Newspaper Page Text
The McDuffie Journal-
J. E. WHITE, Editor * Proprietor.
WEDNESDAY. FEB. 22, 1884.
A rodnotiou of five centa on freight
rule* on Western moat lias boon made in
favor ol Augusts.
The Joijhnal m under obligations to
Bonatur lirowu and Congressman Barnes
for important public documents.
Btitisties show tliat Georgia low 3,000
miltw of railroads, worth about $60,000,-
000, aud reaching 100 of the 137 coil itica
in the Btate.
Atlanta now claims to h ive 72,000 in
habitants, 10 banka with $2,225,000
capital, 140 mile* of streets aud 150,000
feet of aewCiHge.
The railroad artesian well at Montezu
ma suddenly dried up a few days ago,
and still obelinutoly refuses to flow.
Another Wator-100 to prohibition.
At the Rome Furniture Factory, last
week, Jease Farmer, a Forentville youth,
put his hand on the knife of the planing
machino to see if it wasrunuing. It was.
Three fingers.
Hince Blaine’s letter of declination, it
i* the general belief that Senator Sher
man stands the best ohanco for the Re
publican nomination for President. His
chance for being olooted is a very differ
ent thing.
One day last week Mrs. Belle Phillips
of Troup county, from partial insanity,
jumped into a well forty-five foot deep,
breaking both legs above the knees, She
was rescued in a dying condition.
A mule kickod a Crawford county ne
gro a few days ago, and killed him in
stantly. This is end of the misfortunes
of freedom. Before the war the mule
was never known that oonld kill a negro
by kicking him.
Mr. Henry T. Mussengulo died sud
denly iu St. Louis, Mo,, on Tuesday
last. 'He had a number of relatives aud
friends iu Hi is section of Georgia, who
will regret to learn of his death.
To the present time the total amount
of cash asked to be appropriated by the
present Congress for imblic buildings is
over $25,000,000. That exasperating
surplus is bound to rlisupp r.
The beet possible evidence of the
thrift aud Botiil prosperity of Augusta is
the auuouuoemeot that SOO,OOO of her
aewnn per oeut. beads, duo March Ist,
will be paid in oaah or tire day they fall
due.
A bill has been introduced tu Congress
forbidding pr dtMricls’sh,
the United States from levying any tax
or license npon oommeioial salesmen.
This is a good bill and slAmld become a
law.
The Washington eurreapuudeot of the
Augusta Chronicle is very confident that
no bill reduoing the reveuue will be
passed by this Congress without the
total abolition of the Internal Reveuue
Wait and see.
Jimt aa expected, the Sugar Trnst ban
commenced it* monopolistic rascality. It
has ouvanned tlw pries of refilled and
lowered the price of raw sugars, thna
gouging both the consumer and the pro
ducer.
In the neighborhood of Fairfield, near
Clarksville, on Sunday last, five mad
doga were killtxt, alter they luui Uttoa
fifteeu or twenty other dogs. Maylie the
Georgia Legislature will couaeut to enact
a dog law some day.
An nuknown negro boy, about 20
yean old, was found dead in an out
bouae on John Barnes' plantation, Cobb
county, laat Woduonday, Ho lmd boon
dead several days.
Ou the Brunswick and Western rail
road last Wednesday, John Traaerant,
colored, aged 20 aud cross evod, while
chopping wood mistook his foot for s
hghtwood knot aud drove his axe dear
through it.
A Savannah crank wrote to Tom Wool
folk last woek, warning him that he
would be lynoliod by a mob ou Friday
night, the 17lh, aud nrging him to pre
pare for death. Investigation proved
the alarm groundless, but Tom was
badly frightened, nevertheless.
On Friday morning last a freight on
the Central railroad, near Milieu, parted
aud the rear part rau iuto the forward
part, wreckiug two or three cure. A
printer, named D. M. Pyle, of SaTaunah,
■was mashed Jo death in the wreck.
McOliutook, Sully and Wm. K. Van
derbilt, all great railroad kings, so-called
of the North, were oither iu Augosta or
passed through the city last week, and
Augusta ih putting ou airs about it.
A rabid mad-dog iu the street* of Ka
teuton produoed a panic among the
citizens last week. No one ventnred
out without being armed, every con
ceivable weapon being pnt in use.
The Blair educatiousl bill has passed
the Senate by a vote of 39 to 29, both of
tlie Georgia Senators voting for it. It
passed the Senate onoe before, when
Uiero ware only 11 vote* oast against it.
