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Till! EXPOSITOR
- ,
WAYNJHBBORO', CKA..
Subscriptiaa Price; $2.00 Per Aunurn, 11 AJvincj.
Ptjmmnnicatioiis marked (line f are to lie paid fur
as adrerticements.
AI’POIVIfIKNTS OP KFV. CRH. 8. .0!!NST0>:
First Sumlnv in the month- Wrtyne*bnro’.
.■''neonJ Sunday, and Saturday Lcfore- Ml. Zion.
Third Sunday,and Saturday liot'oro—OldChuroh.
Third Sunday night—Waynesboro'
Fourth Sunday, aud day Wore—Ulark’u Chapel.
Meeting of Waynesboro’ No. 271, F.*. A.-. Mr.
Waynesboro’ Lodge, No. 274 F-*. A.- Mr time la
Is foliowa : On Friday night boforo tbo Ist Sun
lay, and in tho ftHornoon, at 2 o'clock, of Friday
before the 3d Sunday in each month.
Meeting of Waynesboro’ Lodge, No. 2“>f, I. 0. G. T.
The Waynesboro' Lodgo, No. 251, of lade
pendent Order of Good 'iciu|>!ura, meota every
Thursday oveninr, at 8 o’clock, in the Court
heuso K F. LAWSON, W. C. T.
P. P. Johnston, W. S.
Waynesboro’” Post Office Regnlstions.
Office hours, from 8 a m. to 12 ru.; und from
2p.m.toG p. m. Positively no mails delivered
before or aftor office hours.
July 1,1873. Mrs. M. L-Mitcueio,?. M
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBE 4R, 1873.
Srb advertisement “for rent” in an
other column.
i O i
Notice the advertisement of “dog
Inst,” in this issue.
Tint law is pliable—as witness tlic
few sales that take place out of so many
advertised
From copious doses of quinine, etc.,
fevers are abating, and the health of the
county is growing better.
| —-• - ■■■—
Oun. town is so cxcrutiatingly quiet
that we are at a loss for locals—and we
can't manufacture them.
Wk arc pleased to see our young
friend Beurikn at his post again—
greatly benefitted by bis recent north
ern trip.
—'■■■■ ■ • • ■ ■ -
Owing to the absence of Rev. G. F.
Johnston, at camp-meeting, there will
be no preaching at the Methodist church
next Sunday.
S übsciu units will please take no
tice of the cross mark, aud govern
themselves accordingly —i e. remit
amount of subscription,
faun sidewalks/as*a general thing,
aein a very bad condition. On many
streets —we may say, most ot than—
the middle is the better walk.
Ws expect soon to sec our farmers
wagoning their cotton to Augusta, un
less the Central Railroad sells out, to
somebody that can run the machine as
it ought to be run.
Accidentally Killed.—A negro by
the name of Ned Williams, on the plan
tation of Mr. Richard McELMtuuiAr,
accidentally shot himself on Monday
night last. He died next day.
Turks were only two members of
Oouncit in town yesterday. No busi
ness could bo transacted Tuesday night
for the want of a quorum. We think
it advisable, at our next election, to
have alternates on the tickets.
AiiVßitD (who is always Ready), of
tbe colored way of taking hold of things,
while manipulating a patent shuck-cut
ter, ou Tuesday, had the misfortune to
have three Augers of his left hand go
the same way the cow-food Went—un
der the knives and into the trough.
— * -
Col. HAi(jnT,' v bf the largest and best
circus in North America, informs us by
letter, that he will visit our town some
time next month. Since liis first visit
hero, two years ago, he has greatly in
creased his canvass and added largely
to bis stock of performers and trained
animals. Further announcement will
be given in due time.
