Newspaper Page Text
gjjt' Constitulicnftiisi.
AUGUSTA, GA.:
Wednesday Morning, Sept. 22, 1875.
Index to New Advertisements.
Oranges. Lemons, Peaches and Ap
ples—John F. Quinn.
New Goods for Fall—Henry L. A.
Balk.
To Teachers —Election of Teachers of
Common Schools on Thursday, the 23d
instant.
Seed Wheat—For sale by Barrett &
Caswell.
Nice House to Rent—Apply to Paul
R. Sledge.
A Word to the Wise—Coal for sale by
Joseph A. Hill.
Key Tags at 25 cents —By E. W.
Dodge.
Name Plates at 50 cent3 —By E. W.
Dodge.
Lost Keys—By E. W. Dodge, Prac
tical Stencil Cutter.
THE WEATHER TO-DAY.
Washington, September 22—1 a. m.—
For New England, the Middle and South
Atlantic States, generally clear and cooler
weather with northerly to westerly winds
and rising barometer. For the Gulf States,
Tennessee and the Ohio Valley, clear or
partly cloudy weather and slight rise in
temperature, rising, followed by falling
barometer and northerly winds shift
ing to easterly and southerly. For
the Lake region, local rains, followed
by clearing weather, slowly rising temper
ature and light winds, backing to westerly
and southerly, rising, followed by falling,
barometer east of Michigan, and tailing ba
rometer in the upper Lake region, ior the
upper Mississippi and lower Missouri val
leys, clear or fair weather and rising tem
perature, with southerly winds and falling
barometer.
Thermometer, September 21,4:16 p. m.
Augusta, Ga 75 New Orleans,La.. 75
Charleston, S. C.. 76 Norfolk, V;i 61
Corsicana 61 Punta Rassa “0
Galveston 73 j Savannah,Ga .... 75
Jacksonville, Fla. 76 I St. Marks 80
Mobile 74 j Wilmington 71
Montgomery 72 |
Weather in the Cotton District, Septem
ber 21, 7:16 a. m.
Augusta Fair. Nashville Clear.
Charleston Clear. New Orleans.... Fair.
Jacksonville.. .Clear. Norfolk. Va..... Fair.
Knoxville Clear. Savannah Clear.
Lynchburg... Cloudy. Shreveport. .Cloudy.
Memphis Clear, : Punta Rassa . .Thr’g.
Mobile .Clear. Vicksburg Fair.
Montgomery... Clear.! Wilmington Fair.
Temperature at the North, September
21, 7:16 a. m.
Cairo, 111 46 Pittsburg, Penn . 40
Cincinnati, 0 45 St. Louis, Mo.. ... 44
New York 51 Washington, D. C. 48
CITY TOPICS.
Trot out your overcoats.
Amphibious is the name for it now.
Fashionable style of calling for a drink.
The Irish Volunteers will have a
dress drill and inspection to-night.
Mammy, make Sal stop pulling the
kiver off me. Signs of the times.
* What Augusta man will be a candi
date for our next Governor?
Religious services at St. John’s
Church to-night. Voluntary meeting.
Public cordially invited.
Chambers, one of the owners of Moi
sey, is said to be as fine a driver as
Bud Doble.
Sheridan & Mack’s Minstrels will be
the first troupe here this season. They
will play in the early part of October.
Railroads terminating at this point
are not to be governed by the “Pool,”
and will contend for freights on strict
business principles.
Mr. Geo. W. Broadhurst is introduc
ing a very fine soap, called the Bay
Side Soap Liquid, and as it is a very
useful domestic article, housewives will
do well to give it a trial.
Mr. W. Levy, formerly of Augusta,
and lately a resident of South Carolina,
is in the city', and will leave in a day
or two with his family for Texas, where
he proposes to try his luck in the fu
ture.
A verv mysterious air pervades the
atmosphere, and nature seems not her
self. Sudden changes of weather, give
men bad colds and make them nervous,
and this may account for it, and a coup
d’etat is not surprising in this age of
“True inwardness.”
A full and complete report of the
Council proceedings of last Monday
night would have appeared in this pa
per, had the “local” been present. He
was not at the meeting, but was fur
nished a report through the kindness
of Mr. Bloome, Clerk of Council. The
remarks of some members would have
been interesting no doubt.
She testified before the magistrate
that “dot pilly goats shoost vas a—a—
veil, I was vashing py some elodings of
a pig tub, und them gotes coom up be
hind und—veil, shoge, I don’t keu told
you dot vas. I feel me someding pe
hiud my pack, und shump over der tub
und sthand me on my head up mit dot
tub’s pottom up, und der clotdings
sphilt shoost like me, and deni gotes
vink at me mit von eyes und wag his
tails of mine face, und valk out py his
pehind legs like a man, und I can’t sit
me down cood any more already.” The
goat was fined one (s)eent, (which he left
behind.
Apropos of the defunct railroad pool,
it might be a consolation to Joo Brown
to know that he will have no more
necessity of writing, as he did some
time since, an urgent letter to a gentle
man in this city, telling him to make
no pool tarriff on through freights be
yond Nashville, as he had some fish to
fry, and it would appear that lie was
to discriminate against the Memphis &
Charleston railroad. Joe held a big
hand, but lo! it turned out to be a “bob
tail flush,” and now Joo is riding a
shaved nag, with a very small stump
of a tail, and the Memphis & Charles
ton railroad officials are eyeing him
closely.