It is not at all probable that it will pans
the lioase, We thick tbe measure is
not only nnneoeaaary but dangerous, and
hope it will not beoome a law.
Hon. James Q. Blaine, of Maine, has
written a letter to JEsq. Jones, of tbe Re
publican Committee, which he positively
refuses to be a candidate for the Repub
lican nomination. All right, Mr. Blaine.
Nobody will weep about it down this
way.
Atlanta has a man who is double
barrel all over. One eye is dark bine,
the other light gray. In tbe daytime be
is totally blind iu the blue, but sees well
with the gray. At night it is just the
reverse. His ears are in the same fix.
One is I nailed for the daytime aud the
other fur night.
Ncliua White, a colored proacher of
Harris comity, beat his wife so brutally
last week that she died. If it be true,
as stateu, that this is the third wife the
parson has whipped to death, he ought
to bo taken to the woods and Strang up
to a stoat limb.
Dnrrell Johnson, book-keeper and col
lector for Paul & Unllatt, of Atlanta,
skipped out Inst week, with about SSOO
which ho had collected for his employers.
He is about twenty years old and stood
well iu society and business circles. Hia
father has agreed to make good the
loss.
Mr. George Wartheu, a merchant of
Bandersville, claims that he sold $30,000
worth of goods on time lust year, all of
whioh lie collected except SO. This
bonta any credit business wo ever heard
of. Mr. Wartheu ceriaiuly has the beet
customers or the most fetching persua
siveness to lie fouud in the Btate.
OoL Dnnaan Mcßae, formerly of North
Carolina, died iu Brooklyn, N, Y., on
the 12th instant. He was a prominent
lawyer and a colonel in the Confederate
army. When only five years old he de
livered no nddreaa of welcome to Gen.
Lafayette, when he visited Fayetteville
in 1825.
Two little boys, aged respectively 10
and 12 years, sons of Mr. P. F. Bray, of
Wrlghtsville, were in a field cutting
down corn stalks, on Tuesday lost, when
the elder, by accident, split open bis
little brother's head with tho blade of his
boo, from whioh death resulted immedi
ately.
Mr. Conwell, iu one of bis lectures in
Atluuta, uttered the following wholesome
truth: “Whatever science may say,
common sense says that laughter ia a
good thing. A good laugh will do more
good in oases of siokness than the best
physicians
On Tuesday last the Directors of tho
Georgia lluitrond mot aud declared an
extra of obg per
cent., mSiting Is alKa dividend of eleveflT
per cent. This is one of tbs best
managed and liest paying roads in tho
South, As aoou as the dividend was
declared the stock advanced from 200 to
220.
Lewis Sample aud A. B. Merchant,
two operative* of the King Mill, in Au
gusta, got into a fight on Monday night
of last week, in which Sample was fear
fully carved up. He reoeived three
stabs ia Use back of the lioad, one in the
right arm and three in the bock. Both
must have been to blame, as Merohant,
who did the stabbiug, has been released
on a SSOO bond.
To the present date Augusta hM re
ceived 185,059 bales of ootton. To the
same date lost year she had received
137,008 bales. The prospect that her
receipts for this season will amouut to
200,000 bales is very flattering. To cot
tou planters residing within a radius of
one hundred miles no ootton market in
the South offers facilities superior to
Augusta.
We are indebted to Mr. Joseph M.
Brown, of the Western and Atlantic
Uaiiroad, for a beautiful illustrated Val
entine. It is an eloqneut description of
one of tbe most touching and heroic in
cidents of tho last war, whioh occurred
at tbe great battle of Keunesaw Moun
tain.
In the oaao of Heard, oolored, vs. tbe
Georgia Railroad, the Railroad Com
mission has decided that the railroads
must give equal accommodations to
white and oolored passengers who pay
the Rarae faro, but the roads hare the
right to say where each raoe shall
ride.
The Trustees of the State University
met in Athena on Friday last, and de
cided to postpone the election of a
Chancellor, to fill tbe vaoanoy caused by
the death of Dr. Mull, until July next.
Iu the interim Prof. Oharbonnier will
discharge the duties of that offloe.
The Democrats of the committee* on
Territorie* of both the Seuate and House
hare decided to admit to the onion of
state* Dakota, New Mexico, Washington
aud Montana, after the next Presidential
election. Dakota ia strongly Republican
and New Mexico is equally as strongly
Democratic, while Washington and
Montana are doubtful.
