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Even My's Mre Mace!
OUR PRINCIPLE
The Best Goods for the Least Money.
Wo make the price* of Furniture, you can depend on It. We carry the
flucat atock and all the noveltle*and latest style*. For four year* we have held
THE BANNER OF LOW PRICES
And are determined to keep it. Call aud see u*. Everything guaran
teed a* represented, Wo meet all competition from every quarter.
J. I BOWLES <& GO.*
840 BROHD STREET, AUGUSTA. GA
WITH THE BKHT ASSORTMENT OF
HORSE AND MULE MILLINERY
South or Mahon and Dixon Link.
PIE HANDMADE, SINGLE AND DODDLE HASHES
Saddles, Bridles. Collars Whips, &o.
Will exchange new goods for old ones. Personal attention given to the
renar'ng of old Baddies and Hai nes*. Oive me a call when you visit Wash
ington, and 1 will save you money. West of the Court House, and next door
4o Major Hennoberry’a you will find this mammoth Saddle and Harness store.
IT -“ T. G. HAD AW AY, Washington. Ga.
NEW YORK MILLINERY STORE.
MISS MBLMB PUB € ELI.
French Millinery, Hats & Feathers.
728 Broad St., Under Central Hotel, Augusta, Ga
My stock of Fall and inter Millinery. Notion*, Etc., is now complet
In every respect. lam now prepared to serve my mauv patrons, assiiriu
them that they will receive the latest and most fashionable stylos. Order
by mail will reeotve prompt and careful attention, hen visiting the city,
emit to seo mo. Very respectfully, Gl-tf
IVLIhm IN'EJIaIaI 13 PURCELL,
OKO. R. SIBLEY ANBURY' HULL. P. B. TOBIN.
GEO. K. SIBLEY & CO.,
COTTON FACTORS,
847 Ac @4O Reynolds @t.,
AUGUSTA, : : : : : GEORGIA.
Personal Attention Given to Weights and Sales.
JESSE THOMPON <fc CO.,
Manufacturers ot 1
• :■ | . . *
Doors. M, Bills Honings, Brackets
YELLOW PINE LUMBER, &C.
• DEALERS IN
Window Glass and Builder’s Hardware.
Planing Mill ami Lumber Yard, llnle Street, Near Central Railroad
Yard. ONE AND A HALF MILLION FEET OF LUMBER always on
and. rile for prices or call at our office 10-Iv
CE rSTTJRAXj HOTEL
A/cro'crsTA., a-A..
IVIi'H. W. M . Thomas, Proprietress
TUU hotel *o writ known to the cltUena of Wilkes and adjoining counties, it located in the
mldftt of the bntnM portion of Auguste. Convenient to Port Otto-. Twlegreph Office end
LiejHd end offomnduivmtffcU to the phhltc eoch ee only ItlMU* hotel* cen afford.
Athens Foundry anil Machine Works.
II ON ANI> BRASS CASTINGS. MILL GEARING. lINING AND
MILL, MACHINERY, SAW MILLS, SMITHING, HE
PAIRING AND PATENT OR
Steam Engines and Circular Saw Mills,
PreMea, Iron Fencing K*c.
ALSO, MANUFACTURER'S AGENT FOR
, ■n.lnM.TUlttM W.t.r Wh*.l. Victor Cm. Mill. ComMiud Thresh.-™ n4 Sp
,WrU l'. ,™ Anil H.neorh In.pirs ore, Ure anal Boiler rwd. Korttn,
l 7ni.vtor Strewn J.l Pomp, lor r.lm# wWr. .ml * full >t k of flttln K of mil
uurtor*iiueu,iinM..to. For aoscnptm circular. *n purler h.u.
Addrwat
. H omas bailey, agent.
raxoi corais active again
A recent dispaten from Las Vegas,
New Mexico, says: Fence cutting is
going on in Colfax county at a most
destructive rate under a strong or
ganization. An almost unbroken
line of fence of wire from the Ponie
to tkoTognisguite, ninety miles, lias
been cut.
The heaviest sufferers are the Red
river cattle company, four mil**;
Col. J. 8. Tavior, twenty miles; W.
Miles, four milieu; J. W, Kelles, six
miles: Francis Clutlon, fifteen mile.
J. O. Duncan, five mile*. The work
on the fences of the Dubuque cattle
Company began last night, and they
..ill lose ten miles ot wire. The
cutters are not known.
The work of the fence cutters was
as systematic as tho workings of *
metropolitan police force. Each
man was mounted, and they were
placed in squads ot convenient num
bers. The squads would ride up io
the fences, a man would drop out
at a corner,and cut for the extent of
a half mile or more up to where
another fellow had begun work, then
jump into the saddle and rush
to the head ot the line again, after
the style of school boys playing leap
frog. They cut the panels in the miu
die, leaving not one solid panel along
the entire line of devastation.