Autumn. —According to tbe almanac,
tvc have ended our summer, and entered
upon autumn. But the seasons, wo all
know, do not conform to arbitrary divis
ions; and it will be many weeks yet
before we shall bid a final good-by to
hot weather. Still with the shortening
days come cooler nights, and even early
morning and late afternoon begin to
have a slight flavor of autumnal fresh
ness. In a few days, too, wo shall
hear of frosts upon the mountains, and
fires being needed at northern watering
places. Our streets will then fill up—
merchants will be at home—and busi
ness be revived. By the first of Octo
ber the summer, and its pains and plea
sures, will be forgotten; and everybody
will be making plans for the winter.—
So we go; the wheel of time rolls on,
and we roll with it —looking always
forward, and but rarely backward.
RELIGIOUS PROSCRIPTION.
Sonic Sensible Re-mark l * upon a
too Prevalent Put*tom.
The following artiele from tho pou
of tho well known humorist, John l’aul,
wits written at Saratoga. Its senti
ments, aeo so excellent, tho trutus con
tained in it arc no indisputably true, if
we may be allowed the expression, and
there is so much manly independence,
nobleness and elevation abovo the
miserable, narrow-minded prejudices
that prevail among ccrlAin classes and
in oertaiti places, that wc freely give
spaeo to it. Tho article was written 1
after a conversation between John Paul,
and a friend stopping at another hotel in
Saratoga. It is as follows :
“You've got all the jews’ over with
you," said a gentlman from one of the
other hotels to mo Inst evening; “they
(dint down on them over at our house;
won’t have ’em.” 1 like that; proferip
tion of all kinds is good, f like to hoar
one man sny that he hates ati English
man, and another that he can’t stand an
Irishman. For it shows that their edu
cations are not finished ; each has some
thing further in life to look forward to.
Tf they live lor g enough they will come
to the conclusion arrived at by the
great French traveller, who declared
that after visiting every part of the
known world he had made up liis mind
that it was inhabited only by men and
women.
But religious proscription is especially
pleasing to the naked eye. So far as
business dealing is concerned, an officer
of one of your most prominent banks,
to whom I repeated the observation,
remarked that, of all the men who had
dealings with his bank, lie found “Jews”
the most honest, the most faithful in
the performance of the very spirit ctf
their contracts, the most trustworthy
in all money transactions. And is it
not so ? Among the paupers who fill
our streets and our asylums, our ho-pi*
tals aud our jails, do you find a “Jew
They feed their own poor, and. they
take care of their own sick. Like the
best modem engines, they consume
their own smoke and rubbish. But,
aside from these material facts, there is
a poetry and a grandness about the
Jewish character which has always
moved me to reverence. A nation
without a country, a people without a
homo, flowing through and penetrating
all nations, yet not commingling with a
single one; preserving all their individ
ualities, their religion", their language,
their customs intact; the same now as
when, led by the cloud by day and the
pillar of fire at night, they went dry
shod through the cloven sea, and en
camped in the wilderness beneath the
same stars which now stud the heavens.
Show me a people dike this in all
history; a people around whom all the
grand poetry of the Bible clusters; a
people rich in tradition beyond all
precedent, who have yet preserved the
minutest of these . traditions, while
dynasty after dynasty has crumbled
around them, and nation after nation has
faded from off the face of the earth; a peo
ple who have clung to the faith of their
fathers, to the one God whom their
fathers worshipped, asking no change
and seeking no change, while creed af
ter creed has had its day, and decay
and in cess nt wars over doctrinal points
have desolated empires. My sympa
thies in the play, let mo confess, have
always been with Shy lock. Houseless
and homeless, spoiled of h?F wealth and
robbed of his daughter, he is driven
out in his old age to ehildlc>s penury—
and for what ? Insulted and spat upon,
his religion reviled and bis house dis
honored, he took no revenge in coward*
ly murder, after the Christian pattern ;
be sought but the fulfillment of a con
tract, the terms of which ho had com
plied with,and would have complied with,
probably, had positions been reversed.