Much good is expected to result to tbe
South from the recent action of the
Southern Traffic Association and tbe
Central Traffic Association, by whioh
cheap railroad rates, (ooe and a-half cents
a mile) have been obtained for immi
grant settlor* and investors. We have
also good cause to expect that tho terribly
severe winter, wbicb baa just passed
over tbe Northern end Western States,
will bes strong inducement for those
people to seek homes in the fertile aud
wioterless South.
If all be true that is stated concerning
tbe elevated railway invented by Mr. W.
P. Wood, of Clayton oonnty, be bae not
only earned a big fortune, bat is an
honor to Georgia and tbe entire Sonth.
It is stated that tbe oost of this railway
is trifling, and upon it one mau can with
ease propel 1.600 pounds at the rate of
16 miles an hour. Mr. Wood has been
offered $20,000 for bis patent, and an
other mau has written him to name bis
price for it.
Tbe Crawfordville Democrat announ
ces tbe sad death of Mrs. Mary W.
Chapman, wife of Robert A, Chapman,
of Burnett, whioh occarred on Tuesday
nigh' of last week. On Thursday before,
her babe was buried, since whioh time
she had been quite ill, but tho immediate
cause of her death was an overdone of
morphine given tier instead of quinine.
Mrs. Chapman was the daughter of Dr.
•T. J. Cooper, was only abont 20 years of
age aud was married iu January, 1887.
Isnah Williams, of Dooly oonnty,
seems to be an impetuous aud blood
thirsty parent. Youug Mr. Culpepper
fell in love with a daughter of Mr. Wil
liams, aud when the old gentleman told
him he shouldn’t have her, the oonple
eloped and got married anyhow. Tho
next day Mr. Williams went to Cul
pepper's home, found him out in the lot
and stubbed Mm iu nine places, produc
ing dangerous wounds. This should be
a warning to uxorious youngsters not to
provoke the wrstb of fathers who carry
pocket kuives.
Mr. Russell H. Con well, of Philadel
phia, has been delivering some very in
teresting leoturee in Trinity ebnroh, At
lanta. In the first leoture be showed
that he is one of the most progressive
and advanoed thinkers of the day. Home
may consider his thoughts sud predic
tions a little wild from the following,
wbioli we clip from tbe Atlanta Journal :
"Interesting, versatile and evrneal,
Col. Connell is somewhat of a Jules
Verne, when he announeos that within a
decade we will decide, by popular vote,
what weather we want during successive
seasons, aud the government will shape
the storina, the sunshine and showers,
according to popular oaprioe. Bnt even
more dazzling is the prophecy that we
will telegraph on rays of light, aud open
oommunioation with the planet Mars.
What a day will be that when mau'a in
telligence flashes from star to star, and
oirolia the universe with its comprehen
sion. Surely, be must be dreamiug of
the millenium. He did not sornple to
prophesy that transportation will be lift
rjj from the earth to the air, and that we
jill learn to read eaeh other's thoughts.
“Upon this lost lie based a hope of almost
perfect-parity of mind when men learned
to look behind the oountenance and see
the dark legion before passion's pale flag
has been advanoed there.''
From Oleau, N. Y., is reported a re
markable case of mistaken ideuty, in
which one brother was convicted aud pun
ished for a crime committed by tbe oth
er. James snd William Lafler were
twins, and so great was their resemblance
that few people oonld tell one from the
other. Clifford, a rich neighbor, bad
two beautiful daughters, to whom the
twin brothers wore engaged to be mar
ried. Ooe night, after tho men had
visited their sweethearts, a burglar broke
into tbe Clifford mansion, beat Mr.
Clifford to insensibility aud"robbed him
of 88,000. On goiug out of the bouse he
was met by the Miss Clifford who was
engaged to WilliAm Lafler and identified.
William was tried, oonvicted and sen
tenced to tho peuiteutiary for ten yeara,
the principal witness against him being
tbe young lady to whom be was engaged.
William was serving his sentence when
a friend uncovered the plot by which he
was viotimixed. James Lafler had chlo
roformed William, dressed himself in
William’s olotbes, which were entirely
different from his own, and committed
tbe crime. William has been pardoned
by Gov. Hill, and James, who was living
on a ranoh in New Mexioo, has been ar
rested and will donbtloaa be pnnished
to the extent of the law for hia heinous
crime.
■ud Summer ou Pianos.