Stop Dat Mule.
The citizens in the neighborhood
neat Jackson and Telfair streets were
somewhat disturbed yesterday morn
ing by the frantic yelling of a negro
woman crying, “stop dat mule, and
may de Lord hab mercy on my chile!”
The aforesaid “chile” had somehow or
another got an old mule excited, and
the latter started down the street at
the rate of twenty miles an hour, and
the old woman, in trying to keep up,
was distanced long before she reached
the quarter pole. On the corner of
Jackson and Telfair streets, the boy
executed a leap-for-life feat, and land
ed on his head in the middle of the
street, and the last we saw of him the
old lady was pouring turpentine on
him, and having a camp meeting song,
“The mule, oh, where is he? Gone to
de ole plantation.”
Key Tags at 25 cents.
E. W. Dodge,
1 No. 16 Mclntosh St.
Consignees Per South Carolina Rail
road September 21th, 1875.
C Fling W M Jacoby Bligh & H, J B
Miller & D, John Usher, J J Breed-
SjSb! Meadd, JPifc J W Butt. Rus
s Costello & P, Myers &M, H Brooks,
N AltSaS. I WhSOM 4 W, G T Jackson J;
Cos Mrs li A Dame, N W Peacock 1 Jap-
KUUodv & D, A Myers, J W A
VTwSdV!<rDonn4ll & B, J B K J G Bailie
*1 T . t\y Valcu)u, CiifiS Spaeth, iteamey
£ vin i Jones, J Murphy & Cos,
A Smith, Ga hi L } M jq er z McCord,
Krts I V EmA Clinton BCo,
§o°S°4 ,
Sullivan the “mirror
UP to nature” in New York.
“Pinch Gut” on the Qui Vive.
The classic and aristocratic precinct
of a portion of the city known as
“Pinch Gut” has had its usually calm
and all-pervading elegant air consid
erably disturbed within the past few i
days by a chapter of love incidents, the J
sequel lo which has not yet appeared. I
A certain young man wanted to wed the
object of his tender affections, and she
in turn was not loth to bide her time
with him ’till death; but the old
folks had serious objections, and
as it got to the ears of the father
and brother of the lady in dispute that
a runaway match had been planned the
other night, they concluded to stop it.
The “Governor” took a shot gun and ;
kept sentry at the foot bridge, as it
was supposed the couple would go over
to Hamburg, and the brother harnessed
himself behind a ten-inch calibre how
itzer and trod the familiar paths around
the old home, waiting for the intended
brother-in-law. That was certainly af
fection, with premeditated greeting
aforethought, “and the same with in
tent to deceive.”
Luckily for the matrimonial aspi
rant, he did not put in an appearance,
else we might have had to chronicle a
bloody murder. The young lady is un
der surveilence, and the old man is
somewhat reconciled to the match
now, but Mrs. Smith is eternally op
posed to it. In a few days the sequel
may appear, and meantime if any of
our readers meet the military form of
the young man patrolling his beat,
with his implement of war, at late
hours of the night, they had better be
civil and respond to the challenge of
the sentry in quick time.
•
The 30 Pep Cent. Settlement.
Last Monday night, at a call meeting
of Council, a proposition was submit
ted by John J. Cohen & Sons to pay
the city 30 per cent, in settlement of
the claim held against the late bank,
provided the city and the rest of the
creditors wonld agree to the proposi
tion, by the Ist of October. We learn
that Mayor Estes, as instructed by
Council, yesterday accepted the offer,
as did also a large majority of the
other creditors, and thus it is a decided
fact that the creditors will be paid 30
per cent, in two installments. We also
learn that the liabilities of the bank
were about 8200,000, of which all but
SBO,OOO was secured by collateral, and
thus the real liabilities of the firm was
in the neighborhood of SBO,OOO. We
also learn that the bank lost heavily on
South Carolina Railroad stock, having
bought at 27%, and being compelled to
sell for 9.
The affairs will be closed up within
the next two months, as the last in
stallment falls due on tha 20th of No
vember next.
Green Grocers Complain.
Our attention has been called to the
injustice done our legitimate retail
merchants by allowing negroes, and in
some instances white men, to peddle
goods around town in hand carts, free
of license. There are a large number
of them in the city, and the license re
quired of them is $lO per year, but
numbers of them have no license,
and it is very hard for the police
to come up with those who
have none, and the result is, the mer
chant who pays his taxes and license
can be undersold by those peddlers,
and the persons who contribute legiti
mately to the city’s revenue are de
prived of its benefits, and the city is
defrauded. It would be a good idea
for the police to require these cart ped
dlers to show their license wherever
they meet them, and then the evil
could be remedied. We have heard a
good deal of complaint about this mat
ter, and we submit these facts to the
city authorities.
Baptising at Belair.
Last Sunday was one which will long
be remembered by the citizens of Belair,
and that little town should feel proud
at the religious ardor of its inhabi
tants. At the 10 o’clock services the
Baptist church was crowded, and the
services were impressive, and beauti
fully illustrative of the Christian reli
gion. Rev. J. S. Patterson, the officiat
ing minister, preached a fine sermon,
after which twenty-four persons were
baptised, among them some of the
leading citizens of Belair. The con
gregation were highly delighted at the
nnmber of persons baptized, and the
sermon of Rev. J. S. Patterson was
vei’3 r instructive and was attentively
listened to. The church Is in a flourish
ing condition in Belair, and before long
will have folded within its religious
cloak nearly all of the citizens of the
county.