Would not Shylock, think you, have
bared his bicast to the knife in fulfill
ment of his bond without the spiritless
| fuss that Antonia made about it? Such
is Jewish faith ; depend upon it tbe
despised Jew would not have sheltered
himiself from the fulfillment of a bar
gain which he himself sought under the
quibble about a drop of blood. “Won’t
havo Jews,” talk about “the best so
ciety of New York,” you do not know
I what it is untH you have mingled with
Jews, gone among the Rabbis, sat at
their feet, and, in admiration of man
ners and learning which pass all previ
ous experience, of a gracious gentleness
which makes the toleration afforded
you by any other sect seem boorish
rudeness, reoognieed a “society” to
which few can hope permanently to at
tain, a courtesy which comes of the
scholarship and culture of thousands of
years. “Won't have Jews,” indefcd !
Pocket Edition of Hell Eire.
A young parson of the Univcrsnlist
faith, many years since when tho Si
moupure Umvorsalisui was preached,
started westward to attend a conven
tion of his brethren in faith, lie took
the precaution to carry a vial of cayenne
pepper in his pocket to spritiklo his
food with, as a preventive of fever and
aguo. The convention met, and at
dinner a tall Hoosier observed the par
son as he seasoned his meat,.and ad
rcssed him thus :
‘•Stranger, i’ll thank yor for a littel
of that 'ere red salt, for I’m kind o’
curious to try it."
“Certainly,” returned the parson ;
“but you w ill And it rather powerful;
be cureful how you use it.”
The llooaior took tho proffered vial
and feeling himself proof against any quau
tity of raw whiskey, thought he could
stand tho “red salt,” with impunity, and
accordingly sprinkled a junk of beef
rather houutifully with it, aiid forth
with introduced it into his capacious
mouth. It soon began to take hold.—
lie shut his eyes, and his features be
gan to writhe, denoting a very inhar
monious condition physically. Finally
lie could stand it no longer. lie opened
his month aud screamed—.“fire !’’
“Tako a drink of cold water from
the jug,” said the parson.
“Will that put it out?” suid the
martyr,suiting the action to the word,
In a short time the unfortunate man
began to recover, and returning to tho
parson, his eyes yet swimming with
water, exclaimed ;
“Stranger, you cull yourself a “Ver
salist, I believe ?”
“I do,” mildly answered the parson.
“Well, I want to know if you think
it consistent with your belief to go
about with hell fire iu your breeches
pocket ?”
Impoiitant PiscovF.nr.— Galileo invented tho
telescope; Columbus discovered anew world;
Harvey, tho circulation of tho biood, and to Frof.
Mono is duo tho credit of teaching the lightning
how to talk, but it was reserved to Dr. J. Khap
fielii to penetrate tho mystic depths of soionee
and drag therefrom tho wonder of our century.
Tho victory has been won, aud woman is free! —
Tho sale of Dr. J. lSwAPrin.n’s Female Regu
lator is unprecedented in tho history of popular
remc ties,and thousands of certificates arc coming
in from grateful women, throughout the Union,
atlevting its powers and applauding its untold
benefits to their sew For salo in Waynesboro’
by Wilkins A Cos. iuyl-3ia
A Sknsible Man. —Bishop Gloss
brenner, of the United Brethren, de
clines to be made a doctor of divinity
by the Otterboin University. Ills rea
sons are worth recording. He thinks
that thfse doctor dignities should be
given to men of qualifications of a much
higher order, intellectually aud morally,
than he makes any pretension to. The
bishop’s modesty is admirable. If a
clergyman be distinguished for his
mastery of the science of divinity, tho
titlo of doctor of that kind is proper
enough ; but the doable “D” is getting
so cheap and common that it stands a
chnuce also of becoming meaningless.
A Sensible Husband. —Athens, On.,
has a husband whose head is decidedly
level. An exchange says of him :
Recently his wife got to liking an
other fellow. The two mado an ar
rangement to elope, which the husband
discovered. He didn’t get into a pas
sion, nor try to commit murder. 110
went to his wife and said, —
“Look here, there’s no use of your
eloping. Ido Dot object to your going
I’ll hitch up ifcc horse and take you to
the railroad depot, and 111 give you
two hundred dollars to start in life
with.”