"I never knew so hard a summer on
pianos," said a maker. "Even the best
and most expensive instruments have
suffered, those built of the mm thor
oughly seasoned materials being the most
seriously affected. In case* where ex
traordinary precautions have been taken,
and the instruments have not suffered
from the dampness particularly, the keys
have turned a deep yellow. 'While it k
a good practice to keep an instrument
closed when not In use, so that the
mechanism may not be impaired by
dampness, still it should be opened occa
sionally, so that the daylight can strike
the keys. If this is not done they will
always turn yellow. Moths will also find
their way into an instrument unlees it k
opened occasionally. Fully one-third of
the work I have had to do on pianos this
seaaou has been to repair the damage*
done by moths. Some persons, however,
kept the moths out by wrapping a piese
of camphor up In soft paper and laying
it on the keyboard."—New York Mail
and Express.
CURIOUS ACCIDENTS.
William Good, of Mount Joy, Pa, broke
his leg while try.ng to pull off his boot.
Jcsso Mead’s horse ran away near Trcmont,
0., and threw him headlong into the frown
creeh, where ha broke through tho ice and
was druwued.
The mule upon which William Grading, of
Lick Creek, Ilk., was riding, shied, and
throwing {trading against a tree, he was
killed iustautlv.
JUDGE REESE
Lincolnton News.
Washington, Ga., Feb. 3, 1888.
Thomas H. Reuses, Esq.,
Lincolnton, Ga.
Dear Sib : - In order tbat the readers
of tbe News may fully understand the
nature of tbe taxes called “dntiea on im
ports” on the necessaries and comforts
of life now paid by onr impoverished
farmers and laborers of all kinds, I will
give yon a list of them taken from an
autheutio source:
The tax on nails ia 40 per cent. The
tax on screws is 30 per cent. The tax on
hinges is 40 per cent. The tax on paint
is 8 cents per pound. The tax on com
mon window glass is 86 per cent. The
tax on earthen ware, crockery and chins
is 55 per oent. The tax on common
glass wure is 40 per cent. The tax on
table knives and forks is 35 per cent.
The tax on iron hollow wure glazed is
45 per ceut. The tax on cotton fabrics
of all kinds is 40 per cent. The tux on
Box, bernp, jute aud other ra w textiles
used for making bagging and sacks of
all kinds is 17 per cent. Tiie tax on
iron, steel and hardware is 37 per cent.
The tax on rioe is 73 per cent. The lax
on raw wool is 37 per cent. The tax on
woollen maiiufacturies is 67 per oeut.
Mr. Samuel Barnett, a gentleman well
known to you, iu some article written
f<r the Atlanta Constitution iu 1883 and
published as an editorial in that paper,
speaking of these taxes says : "Iu the
United States the Federal Government
does its work of taxation thoroughly—
every citizen is literally olothed in tax
ation from bead to foot. Hals and boots
are taxed and no garment between them
escapes whether of wool or cotton, flax
or silk. It covers what we wear, what
we eat and whaj we work with. Taxation
begins in tho orndlo and does not end in
the grave for even the tomb-stone is not
spared. From the mother’s womb to tbe
womb of earth taxes pursue the smu. of
men and pqfsns not iu vain. ThAod
eral tax on sugar alone in the county of
Wilkes exceeds the wliolo comity tax—
the former being about $6,000. The
tariff operates unequally but largely in
tho dark. Tho tax payer knows the
general average of Federal taxation per
aspits to be five times State aud county
taxes put together, bnt the details he
knows not. He pays taxes when he
buys iron, when he buys crockery, when
he buys clothes, blankets, sugar or salt,
while the Government gets two hundred
million dollars from duties the people
pay to the protected manufacturers of
the United States, seveu hundred ami
fifty millions of dollars ont of their pock
ets. The government gets the little eud
and tbe protected classes tbe big end by
nearly three to one.' 1
Iu view of these startling facta can any
reasonable mau in our country hesitate
aa to hia position on the great question
of tariff reform—where it should begin—
whether by talking taxes from whisky,
beer, etc., or from the necessaries and
comforts of life?
If the repeal of tho Internal Reveune
law, so far as it is affected the manufac
ture and sale of wbisky, beer, etc ,
benefited the majority of tho people of
the United Stales, it could lie thon well
oiaimed that the policy of repeal should
prevail. This, however, is not the onso
as such a policy can only bonfit a minor
ity of the whole people and a large
minority at that. If all • people of
the mountain counties o I to all
the people engaged m v 1 b .‘filed by
manufacturing, the result uld bo that
they would stand about one to five of tbe
whole people. Yours truly,
W. M. Reese.
Is Tljere any Future Life for
We answor, John Wesley, the founder
of Methodism, thought there was. Bo
did those eminent Christian Bishops,
Jeremy Taylor aud Bishop Butter. Cole
ridge advocated it iu England, Lamar
tine in France and Agassiz iu America.