This is done because hrary cattle
owners fence more ground than their
deeds call for. In so doing liter
keep cattle on the public domain iroiu
getting at the water for the want of
which they drift against the fences
and die from thirst. Three hundred
and fifteen head of cattle died along
Col. Taylor’s fence* last spring,
which goes to show the evil of barber!
wire in cudless lengths.
Senator Dorsey, who owns sixty
miles of fenced laud* of Palo Blanca,
addressed the cutters at Springer
yesterday, and said to them that it
they would iuform him when they
got ready to bogin operations on his
wire he would take it down volun
larily and reel it up, thin saving ton*
of barb that would otherwise go to
waste. They said they would give
him notice in time to save trouble.
7IIKALX THUGS IN RUSSIA.
A case recently tried before the
criminal tribunal of Oddessx has
hroughi to life some further proofs
of the diabolical tenets held by a e
-croetly organized and fanatical Rus
sian sect, against which several prosc
cutiens have from time to lime licen
mado. This sect, which is under an
| oath of secrecy, appears to consist en
tirely of women. These female fan
atics, or rather female Thugs, have
become infamous under tho denomi
nation of “Angel-makers.” They
secretly destroy children, generally
infants of the breast, committed to
their charge. As uurses, generally,
and more frequently as care-takers
of illegitimate children, they destroy
their charges in the manner which
promises the safest means against de
tection. They profess that their mis
sion is to murder for the assured sal
vation of the souls of their innocent
victims, and at the same time to earn
(hr themselves eternal glory.
The prlsloner charged was tried un
der the name of Kacltol Ostrovskaia,
but was knowu to tho police by sev
eral aliases. She is a married woman
24 years of age; one of her known
victims being her only child. Three
cases of child-murder,one by strangu
lation, were proved against tho pris
oner, who was condemned to fifteen
years’ hard labor. The woman ap
peared entirely unaffected, and when
called upon by the Judge, replied
simply and with the utmost compo
sure, “Do with me as vou will; I am
in your hands.”
A bill to punish wife beaters by
whipping has been introduced into
the Pennsylvania Legislature, and
some of the newspaper* of that Stale
give it an unqualified indorsement.
The Philadelphia Times sav#: "The
principle of the bill is a good one, and
the public sentiment has been ready
to apply it for some years, so that the
quicker it is dono the belter. There is
no other effective punishment for this
offense, and it is time this last resort
was tried.” It has not been very long
since some of the leadings Pennsylva
nia papers were abusing Delaware iu
the most unmeasured terms for retain
ing the whipping post in this enligh
tened ago. There is no doubt, however
that it is growing in favor in some
sections, and there it a class of mean
and petty criminals that can be so ef
fectively and cheaply punished in no
other manner than by whipping.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, being highly
concentrated, requires a smaller dose
and is more effective, dose for dose,
than any other blood medicine. It
is the cheapest, becatiso the best.
Quality and not quanity should be
considered.
A HORRIBUt STORY FROM
ATLANTA
Dipt. Crim, of the Atlanta police
force, patrol'ed North avenue, in the
celorerl settlement, Monday morning.
As the Captain passed one ot the
houses his nssal organs were greeted
with the smell of horsing flesh. Ap
proaching the house from which the
odor appeared to emanate, the Cap
lain knocked at the door. The door,
however, swung backward as the
Captain’s stick touched it, and, seeing
that it was not fastened, be made biod
to push it open and enter. On an old
bed in one corner of the room he found
a woman in a half-dead condition.
Advancing to the bed CapL Crim was
horrified at finding that the woman's
left side end shoulder had bceu burned
until llie bone was almost plainly in
view. Bha said that her name was
Dora Jones, and that she lived alone.
On Saturday night she got drunk
and while drunk fall into the fire on
her hearth. She was too drunk to ex
tricate herself, and laid there for
quite a while. Finally she got up
and laid down on the bed, ami had
not been able to get up. No one came
near here during Saturday night.
Sunday or Sunday night, and she was
almost daad when Capt. Crim found
her. By Inquiry the Captain ascer
tained (hat a negro family lived in
the next room. To this family the
Captain then went. He asked them if
thev knew of the woman’s condition.
“Tes," said one of the women.
“Then why don't some of you go aud
give her some attention?” asked the
Captain. “Because it ain’t any of our
business,” was the heartless answer.
Tho women then told Capt. Crim that
Ihe woman had not fallen in the fire
In her room as she said. They de
clared that sha came home about day
light Sunday morning in that condi
tion, and that she refused to tell them
how she got burned. Capt. Crim sent
a ward physician to IWra Jones
house.
lord aylkbford dbajd.
Th* Rod of a Chequered Career Among
the Cow-Boy* of lew.