He was as good as his word, and did
everything in his power to aid the cou
ple in their speedy departure. .As ho
shook hands with tho brevet husband,
he said, —
“Old fellow, I don’t wish you any
worse luck than you’ll get with this
woman. Be as happy as yoq can with
her, and then you won’*, think yourself
in Paradise.”
—a >—
Somethnro New Uant.it the Sun.—A tie-. era
in dawning upon tho life of women. Hitherto she
has boon called npon to suffer tho ills of mankind
and her own besides. Th#roquent and distress
ing irregularities peculiar to her pox have long,
-been to her the “direful spring of woes unnum
bored.” In the invasion of the rich aud is the
hovel "f poverty alike woman Ua.;i boon tho cod
slant yot patient victim of a thousand ills un
known to man—and those without a remedy.—
“Oh, Lone, how long!” in the agony of her soul
hath she cried But now the nour of her re
demption is como .She will auftcr no more, for
l)r. .I.Ruadfikwi’s Female Hog uI at or—tVojaaii’s
Best Friend—is for sale by all respectable drug
gists throughout the land at $1.50 per bottle.—
For sale in Waynesboro’ by Wilk-ns A Cos
WHAT riJTLIC MEN OWE TO
NEWS I‘Al’lilW.
Cal. Foruoy complains, in a well writ
ten article in tbo Philadelphia Press,
that pubtib men arc, as a class, ungrate*
fu| to newspapers and tho journalists to
whom they, in many instances, owe
their position. Nobody is more compe
tent to speak on this subject than 001.
Forut-y himself, lie has made more
statesmen out of small material than
any man in America, lie has taken a
more active part in the personnel of
American politics in the last twtuity
years than almost any other man. Much
of his work has been that of a politician
rather than that of a journalist; but
in either capacity lie has always been
able to servo his friends well, and bo
has always served them faithfully. His
reward has been very small, if he bad
let politics nlonc and devoted himself
exclusively to journalism,* ho might
have made a greater fortune than Ben
nett V. But ho was always very fond
of helping some friend to an office* ami
always had a taste for political intrigue
with a purpose of this kind. lUh ex
perience has no doubt been that of a
hundred.othera who have operated iu
tho same way on a smaller scale. Make
a Governor out of sin alderman to-day,
and to morrow lie’ll tell you that be
owes his eievation to his own superior
merits. Forney made a President of
the United States of James Buchanan
—but before the old publie function
ary had taken his treat ha repudiated
his patentee and manufacturer in the
most ungrateful manner. Congressmen
arc made by country newspapers—yet
when they go to Washington it would
not be safe to tell them so.
Garfield, as M. C., wa3 invited by a
seven by nine sheet, the editor of which
had probably never Been a five dollar
bill in his life, aud Garfield would ccr
taiuly be indignant now if asked to
give five dollars ot his back pay to that
man. Trumbull was first heard of, we
believe, through a little paper at Alton ;
and he was last heard of drawing his
five thousand dollar grab. Ben Butler
says he was not made by tho newspa
pers; but then it must ever remain one
of the mysteries of nature where Ben
Butler came from, and what object was
in view in producing him. If tho griev
auoo of which Col. Forney complains
is a sore one, it is the fault of those who
are aggrieved.
There is too much pulfery of small
n e in tho newspapersnow-*day—too
much disposition to exalt gouilo dull
ness and amiable imbecility into intel
lectual greatuess and real ability. Hvcry
chuckle head in Congress gets more
praise from the press of bis party now
than could have been bestowed upon
Daniel Webster in his palmiest days.
So toys the Ft. Louis Democrat.