The R. R. Club.
This club held a special meeting last
evening and arranged for another con
test. The members seem anxious to
obtain efficiency as soon as possible,
and it was determined to have regular
practices, and in shooting to adhere
strictly to the rules of the National
Rifle Association. After the next prac
tice the team that will compete for the
State premium will be selected. It will
be a rather difficult task to make the
selection, as there are twenty-six ac
tive men in the club, all of whom make
a splendid record. In the absence of
Captain Daniel, Mr. Habersham con
ducted the business of the meeting.
*•.
A Stabbing Affray.
Late Monday night last a cutting
affray occurred between Samuel Hens
ley and a Mr. Henry Dorsett, near the
Union Depot, in which the latter was
cut three times in the left side, but as
the knife was a small one no serious
wounds were inflicted. The parties
had a dispute about some private mat
ter, and Hensley, becoming wrathy,
proceeded to carve Dorsett. The lat
ter was all right at last accounts, and
he says it is nothing more than a
serious mosquito bite.
Name Plates at 50 cents.
E. W. Dodge,
1 No. 16 Mclntosh St.
Eureka.—California Water, for the
toilet and bath, at
jy2s-d&ctf W. H.Tutt & Remsen’s.
“Neuril.” —The instantaneous cure
for Neuralgia. Depot, No. 291 Broad
street. ap7-ly
Beautiful Toilet Sets—at very low
prices, at W. H. Tutt & Remsen’s.
jy2sd-d&ctf
Landreth’s Onion Sets.— The beet
just received at
sepl7-tf W. H. Tutt & Remsen’s.
No use going to New York for Boots
and Shoes, when Gallaher & Mulherin,
289 Broad Street, will sell you those
goods at New York prices. Read their
advertisement. seps-suw&flm
Patronize the only Paint and Oil
Store in Augusta. I keep none but the
best goods, and will sell you any quan
tity you want from a teaspoonful up
wards. George D. Connor,
my9tf 53 Jackson street.
Strictly Pure White Lead, Linseed
Oil, Turpentine, Varnishes, Window
Glass, Colors and all house Painters’
Supplies at George D. Connor,
my9tf 63 Jackson street.
Attention, School Boys and Girls.—
Go to the Live Book Store to get your
School Books. You can get them
cheaper there than from any other Store
in towa. A. F. Pendleton.
sep!9-3
THE POOL CONVENTION.
The Pooling Business Well, Sick and
Dead.
[Atlanta Herald]
The Railroad Convention met again
in the breakfast room of the Kimball
House, yesterday morning, and was in
almost continuous session during the
day, and again last night.
The meeting, so far as we can learn —
for newspaper men were not allowed
within the sacred precincts of their
meeting chamber —was quite harmoni
ous, and after prolonged discussion
upon nearly all of the many plans sub
mitted by which the railroads are to
operate with each other with more
comity and good feeling, they at length
agreed upon a plan which we under
stand to be this : The railroads in gen •
eral are to select and appoint one man,
a special agent, to whom all matters
of difference between any of the rail
roads is to be submitted, and his arbi
tration is to be final. The subject of
appointing one agent in each of the
cities, who is to act for all the roads,
was under discussion, but we could not
learn what disposition was made of the
matter.
A committee on rates was appointed,
and it was in session last night alter
the adjournment of the Convention.—
As soon as their labors are completed
they will be published, and then the
public can see for themselves,. official
ly, what the Convention did.
The Convention adjoured to meet
at the same place again on the 14th *of
October next.
[Atlanta Constitution.]
The Pool is Dead
as a general and close corporation, and
Jiereafter the roads terminating at any
center may pool or not, as they choose,
and are at liberty to designate for them
selves what lines of freight they will
pool in or out. This action reduces the
pool question down to a local matter at
terminal points, and renders it exceed
ingly doubtful whether there will be
any considerable amount of it done at
any point. At least the manipulations
of freights will not be so burdensome
as heretofore to either the public or
the roads themselves. This, itself, is a
large item in favor of general com
merce. A general agent becomes neces
sary under this new phase of the mat
ter, whose selection shall be unanimous
and whose duties shall bear the same
relation almost to all the roads con
cerned that those of each road’s gen
eral manager does to it. This is a big
job, and not only makes the General
Agent an overseer of all the roads, but
the umpire for them, hearing, consider
ing and representing a fair basis of set
tlement in each case of difference aris
ing between them. Some of the mem
bers contend that no man can be found
who can fill this office and perform Its
monstrous duties acceptably to himself
or the roads, but are willing to give
him a trial. He is to be selected by
the General Committee now existing,
and the nomination ratified within
thirty days from this, and it is be
lieved that General H. Haupt,
the General Manager of the Air-
Line Road, will be the person selected
for this responsible office.
This arrangement, to judge from ex
pressions current among some of the
conventionites, will not last very long,
as they do not anticipate that the po
sition will be inviting to any individual.
We shall see.
Thus has the pool, conceived by Pres
ident Wadley, and organized with such
a grand flourish, come to a sad ending.
