS,-<;?uUen Seeds,‘etc. • All §{fo(H l s.old at
lowest pi ires for Cash.
MAfilt' t.'i UK for Chills sent bv mail on receipt of price, One Dollar per box.
May 20,. 1875—tf * J. H. ALEXANDER
y-y, si *w, ss&v as^
# it 4% 111 ® sk 4( %4% $
Manufacturer of Cigars,
,Vp , CL J
f yl jjJTT’.LM.iSgn C 1 ’ dLfA
pi v. ~a v -cc >3l
Jof A/ . JAj|
& -Upe
AND WHOLESALE AKD RETAIL
DEALER IN
■TOBACCO,. PIPES,
Corner ol’ a aid MeirH^rStreets,
may 20, 1870— * * ' ""^
PA INT r AN D dTE^TORId S
S3 Jackson Street, Augusta. Georgia.
THE - BEST - CF ' AKTI'f.LES !
■ A!.L_ FRESH AN 1 feW I
WHITE LEAD. ZINC.TAINTS, | I \ l* I*BifES, VARN IS# / OUTT Y,
COLORS. LINSEED OIL, j -WINDOW (FtASS, , *
MACHINE OIL, GiN OIL. ‘ ; KEROSENE OIL, Etc.,. Etc.
J-T’d KR ' ,S —CASH ON DELIVERY ; or approved city acceptance.
- D. COKTPijron,
.. . 53 Jackson St., near ileit Tower, nuusta, Ga.
, may 20. 1g75-fimo °
—naaca— ui_ i
rtEOMHA-Greuic County—.
IT A.ncent S. Hall Ado.inis.rn.or of( OS. JllS. A. TIIOIKItOII
John Hall, deceased, applies for Letters of
Dismission, and such Letters will he grant- Is OUT tlulv AUTHORIZED Agent
ed on the first Monday in October next un- | J ° .
les valid objections (heretoare filed. , to FOlicit and receive SllbsCTip*
Given under my hand and official -igna-| | j nnc t U O cr . mf l rf .~
ture, this June 10th. 1875. IIOIIS TO the tl FRAUD, .Min Ft
July 7 -3m IOKI F. THORNTON. Ord A- 'ccipt (>r tllO stilt)©.
AND
Smote- ’'Articles
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