Gramibs in Virginia.— The follow
ing statement is made by the Washing
ton correspondent of the New York
Timtt:
A movement has beou inaugurated
to extend the farmers* granges to Vir
ginia. The farming community make
great complaint in that State bocausc
tbe property employed in farming has
to pay one-half of ouc per ccut. taxes,
while persons and companies dealing in
money either pay uo taxes, or pay only
on their net income. A series of so
callcd commercial circles have bccu or
ganized, whoso purpose it appears to
la to destroy competition iD cities and
towns other than those selected by
them, at which one of the members of
the circle does all the bidding for all'
the buyers. The consequence ia that
the fanners complain of great oppres
sion. Applications have been mado to
the officers the Grange Association
to extend the granges to Virginia. In
asmuch as fifty-eight per cent, of tho
populatiou of the State is ungaged in
agricu .lire, it is considered probable
that the establishment of the grange*
may have seme effect upon the coining
election.
. - ■ •
BuAuriEi.n’s Female Kkoui.ator. We have
often read intho newspaper*of tho grand success
of moaieal compounds put up at (ho North and
elsewhere. Many of those ms.Ucioo* have hud
thoir day, and wo hoar uo moro of them. Their
proprietors havo made fortunes, not.so much from
’thecurativu powors and virtuosof thoir mixtures,
:i.s from tho mrorioty given them by advertising,
by which people wore made to boliovo all the
good that whs said of them A preparation is
now before tho public, which is becoming vory
popular, and is known as Bralfield’e Fotuale
Itcgulator, put up by L. H. Bradfieid, of Atlanta,
On., at BIJvO per bottln. Such is it curative
virtues that it has gained wide-spread populari
ty all over the country where it has been made
known, and it is beinjj Introduced everywhere
We are informed that inuneuse quantities of this
medicine are being sold in- all soetiens *f the
South and Southwest, ospoeially in tho city of
New Orleans and in Texas This much wo say
in justice to its proprietor, who is a gentleman
of integrity, and who would not engage in tho
Ljaunfaeturo and sale <>f a hum Qrangr.
reporter. Ifs/" li F R is fir tire In Waynes
boro’ by \V*lk|ns A C royl- 3tn
Miscellaneous Ailrertisain’ta
A FAnTwoinViciiavu^.
rpIIAT “DRAKE'S MAGIC LINIMENT"
JL Is the best remedy for pains of all
kinds; Croup in children. Sore Throat,
Dirmhosa amt Dysentery; Colic, in Mules
and Horses; Scratches, Chills and Fever,
Ac., Ac. Full directions aro nd every
bottle. Try one bottle and lie convinced.
For sttlo at Wilkins & Cos ’s and Amos P.
Lamkktii's, Waynesboro; Waknock Bros.,
Lester’s District; Mrs. B. I’f.k kins, Lawton
villi*; l’KKKtns At Bbotukk, Saw Mill; F,
A. Jokes, No.Pj, C,H. R.; and.!. If. Daniel
A Cos., MHlon and No. 8, C. R. 11.
W. C. HAUSER, General Agent,
join Bartow. No, 11,C. E. It .Ga.
Gr XT utSLKT OS!*
fhcknix guano.
WILCOX, GIBBS A CO.’S
nviTsr J.2PXJ ia.o?:d guano
f|' , HKSK CEL EBB A TED GUANOS, iiu-
I ported ami prepared by Wilcox,Gibbs
& Co.*,- Savannah, Ga., and Charleston, S. C.,
are fivr sale for cash, or on credit on accom
modating terms, payable in cotton, by
Pr. W. I. ONES, Agt., Herndon, Ga.
BLAlft, SMITH & CO., Agts., Augusta, Ga.-
HiJpcial attention in called to the use of liio Idurnu
(luano coiii jiowU'd with Optiondeed. Bend or apply
so* above for circular* giving testimonials from plan
levs- prices, terms, Ac. mchl-rtw
THOMAS RfeUttAKDS & SN~
BOOKSELLERS, STATIONERS,
A Nl> PRATERS IN
<s#<®.ajsr 0
263 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
ESTABLIBED 1827.
Keep constantly on hand a large
•STOCK OF ALL KINDS & SI7.ES OF
BLANK BOOKS.