He departs from the scene of his de
feat with a largo flea in his ear and
with very little public sympathy visi
bly manifested for him in his gloom
and chagrin. To the pool we say, “ vale,
vale! ”
JOE CREWS.
How r He was Buried—Ante-Mortem
Opinions of Him—Arrest of a Son of
Dr. Schell.
[Columbia Union-Herald.]
The following is an extract of a letter
received yesterday from Laurens:
“The remains of poor old Joe Crews
were consigned to the earth to-day' in
the village cemetery. There was a con
course of not less than four or five
hundred present—all colored, except a
few personal friends, including Mr.
Moses, the two Leahys, and Mr. Booue,
the Postmaster of Newberry. The citi
zens of the village sat around cursing
the old . It was the most solemn
sight I ever witnessed—the poor widow
and nine children crying over the re
mains of the old man. The youngest
child is only eighteen months old. The
suspected assassins walk about the
streets, apparently without fear of ar
rest. Senator Owens and Solicitor
Fleming are here, but have made no
effort to have the suspected parties ar
rested. The colored people regard the
killing of the old man as an irretrieva
ble calamity.”
The following dispatch was received
yesterday from Laurens:
“Laurensville, Sept. 18.
“I have just arrested Washington
and Walter Schell, the brother and
nephew of the late Dr. Shell, for the
murder of Joe Crews.” “J. C.”
HRumors of the airest of other par
ties were prevalent, but none others
have been arrested. Mr. Canton, who
went to Laurens with General Purvis,
Senator Owens and others the night
the news reached the city of the shoot
ing of Mr. Crews, arrived in the city
yesterday. He reports all quiet in the
village, although squads of four and
five men, fully armed, were patrolling
the streets all night. This was done in
consequence of a wild rumor that the
colored men intended to retaliate by
killing the Messrs. Schell, the arrested
parties. The fears of the white citi
zens, we are informed, are entirely
groundless; for while the negroes feel
the loss of their representative, they
have have no idea of violating the law
by retaliation.
“Phoenix Brand” Pure White Lead.
We offer the above Brand of White
Lead to the public, with the positive
assurance that it is perfectly pure, and
will give one ounce in gold for every
ounce of adulteration that it may be
found to contain. Eckstein, Hills &
Cos., Manufacturers, Cincinnati, O. Sold
by W. H. Tutt & Remsen.
aug2s-d&ctf
Notice. —Consumers will consult their
interest by bearing in mind that a
large proportion of the article sold as
Pure Wldte Lead is adulterated to the
extent of from 50 to 90 per cent., and
much of it does not contain a particle
of Lead. The Flwenhp Brand, Pure
White Lead is the best. Sold by
aug2sd&ctf W. H. Tutt & Remsen.
The Belle Lizette Cologne is made
of the finest ingredients that money
can buy, and is warranted in delicacy
and durability of odor, equal to any
ever offered in the city. It gives per
fect satisfaction to the most fastidious.
Try it, at . J. H. Alexander’s
sep 19—lm. Drug Store.
Winter Gardens. —Fresh seeds in
for Fall sowing. A little labor now se
cures a good garden all winter. Also
Clover and Lucerne seed, at
J. H. Alexander’s
sep 19—lm. Drug Store.
Many persons, who havegone to the very
brink of the grave beyond the old line that
was once the limit of hope, who have set
their houses in order and taken a sad leave
of their families and friends, have been
brought back to life and vigorous health by
the persistent use of the celebrated Home
Stomach Bitters. sep2l-tuthsa d&c
GEORGIA GENERAL NEWS.
*- | *
We learn that Col. P. M. Shell,ly has re
signed his office as deputy colhptorof the
fourth district. .
There isn’t but one Radical Vaper pub
lished in Georgia-the Atlanta Advocate-
Republican, we believe it is called—and it is
calling for Federal troops. We deputize
Henry Ward Grady to enlist fct once, as a
brigade, and to take care of that office.
Last Saturday at Floyd Springs, a thief,
of a religious turn and literally taste, en
tered the Baptist church and stole there
from the Testament, and afterward entered
the school house near by and -dole all the
books that had been left lying around
loose. . .
In its reminiscences of 1854 the Columbus
Enquirer notes that in January of that year
the Georgia House of Representatives, by
the casting vote of the Speaker, passed a
vote considering Macon as a Heat of gov
ernment, whenever that city Should fur
nish a State House of suitable dimensions,
free of expense to the State, jl’he Senate
lejected the proposition to rermfve at onco,
and left the question to be decided by the
people at the next general election.
The Savannah News publishesifche follow
ing bankrupt roll for the past w>ek: Peti
tions for final discharges have 1 ' been filed
by Virginias G. Hitt, Leesburg, Lee coun
ty, Ga. Final discharges havo been grant
ed in chambers to William H. C;iristoph< r
Reynolds, Taylor county, Ga,; Joseph M.
Howell, Valdosta, Lowndes county Ga.;
John Smith, lrwinton, Wilkinson county,
Ga. Petitions in voluntary bankruptcy
have been tiled by Lloy I I|. Hooper,
Columbus, Ga.; Houston & pijrrott, Au
gusta, Ga. i
A few days ago, a Walker county farmer
brought to towrn a wagon loud of home
made bacon .and converted it -Uo ea-li.—
This farmer’s name is James Hixson, and
he sold this wagon load of E*oat to Mr.