Agassiz, the greatest scientist we ever
lmd ou this continent, aud a man of
profound religious convictions, was a
firm believer iu some future life for the
lower animals. A professor of Hurvsrd
University lias compiled a list of one
hundred aud eighty-five European an
thors who have written on the subject.
Among the leading clergy of Boston,
who have publicly expressed their be
lief in a future life for animals, are Jos.
Cook, Triuitarian, and James Freeman
Clark, Uuitariau. Some ten years ago a
man left by will to Mr. Bergb’s Now
York Society, about a hundred aud fifty
thousand dollars. Relatives contested
the will on the ground that he was in
sane because he believed iu a future life
for animals. The Judge, iu Bustaiuing
tbe will, said he fouud that mors than
half the human race believed the same
thing.—Geo, T. Augell in Our Dumb
Animals.
A party of drunken Hungarians, at
Silver Brook, Pa., got iuto a general
fight at the house of a mau named Ms n
lick, ou Sunday night, which resulted in
a fearful tragedy. During ttie fight a
lamp was overturned aud exploded, and
in an instant the room was enveloped in
flame* aud the clothing of all present
ignited. The door was looked and the
crowd was either too drunk or didn’t
know how to get out. Five men and
one girl were roasted alive and Maulick
and his wife wero fatally burned. Mrs.
Mauliok threw her babo out of a window
to save it from the flames, but it was
killed by the fall. Nine deaths in all.
—Buy the best and prettiest Shoes of
Burnside.
—For Fine Shoes and lists Burnside’*
is the piece
A FEARFUL CYCLONE
On Sunday last, a calm and almost
cloudless day, a terrible cyclone,
without warning or premonition,
swooped down upon the prosperous
town of Mount Vernon, Illinois, and
literally swept one-half of it from ex
istence, while the remainder took
fire, and, under a strong wind, was
almost entirely consumed. The
telegraphic dispatches give borrow
ing details of the disaster. The
shrieks and groans of the dying
could be heard above the roar of tbe
wind and flames, and tbe bodies of
tbe killed could be seen half buried
in the ruins. In one of the bank
buildings four men were imprisoned
in tbe ruins and burned to death.
Their cries of pain aud pleas for
help were agonizing, but no human
relief could reach them. Hundreds
of people are rendered homeless,
and, as the weather has turned sud
denly cold, much suffering will
result.
Five hundred houses, constituting
three-fourths of the town were des
troyed by the cyclone and the fire
which followed it, inflicting a loss of
over one million of dollars The la
test reports show that thirty-five
persons were killed and over one
hundred injured, many of the latter
being desperately wounded and will
certainly die, so that the death list
will, in all probability swell far be
yond its present limit.
No such fearful disaster as this,
accompanied by such tragic and
heart-rending results, has ever
been inflicted by these sudden and
death- dealing storms, and the peo
ple of this section of Georgia know
from experience liow to sympathize
with the sufferers.
Mrs. Todd, a sister of President
Lincoln's wife, is visiting in Valdos
ta.
Vanderbilt University has received
another donation of $20,000 from
Cornelius Vanderbilt to enlarge the
school of engineering.
Rev. S. H. Cate, a prominent
preacher of Chattanooga, committed
suicide on Saturday last by taking
poison. Melancholy and despond
ency are assigned as the motive.
Rethune Jones, a youug man of
Milledgevillo, is another addition to
the rapidly increasing list of hydro
phobic victims. He was bitton by a
tnad-dog iu September hist, but the
horrible malady did not develop un
til a few days ago.
Atlanta is getting ready to enter
tain, on tho 29tli iust, Sir Thomas
Henry Grattan Esmonde, a sprig of
the British nobility and a member
of Parliament from the city of
Dublin.
The latest reports of the condition
of the Crown Prince of Germany give
virtually no hope of his recovery.
Ou the contravy, they indicate clear
ly that his fate is settled, and that
his life cannot be prolonged tunny
mouths at most.
A number of Morman elders are
preaching and proselyting in por
tions of Columbia and Richmond
counties. It is said that Grovetown
is th air headquarters, but tho good
people ought to rise up in their
wrath and kick their hindquarters
iuto the Savannah river.
We deeply regret to learn that
Maj. Thos. J. Burney, recently of
tho Augusta Gazette, has been com
mitted to the Asylum in Milledge
ville. We hope his mental altera
tion is only temporary, and that ho
will soon be restored to his family
and to tho important and useful la
bors of journalism.