Foolscap, 141 or, Koto, ami all other Writiu'' Paper
and Wrery arflclo of Stationery used in
Counting Looms and I’ublic Offices.
AI.SO,
A great variety of Fancy floods to nice tho
\rauU of Country Merchants.
Any Book will be sont by mail, free of ex
penso, on receipt of Publishers’ prico oclO-ilm
Jno. 1). Muimerlyn,
Agent for the
FOLLOWING FIRST-CLASS
Insurance Companies:
Tite Now York Life,
Cash Assets, $18,500,000
Liverpool and London And Globe, ~
Cash assets $21,000,000 gold.
(America) 3,300.000.
Andes Fire, of Ohio $1,000,000.
Georgia Mutual Protection.
Clerk’s Office, Ccit-hoqae Square,
je22 Waynesboro’, Ga.
MRS. At. L. PRITCHAKty
6® intOAI) STREET,
ATiaUSTA, GF A.,
HAS ON HAND AND IS CONSTANTLY
receiving everything in tho
Millinery and Fancy Goods Line.
Switches, Puffs, Chignons, etc. Lace and
Linen Collars. Velvet and all other kin ls
Hats and Bonne.s. Ilihbons, Braid, Fringes,
Flounces, Feathers, Flowers Handkerchiefs,
Hosiery, Silks, Satins, Velvet, Velveteen,
Veils, Crepe Collars and Vpils, etc., etc.—
My stock is complete and well assorted.
IV Remember the place, 200 Broad St,,
first doorabove tbe Drug llouso of Messrs.
Green Rotsignol.
mylo-gni Mss. M. L. PRITCHARD
MBS N. BRUM FLAB K~
251 BROAD STREET, AUGHJSTA, GA,
nS NOW A LARGE
AND VARIED STOCK 01
Millinery and Fancy Hoods,
REAL HAIR SWITCHES,
BRAIDS AN!) CURLS,
New floods received t; i- weekly. Mr*
Clark will give : ers' iial attention to the
millinery departm. ■>.
lit*. N. BRUM CLARK,
251 Brua.l street.
Mrr. Clark will exhibit Pattern Hats anil
Oi*r' on Tnes'lay, A ;>;il 15. aplO 3
KIIIVU FOR CATALOfII ES
or
NOVELLO’S CUEAP MUSIC,
Novollo’g 0 iocs, Pari Soup*, etc... It to 12 cents.
Novollo’s Church Music 6 to 12 cents.
Novello’s Octavo Edition of Operas.
Trice ft; or SZ, bound In cloth, gilt edge*.
Novello’a Octavo Edition of Oratorios.
In pager, from 00 cents to $1; cloth with gilt edge*
$1 to f’2 caeh,
Novello’s Cheap Editions
of riANO-FOi.n; cruisgics.
Bach's 18 Preludes uud Pupij. C10th...55 00
Beethovnu’a 38 Sonatas. Elcfeaftily bound.
Full gilt 3 50
Beethoven's 34 Piano Pieces. Elegantly
bound Full gilt 1... 200
Chopin’s Vaises. Still papercovow 1 5U
Ch'adn’s Polonaises “ “ ..... 2 00
Chopin’s Nocturnes “ “ ... 200
Chopin's Mazurkas “ §. “ .. 200
Chopin's Ballads " “ .2 00
Chopin’s Preludes “ •* . 250
Chopin's Sonata* “ “ .. 2 50
Mendelssohn’s Complete Piano Works,
egant Folio Kdition. Full Gilt. Com
pleto in 4 volumes 2 0
The Satno, Bvo. Full gilt. Complete in
4 volumes 11 0
Tlio Same. Bvo.' Paper. Complete in 1
volumes 10 00
Mendelssohn’* Bongs Without Words. Fo
lio Kditdnn. Full gilt 850
Octavo Edition. Full gilt 3 50
1 Octavo Kdition. Paper covers 250
Mozart’s Is Sonatas. Elegantly bound.
Full gilt 3 00
Schubert's 10 Sonatas. Elegantly bound.