Hargis, of DeSoto. this, with what he had
sold to Mr. llargls before, tyiade three
hundred and forty-live dollars’ worth of
meat he has sold this year. In-addition to
the above, Mr. Hixson carried- recently to
Chattanooga and there sold ov> r two hun
dred bushels of w'heat kept over from last
year’s crop.—[Commercial.
Atlanta Constitution ; Judge Johnson’s
resignation has not only been accepted, but
Judge Martin J. Crawford has received
irom the Governor an appointment as the
successor, and has accepted it. The change
takes place on the first day of October, and
the new Judge will hold his first court in
Taylor county on the first Monday in Oc
tober. The two distinguished lawyers will,
it seems, simply exchange places. When
Judge Crawford takes his seat on the bench
Judge Johnson will drop into Ms vacated
place in the leading law firm oi Columbus,
and thus all will be well. Judge Johnson’s
public career has been a checkered one, and
his ardent temperament has given him a
considerable crop of enemies; bathe leaves
the bench with the respect of ail with whom
he came In contact.
lrwinton Southerner: On Thursday night
last, as Mr. W. G. Solomon, son of Mr.
David Solomon, of Gordon, was going to
his father’s house, a short distance above
the warehouse, he encountered the down
passenger train, and blinded by the head
light, or from some unexplained cause,
failed to get off the track, and was struck
by the pilot and thrown down, with his
right leg on the track, which was run over
by the truck wheels of the engine and
ci ushed off at the anklo. The accident was
discovered, and the fireman ra?h back and
found him lying in an almost; insensible
condition by the roadside. His friends re
paired to the spot and carried him to his
father’s residence, and called in Drs. Mas
sey and O’Brien, who amputated the limb
below the knee. At last accounts he was
doing well.
Macon Telegraph: A most unfortunate
accident, resulting from a heed.ess use of
fire arms, occurred in this city Sunday
afternoon, in which Miss Sallie Anderson,
daughter of Hon. Clifford Anderson, receiv
ed a painful wound in her left cheek. It
seems that she and her cousin, Harry An
derson, were in a romp, when hej aimed at
her a pistol which was suppose! not to bo
loaded. Unfortunately, howevjer, It was
loaded, and the ball entered her left cheek,
and lodged somewhere out of r. ; ach of the
surgeon’s- probe. It has not: yet been
found and we understand that the
probability is that it never will bo
found, though there is no apprehension
that it will result fatally. Miss Anderson
is an accomplished young lady about sev
enteen years of age. She graduated the
past summer with honor at the-Staunton.
Virginia, female college, winning the medal
for proficiency in music. She has the sym
pathy of this entire community, and so
has her cousin, who was the innocent cause
of her affliction, She bears her misfortune
with a wonderful heroism, and is entirely
firm, enduring the pain of probing with a
heroism that almost amounts to indiffer
ence. <
Madison Journal: Jack Campbell, aged
eighty years, departed this life <jn Friday,
September 10th, after a short illness. Per
haps no colored man in the Str<te is more
widely known than was “old Jock Camp
bell,” then proprietor of the Midison Ho
tel It was here that Jack made his repu
tation as a wit and humorist. Ijre was one
of the waiters around the tablet and never
lost an opportunity to indulge:in a witi
cism. His name figures in the “ Statistics
of Georgia,” “M*jor Jones’ Courtship,"
and a biography of his own life.-: Many of
his jokes and witty sayings have appeared
in tne publications of the Harpe, s. At one
time Mr. P. T Barnum offered Mr. Camp
bell the sum of SIO,OOO for him.. We have
heard of many laughable incidents in
the life of Jack, but will repeat only
one. On one occasion a guest of the hotel
who was a regular and deep imliiber of ar
dent spirts, was dining, when ; Jack ap
proached with a gl iss of pure (fold water,
saying: “Allow mo to astonish your stom
acn, sir, with a glass water.” His love of
joking lasted to the day of his death. He
was very popular among the whites, al
ways respectful, but at the same fime never
letting a chance slip to raise 4 laugh at
somebody’s expense. A large dumber of
colored persons and a few whites' attended
his funeral. Prominent among the latter,
was his “young master - ,” (now an; old man),
who shed tears as if for a brother. Poor
old Jack! May the sod rest lightly upon
you, and the great Hereafter bring that
happiness freedom did not gain ifn you.
A Popular Error Corrected!—lt is an
absurd but very common err<jr to sup
pose that a disordered condition of the
liver can be remedied by a .-fmple ca
thartic. Such is, however, far from
being the case. Cathartics: do not
touch the liver at ail. It is Qnly when
(as in the case of Hostetter’s
Bitters) the laxative principle is com
bined with tonic and stimulative ele
ments, that the great 3ecretivii gland is
directly acted upon. The I Bitters,
although sufficiently laxative to re
lieve the bowels moderately] do not
owe their anti-bilious effects t|> purga
tion merely, but to their jfower of
rousing the liver from its inaction and
impelling it to secrete and distribute
the bile in sufficient quantities for the
purpose of digestion and evacuation.
Its effei t upon the stomach and bowels
is such as to ensure the regular dis
charge of the functions na.fied and
prevent abstraction or vitiaf on of the
biliary fluid—in other words, >h secure
entire co-operation with the liuer.
sep2l-lwd&w 4
The Mobile Life Insurance Company,
which has been in existence fc!ur years,
has recently made a change in its
management which promises |o be of
great business advantage. ;W. L.