The wisest and most cautious
statesmen ia Europe and America
now admit that a gigantic war be
tween several of tbe great European
Powers is inevitable. Russia has
massed 800,000 troops on the Aus
trian frontier, and is aggressive and
arrogant in claiming the right to
dictate the government of Bulgaria
and Roumauia, while the allied em
pires of Germany aud Austria, with
Italy as a contingent, are equally as
determined iu resistance. France is
mobilizing her army, and will be
ready to join in the great struggle at
the proper time, and all over Central
Europe active military preparations
i are being made on an immense scale.
! Diplomatic intercession has be
! come powerless to bring about a
■ settlement, and is now employed
1 only to delay, for a brief period, tbe
I fearful shock of the huge armies
which practically face each other.
—lnvoice of New Hats and Shoes at
Burnside’s.
Right Aim Left
OF
Main Street- Thomson* Georgia,
YOU WILL FIND
One ofT.N.IM’ Big Stores.
Groceries, Dry Goods,
Dry Goods. Grocereis.
STAND FROM UNDER!
Crash in Prices! Horrah for Mrs. Cleveland !
Bern’s Your Chance !
If yon have been waiting an opportunity of this kind,
Kmbraee It CfciiieLtly !
joiin Ta. holzendorf
i 'lacing before you a fascinating display of genuine bargains which will
TICkLE VOIR HEARTS
With unalloyed pleasure. Go and see his glorious crop of
BARC*AINB in FALI GOODS.
We know that he ram satisfy yon in every respect.
PROGRESS
—abe.l, hi. WATCHWORD. 11. 6m wwtod .„A -hrm, Ic |, mcn .i n .,
aikd night, aud bin reward has been continued
prosperity,
Aud as season follows season hie stocks increase in size, and his oomnuid of ready —-1-
has given him the
I* o w E R
To place bargains within tbe reach of ell. Hie
Prices'! Are The Lowest
In this or any other town. There is a tull and complete assortment in everv line of
Dry Goods and Notions, Fancy Goods. Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Groceries,
folwcco, Hardware, Crockery, Glam were. Cenned Goode, etc.
Como end get a little LOW Pit ICED BUSS. Everything now, nothing shop worn.
Bury yonr double end try me onoe. I can, will and do please those who trade with ms
JQBM I. HQLZM.\mw.
Opposite Depot, IUOJbO\, 0.4.
PENDLETON’S
BOOK STORE.
804 BROAD STREET,
(Neat to E. R. Bcbnci<Wr’.)
AUGUSTA, - - GEORGIA.
Keeps constantly on hand a full line of Books, and Stationery, consisting tn
part of Standard and Miscellaneous Books. Novels, Tales, nnd Religious,
Bibles, Testaments, Hymn Books of different denominations,
Sunday School Books and Requisites, School
Books, Blank Books of all kinds.
Note, Letter, Fools-csp.
Bill and Legal Cap Paper, Office
and Fancy Stationery, Picture Frames. Dolls and
Toys. Photograph and Autograph Albums, Pictures, Ac., At,
Books and small paexagee of Stationery sent by moil, free of postage,
en receipt of money for the same. A. Ji\ ?RN DLETON.
wiii.flWßßi! 1 l .. -i— '^amr^s^mssaxFßsmp^mK^sssc^mL^sssssssataamammßssm
COMMERCIAL HOUSE!
RESTAURANT AND SALOON.
706 Broad Street, Augusta, 6a.
LEXIITS HEISSQN, - - PROPRIETOR.
Fish, Oysters, Game,
And all DELICACIES of the Season Served in Best Style AT ALL HOURS,
-Aiso-
Sleeping Apartments for Gentlemen.
COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS
WILL FIND MY HOUSE THE MOST CONVENIENT IN THE CITY FOR
DISPLAYING THEIR GOODS.
A FINE STOCK OF
WINES, LIQUORS and CIGARS
ALWAYS ON HAND.
E. R. SCHNEIDER,
▼HOX-aaUJi AID ATAJI. DIAUn
Fine Wines, Cigars, Brandies, Tobacco, Mineral Waters,
WHISKIES, CINB. PORTER, ALE, AC.
601 sad 801 Brood Street, Av-gusU, GtorgU,
AGKffTS FOR
?biyb Clipft Pfliartii, Urbina Wine Company, Antar-Bccl
BREWING ASSOCIATION.