The lari of Aylesford died at the
Cosmopolitan Hold, here, at 9.30
o’clock last night, from inflammation
of the bowels, UL remains will be
sent to England.
The death of Earl of Aylesford
among the cowboys appears to he
another argument of some prominence
io the effect that,more spendthriftism
and libertinism will away with the
healthiest and best prelected person*
ill due time. Even among the cow
boys he always opened a fresh bottle
when any guest arrived and as a natu
ral consequence died of inflammation
of the bowels at tho age of thirty-fire
On January 19,1371, he succeeded his
father as the seventeenth Earl of
Aylesford. He was married to Edith,
the third daughier of Lieutenant Col
onel Pater Wiliams, of Temple nouse,
Berks, on January 8, 1871. He had
two daughters. Hilda Joanna
Gwcudolfn who was born on July 25,
1872, and Alexandra Louis Minna
horn July 9, 1875. The Prinee of
Wales stood sponsor for the latter.
He was an Intimate satellite of the
Prince of Wales, accompany ing his
Rayal Highness on his India expedi
tion and was his companion in many
tamobs frolics. His wife eloped with
Lord Blanrtrfird, now Duke of Marl
borough, aud the Qneen’s Proctor
intervened to prevent his obtaining a
divorce from her.
Emory Speer is hiving a handsome
monument placed over tht grave of
his first wife, in Oconee cemetery.
Communication
WcirurKA. Ala., Sept. 38. 1884.
—About six years ago I became af
flicted with a verv disagreeable skin
disease, with large, dry sores and
many crusted pimpler on mr face,
baud sad shoulder. The sore en my
shoulder rat a hole nearly ait inch
deep, anb the cancerous appearance
of one of the sore* near my eye
alarmed rao very much. I tried all
kinds of treatment, but found nothing
that seemed to affect the disease. I
tidily decided. I tried all kinds of
treatment, but found nothing that
seemed to affect the disaese. I final
ly decided to try S. S. S. on adviee
of a physician, and in a short time
tlie s'-abs dropped from the sores and
left my skin smooth and well. I con
sider S. S. S> the greatest blood med
icine made, and the ouly that will
cure the disease with which I was
afficted. I think my trouble was the
result of a terrible attack of malarial
fever, contracted while farming in
the Tallapoosa river swamp, I cau
be found at my office in th£ court
house at Wctumpka. You can refer
to me. J. L. Rhodes,
Dcp. Sheriff Elmore Cos, Ala.
Treaisc on Blood and skin Diseases
mailed free.
The Swift Specific Cos , Drawer 3
Atlanta Ga.,
CATCH OH TO THIS !
LOOK HEBE NOW.
TEN MINUTES IS NOT A LONG TIME, BUT IS SUFFICIENT
FOR ME TO CONVINCE YOU THAT
MY PRICES ARE A
TERROR
TO MY COMPETITORS.
IST-A-ME,
T. Burwell Green,
Means Good Goods at the Lowest Prices. That my prices are so low U
a surprise to all who visit ny store, and will result iu your
INVESTIGATION,
ADMIRAIION,
NEGOTIATION,
GRATIFICATION
A PRIZE WILL BE SECURED, BECAUSE AN
Investigation
Of My Bargains will Excite your
Admiration
And Load to a
Negotiation
And Result in Your Immense
Gratification.
Now it the time to boy. My stock is on the market regacdless of cost.
Bargain* every day at
T BURWELL OREEJN’S.
COME ONE!
COME ALL!
SAVE MONEY BY BUYING YOUR GOODS FROM
O’NEILL & BRO.,
West Side of Public Square, WASHINGTON", GA.
W Keep Constantly on Hand a Large Stack of——
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, BOOTS, SHOES
And HATH.
Fancy Groceries & Plantation Supplies
OF -AJL.X. KINDS.
LADIES’, GENTS’ AND CHILDRENS’ SHOES
Cheaper than Anywhere Else in Town.
We Have Just Opened a Large Assortment of
READY - MADE CLOTHING
Bought tor the Cash, and which we sell Low for the CASH.
Harness, Saddles, Whips, Hardware,
Tinware, Crockery and Glassware
AT BOTTOM FIGURES.
Don’t fail to visit the new store, where you can get anything yon want
at Lowest, Cash Prices. 46-tf
O’NEILL Ac BRO.
Holiday Trade !
ti mmm store.
SEND YOUR ORDERS FOR DRY GOODS, HOLIDAY GOODS, ANI
ANYTHING YOU MAY WANT, TO
V. RICHARDS & CO.
WE HAVE A LARGER STOCK TO SELECT FROM THAN AN IT
HOUSE IN AUGUSTA.
Express Paid on $20.00 Orders.
EVERY PURCHASER RECEIVES A HANDSOME
CHRISTMAS CARD.
Y. BICHARDS Sc CO.,
45-tf 921 Broad St., Aueusta, Gtu