Baker has retired from the Presidency,
to which office Maurice McCarthy has
been elected, the latter being ;> gentle
man of great influence and energy, and
well qualified to promote the interests
of the company. The compar t has is
sued since its commencement 4,200
policies, or an average of one -housand
and fifty per annum, the larger pro
portion of which still remain it? force. —
N. Y. Insurance and Beak Estate
Journal. sep i-l—Jw.
-
August Flower.— The mos; misera
ble beings in the world are those suffer
ing from Dyspepsia and Livoi Com
plaint. '|g ,
More than seventy-five perl cent, of
the people in the United States are af
flicted with these two diseases and
their effect—such as sour titomach,
sick headache, habitual poapyeneas,
impure blood, heartburn, we iferbrash,
gnawing and burning pains aN the pit
of the stomach, yellow skin? coated
tongue and disagreeable taste in the
mouth, coming up of the food after
eating, low spirits, etc. Gc to i.he drug
stores of F. A. Beall, M. E. Bowers,
and Barrett & Land, Wholesale Deal
era: inyll-dfeow&c
—— Ini * ||
The best 5 cts. Segar that has been
made since the war. Try then.:: at Wil
son & Dunbar’s, 186 Broad street.
sept3-3m ; j
FINANCE AND TRADE.
THE AUGUSTA DAILY MARKETS.
Constitutionalist Office, [
6 o’clock P. M.. Sep. 21, 1875. (
Remarks.
Trade was brisk to-day, and no doubt
this week will be a decided improvement on
last. Quotations generally the same.
Financial.
exchange.
New York exchange buying at pax
premium, and selling at %,
Savannah and Charleston exchange, buy
ing at % off and selling at par.
Sterling exchange nominal and little do
ing,
GOLD AND SILVER.
Gold, ....1 12 aIJS
Silver 1 03 al 06
Cotton Mai’ket.
Cotton was firm, with a g ood demand
We quote:
Low Middling 1254
Middling 12%
Good Middling 13
AT ALL POINTS,
Receipts since Ist September 57,891
Receipts same time la t year 47,699
Stock at all U. S. ports 88,613
Stocks at all U. S. ports last year—9s,79l
Stock in New York, actual count 25,49 e
Stock in New York last year 41,215
The Meat Market.
Clear Ribbed Bacon Sides 14% a 14%
Dry Salt Clear Ribbed Sides 13% a 13%
Dry Sait Long Clear Sides 13% a
Bellies 13% a
Smoked Shoulders 11 a
Dry Salt Shoulders 10 a
Sugar Cured llams 15%a
Pig Hams 16 a
Tennessee Hams 14% a
Lard—in tierces, 15%; in cans, kegs or
buckets. 17.
Corn, Wheat ard Oats Market.
Corn.—Car load Di-imol lots In depot:
White, $1.03; Yellow and Mixed. SI.OO, sacks
included.
Wheat.—Choice White active nt $1.50;
Prime White, $1.35; Amber, $1.40; and Red.
$1.35.
Oats.—Red Rust Proof, $1.25; Feed,6oaGs.
Corn Meal and Bran.
Corn Meal—We quote City Bolted, $1.05;
Western, SI.OO.
Stock Meal—9oasl,
Bran—Wheat Bran per ton, $25.
Stock Meal—9oasl.
Bran —Wheat Bran per ton, $25.
The Hay Market.
Quiet, with small stock and light de
mand.
Hay—Choice Timothy—car load lots,
$1.35 per hundred ; Western mixed, $1.15a
1.25 per hundred; Eastern Hay, $1.45a
1.50 per hundred; Northern. $1.25.
Country Hay—sl uer hundred.
Flour Market.
The flour market remains firm with full
stocks. Quotations unchanged.
city mills flour.
Supers $6 50a7 00
Extras 7 00a7 50
Family 7 50a8 00
Fancy 8 00a8 50
WESTERN FLOUR:
Supers $G 00
Extras 6 50
Family 7 00a7 25
Fancy 7 50a8 00
Bagging, Ties and Twine.
Those articles continue firm with increas
ing demand as cotton picsing proceods.—
Wo quote:
Bagging—Domestic—(2%a2H lbs), 15.
India, 12%.
Ties—s%aG.
Twine—l6alß.
Pieced Ties—4%.
Telegraphic Market Reports.
European Money Mai-kets.
London, September 21—Noon.—Erie, 15.
Weather cloudy and threat' ning.
Paris, 'September 21—Noon—Renes, Csf.
90c.
United States Money Markets.
New York, September 21—Noon.—Stocks
active and steady. Money 2. Gold open
ed at 117% and closed 117. Exchange—long,
480; short, 484 Governments dull and
steady, states bonds quiet and better.
New York, September 21—P. M.—Money
eisy at 1%a2. Sterling quiet at 480. Gold,
in>%allo%. Governments steady and in
active; new s’s, 18%. States quiet and
j nominal.
New York, September 21—P. M.—Stocks
closed dull and steady at 103%; Erie 17%;
Lake Shore, 54; Illinois Central, 97% ; Pitts
burg, 90%; North western, 39%; preferred,
54; Rock Island, 107%.