I Full gilt 300
! Schubert’s Panecs Complete. Elegantly
• bound. Full gi1t...';..:... ‘I.. 200
Schubert’* PHno Pieces. Elegantly bound
Full gilt 2 00
Schumann’s Forest Scenes Nine Easy
1 Pieces Paper cowrs— 80
Schumann’s PiapoFortc Album. Elegant
ly bound. Full gilt. 2 50
The Same. Paper covers. 150
1 -V MOTHESt GOOHE.
OR NiATIoUAL NURHKRV RHYMER
Set to Jtusle by 7 W. Kudofr, with tii hctut/ul
ilfuswatibne engVaved by the Brothers Dalitel
Hoards, $1.50. Bplendtdty hound in cloth, gilt
ec’ges, $2 50.
Address, „
j. fv, VIiTISKS, Broadway, N. Y
jfc 3w Agt Novelb’s Chtap ATimc.
Augusta Advertisements.
hstjivb
A. Prontaut & Son,
WATCH MAKERS AND JEWELERS.
fTWIE SUBSCRIBERS would respectfully
I inform (lie citizen* of Buvkc and ad
jacent counties that they keep a special
esUhiisment for tho
imill OF WATCHES AND JKWKLKL
ALSO,
HAIR WORK. IS EVERY DESIGN, MADE TO ORDER
jpTAll work entrusted to their cars will
lie executed Promptly, Neatly,and war*
ranted for one year
At their store will be found ono of the
largest stocks of
GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES of the beat
European amt American manufacture in
the Southern States, with a solect aa
sortmeut of
Rich ani> Nkw Stylus oh Etruscan Gold
ewslu y , set with Diamonds, Pearls,
Rubies, Oriental Garnets, Coral etc.
Also, Solid Silver Ware, consisting of
Tea Sets, Waiters, Ice and Water Pitchers,
Castors, Goblets, Clips, Forks, Spoons, and
every thing in the Silverware lino.
Fine Siuglo and Double Barrel Guns: Colt’s,
Smith A Wesson, Remington, Cooper, Sharp,
and Dorringor Pistols, anil many others of the
In tost invei'J'.on.,
Fine Cutlery, Spectacles, Walking Cana*,
I'ortcmonnaios, and Fancy Goods of every
variety to bo found in a first class Jewelry
Establishment.
Old Gold and Silver taken in exchange
for goods.
A. PRONTAUT & 80N,
236 Broad Street, between Central and Globe Rote!*,
ovlH-ly AUGUSTA, GA.
A GREAT BLESSING.
Never, since tho time “when tho morning stars
ling together,” has there been a greater medical
discovery and blessing to the human race than the
GLOBEFLOWER COUGH SYRUP
This delightful and rare compound is the ac
tive principle, obtained by chemical process,
from tho “(Jlobo Flowor,” known also ns "But
ton Root,’’ aud in Botany as "Cepkalanthus
Occidentulis.
Globe Flower Couch Strut is almost an in
fallible cure for every dospription of Cough.
Colds, Hoarseness, Soro Throat, Croup, Whoop
ing Cough, Pleurisy, Infiuenza, Asthma, Bron
chitis, Ac; and will euro Consumption, when
taken in time —as thousands will testify-
Globe FlowSr CnuoA Syrup will cure the
most obstinate cases of Ch onic Cough and Lung
affections, when all other boast* 1 v ■ Hies fail.
Globe Flower Cough Syr; p aoes not con
tain a partielo of opium or any of its preparations
Globe Flower Cough Syrup does not eon
tain a partielo of poison, or any ingredient that
could hurt tho most delicate child.
Globe Flower Cotton Syrtp has become,
whore known, the most popular Cough e dicise
in the country, because it has successfully with
slood tho three groat teals of merit, viz : Time,
Experience, and Competition, and remains, after
passing through this ordeal, the bost article of
kind in the world.
Globb Flower Coucn Svhup is pleasant to
the taste, and does not disagreo with the most
delicate stomach.