Sub-Treasury balances: Gold. $35,418,058;
currency, $58,840,687; Sub-Treasury paid
out $21,000 on account of interest, and
$27,000 for bonds; customs receiDts, $331,-
000.
European Produce Mai-kets.
Liverpool, September 20—2 P. M.—
Breadstuff's dull. Red Western wheat
9slldalos2d. Mixed Western Corn, 27s3da
I 29sa9d. Lard excited at 61s.
Liverpool, September 21—5 P. M
i Y r arns and fabrics quiet and unchanged.
New Y r oi - k Produce Market.
New York. September 21—Noon.—Flour
dull and declining. Wheat quiet and
strongly in buyers’ favor. Corn dull and
declining. Pork firm at $21a21.25. Lard
heavy; steam, 13 13-16. Turpentino firm at
31%. Rosin firm at $1.70a1.75 for strained.
Freights firm.
New York, September 21—P. M.—Flour
saloe. lower and very modei’ate business
doing; superfine Western and State, $4,80a
5.35; -outhern flour heavy and lower; com
mon to fair extra, $5.55a6.50; good to
choice extra, $6.65a8.50. Wheat, dull and
heavy at la2c. lower, and limited business;
$1.19a1.40 for new and old winter red West
ern; $1.20a1.41 for do. amber Western; $1.30
a1.50 for do. white Western. Gorn 10.
lower and in fair demand at a decline; 70a
71 for steam Western mixed; 72a73% fox
sail do; G3a7o for damaged and unsound
do.; 73a74 for high mixed and yellow West
ern. Oats dull at la2c. lower at 30a54 fox
new mixed and white; whito Western 46a
54. Coffee —Rio firm and in moderate de
mand; 2500 bag's at 21a21%, in gold;
cax-goos, 18%a21%, in gold; job lots
19a21%, gold. Sugar dull and heavy at
7%a8% for fair to good refining; B%aß 5-16
for prime refined firm; 10% for standai’d; A,
11 for powdered;ll%all% for granulated;
11% for crushed. Molasses dull; 3Ga42
Muscovado; 38a50 for Porto Rico. Rice
firm and in good demand to trade, 7%a8;
new Louisiana and Carolina, $‘2.62%a2.65,
gold, rangoon bond. Tallow firmer at 10a
10%. Rosin firmer at $1.70a1.80. Turpen
tine firmer at 32. Pork firmer—new job
lots, $21.25a21 35. Lard firmer—prime steam,
13 13-16a14. Whiskey decidedly firmer at
$1.21. Freights a shade firmer; cotton, sail
5-32; steam %a5-16.
Western Produce Markets.
Chicago. September 21.—Flour quiet and
weak; spi'ing exti-a5,55.25a6.00; Minnesota,
$6.50. Wheat generally unchanged; Chi
cago spring. $1.14; No. 2 do., $1.07 for spot,
$1.05% seller for October; $1.05% seller for
November, $1.04a1.04% seller for all the
year; No 3 do., 94. Corn unsettled—No. 2
mixed, 55% for spot, 54% bid seller for Oc
tober, 48% bid seller for November—reject
ed 53%. Oats in fair demand—No. 2, 34%
for spot, 35 seller for September, 32% bici
seller for October, 32% seller for all the
year. Barley—buyers and sellers apart
tending down at sl.Ol for spot, $1.03 solici
tor October, ltye easier and in good de
mand at 75 for spot. Pork strong and
higher at $22 for spot, $21.50a21.55 seller for
October. Lard In fair demand and prices
advanced; 13.50a13.55 spot; 13.52% seller
October. Bulk Meats steady and un
changed. Whiskey strong and higher at
$1.15%a1.16.
At the afternoon call Wheat was easier at
$1.04% Offober. Oats steady at 34%a34%
September; 32%a32% October. Corn lower
at 54 October. Pork and Lard unchanged.
Receipts: Flour, 6,000; w'heat, 100,000; corn,
134,000; oats, 70,000; barley, 28,000; rye,
7,000. Shipments: Flour, 4,000; wheat,
8.000; corn, 8,000; 0at5,45,000; barley, 11,000
Louisville, September 21.—Flour and
Wheat unchanged. Corn quiet and firm, at
75a82. Oats quiet and steady at 42a50. Rye
quiet and unchanged. Px-ovisions steady
and firm. Pork nominal. Bulk shoulders,
8%; clear rib sides, 12%; clear sides, 12%.
Bacon—shoulders. 9%a9%; clear rib sides,
13%; clear sides, 13%. Hams, sugar-cured,
13%a14%, Lard, tierce, 14a14%. Whiskey,
$1.15. Bagging quiet and unchanged.
Cincinnati. September 21.—Flour steady
and in fair demand. Wi iea t' 4 u Ul *Gd. $1 25
al 35. Corn dull at C5a67. Oats quiet and
unchanged. Barley dull; spring, $1 Olal 08.
Rye quiet and steady at 78a80. Provisions
strong and higher. Pork firmer and held
higher; country, s2l 50; city, s2l 55a21 60
on spot; held at $22 for buyer for Septenx
ber. Lard quiet and firm; steam, 13% bid;
13% asked; country kettle sold at 13%;
city, 13%a14. Bulk meats—shoulders steady
at 8%; sides higher; clear rjb, 11%.. 9 on
spot; 12 to buyer for September; cioar
sfdes, 12%. Bacon steady and firm; shoul
ders, 9%; clear rib sides, 13%a13%; clear
sides, 13%a13%. Hogs—demand fair and
market firm; stackers, $6 50a7; common
light, s7a7 50; good light, $7 65a7 90; good
butchers, sBaB 25; receipts, 865; shipments,
337. Whiskey—demand active at $1 15.
Batter strong: and higher; choice Western
reserve, 26a28; central Ohio choice, 22a25;
medium, 20.