Physicians who have consumptive patients
are invitod to try tho Globb Flower Cough
Strut. Its magical offsets will at once bo felt
and acknowledged.
Rewaro of counterfeits; the Amuijio has the
words, Gix)ise Flower Cough Syrup blown in
each bottle, and tho signatures of the proprietors
upon each label. The trade-mark label and
compound are protected by Letters Patent.
Don’t tako any other article as a substitute
for Globb Flower Cough Syrup. If your drug
gist or morehant has nono on hand, request him
to order it for you.
Thousands of Testimonials of the most won
derful cures aro constantly being recoi’ ed from
tho North, East, West, and South—some of
which seem almost, miraculous.
Sold by Druggists at SI.OO per bottle, SSOO
for one-half dozen.
WHOLESALE AGZNTS:
Tlitkt, Rankin A Lahak, aeon, Oa.
Barr ktt, Land A Cos., Augusta, <1
J. S. PEiiE HTON & CO. Propriei
Atlanta,
Formate by Wii.kins & Cos. janlß-l
KEY m M‘ imeb; 1
AT THE
ONE PRICE HOUSE,
AT
WnOLESALK AND IiETAIL.
IT. L. A. BALK,
172 Broad st, Augusta, Ga.
I HAVE RECEIVED A CAREFULLY SK
LKCXED STOCK of all the novelties of the
season, in
Straw Hats, Ladle*, Misses, Gents,
and Youths, from 25c. upward.
Parasols, with or without attachment,
from 50c. u ward.
Ladies l’catty-iuutle Suits, new
sfy'es, from s•"> upward.
Prints, all tlio now styles, fast colors,
from 10c. upward.
BJress Goods, a fino selection of all
tlio nov. Hies, at 16c. upward.
Ef’dlit liuig) Ginghams, Tabic-covers,
Table-Damask, Ilontespun, Duder-Shirts,
Drawers, Trimming, Ribbons, Corsets, Rea
dy-made Shirts for Gents and Youths, Col
lars, Gloves, Umbrellas, Trunks, Valises,&c.
I have also a full assortment of
BOOTS ATSTO SHOES.
and ft fine selection of
READY-MADE CLOTHING!
All these <?oods are marked as low as the
lowest, and I ask but one price. Mako a
note of this, and come and see or send an
order, on which 1 will allow a liberal dis
couut. IV. L.. A. BAL.It,
172 Broad Street, Augusta, Oa.,
my 22-1 w Next door to Bolhwell.
NOTICE!
/in’HE FIRM OP ASHTON & GLISSON,
L Attorneys at Law, having been dissolved
by mutual consent, on fho FIRST OF JUNE
LAST, 11. C. Glissjn will wind up all of the
unfinished business of the firm, and is alone •*>-
thorized to use the firm name in collecting or
signing rocoipts. JNO. P. ASHTON,
11. C. GIISSON.
July 7th, 1373--jylo-lm
ij A3sr.i-ci^Tjr s TCsr wotice.
All persons affected by the re
cent decisions of the Supreme Court of the
United States, declaring the laws or Georgia as to
Slave Dottc, Homestead, Exemptions and Tax Af
ftdavits, to he unconstitutional, can be fully protect
ed against them by the Bankrupt Laws of Congress.
Having recently paid much attention to these laws,
and tho rjractice in Court*of Bankruptcy, lam pre
pares, n'ijd can procure discharges from all old
debt#, and secure to Debtors tho benefits of UL
SXKVFTIONH RZCOONIZSD BY Tit* I.AWB Or OKOROIA,
IN 1870 As tc debts made since Jan. 1, 1569, tho
law Is this : If the bankrupt can pay 50 per cent,
on the dollar of these, he will be entirely discharged
from them; if not, they continue subsisting debts
against him, to be paid hereafter, should he ever
become able; but do not prevent him from going
into bankruptcy, ss shove stated.
JOHN D ABHTON,
jeS-lm • Attorney t Law