St. Louis, September 21.—Flour unchang
ed. Wheat lower; No. 2 fall, $1.52% hid;
No. 3 do., $1.25 bid. Corn lower at 53 bid.
Oats dull and lower to sell at 35a35% bid.
Barley unchanged. Rye lower at 70. Pork
active and higher at $22a22.10. Lard quiet;
kettle, 13%. Bulk meats—more doing;
cl* ar rib sides at Council Bluffs sold at 11%;
prices of meat here nominally higher;
shoulders, 8%; clear rib sines, 12%; clear
sides, 12%. Bacon scarce and firmer;
shoulders, 9%; clear rib sides, 13%a13%;
clear tides, 13%a13%. Whiskey steady at
$1.15. Hogs slow and unchanged. Cattle
firm; good to choice natives, $5.25a0.35:
medium to fair. $4.15a5; common to light,
$3.25a3.75; good to choice Texans, s3.9ua
4.25; medium to fair, $3.30a3.65; common,
$2.90a3.15. Receipts—flour, 7,000; wheat, 67,-
000; corn, 90,000; oats, 12,000; barley, 11,000;
rye, 2,000; cattle, 2,000.
Baltimore Produce Market.
Baltimore, September 21—Noon.—Flour
dull and unchanged. Wheat dull and off;
Pennsylvania red, $1.25a1.30; Maryland
red, $1.10a1.35; amber, $1.40a1.45; white,
$L20a1.45. Corn weak and lower; Southern
white, 75a80; yellow, 71.
Baltimore. September 21—P. M.—Oats
steady aad unchanged. Rye quiet and
steady at 78a80. Provisions dull and
steady. Pork firm and higher at $22.50a
23.00. Bulk meats nominal. Bacon steady;
hams. 15a15%. Lard firmer; refined, 14%.
Coffee strong and unchanged. Whiskey
excited at $1.20. Sugar firm at 10%a10%.
Wilmington Produce Market.
Wilmington, September 21— Spirits Tur
pentine firm at 30. Rosin strong at $1.35
for strained Tar firm at $1.45.
New Orleans Produce Market.
New Orleans, September 21.—Sugar and
molasses unchanged.
Liverpool Cotton Market.
Liverpool, September 21—Noon—Cotton
—market easier, but not quotably low
er; middling uplands, C 15-1 G; middling
Orleans. 7 5-16; sales, 8,000; speculation
and export, 1,000; receipts, 2,800; Ameri
can, 2,300, to arrive; sellers offering at 1-16
decline.
Liverpool, September 21—3 P. M—Mid
dling uplands, low middling clause, Sep
tember and October delivery, 6 13-16; do.,
do., shipped December and January, per
sail, 6%; sales, 1,400 American,
London, September 21—P. M—Sales of
middling uplands, low middling clause, Oc
tober and November delivery, 6 13-16; sal* s
of middling Orleans, low middling clause,
shipped October, 7.
1:30 P. M——Sales of middling uplands,
low middling clause, shipped October aud
November, 6 13-16; do, October delivery,
6 13-16; sales middling Orleans, low mid
dling clause, shipped November and De
cember, 7.
New York Cotton Market.
New York, September 21—Noon.—Cot
ton dull and easier; sales, 921 bales; up
lands, 13%; Orleans, 14%,
Futures opened easier, as folows: Sep
tember, 13 5-16a13 7-16; October, 12 29-32a
12 31-32; November, 12 25-32a12 13-16; De
cember, 12 25-32a12 27-32; January, 12%a
12 15-16; Februry, 13 3-32a13 5-32.
New York, September 21—P. M.—Cotton
dull and easier; sales, 1,708 bales at 13%a
14%; consolidated net receipts, 21,133 bales;
exported to Great Britain, 5,112 bales; Con
tinent, 2,293; net receipts, 180 bales; gross
receipts, 721.
Futures closed steady; sales, 20,500 bales,
as follows: September, 13 7-1Ga1315-32; Octo
ber, 13 1-32 ; November, 12%a12 29-32;
December, 12 29 32; January, 12 31-32a13
February, 13 3-16; March, 13%a13 13-32;
April, 13 19-32; May, 13 13-16a27-32; June,
14 l-32a14 1-10; July, 14 3-16a14%; August,
14 5-16a 14%.
Boston aud Philadelphia Cotton Mar
kets.
Boston, September 21.—Cotton quiet
and nominal; middling, 14; net receipts,
170 bales; gross, 690; sales, 10G.
Philadelphia, September 21.—Cotton
dull; middling, 14; net receipts, 20 bales;
gross, 110.
Southern Cotton Markets.
Memphis, September 21.—Cotton—de
mand fair; middling, 13; net receipts, 238
bates; shipments, 200; sales, 250.
Wilmington, September 21.—Potion
firm; middling, 12%; net receipts, 399 bales;
sales, 75.
Mobile, September 21.—Cotton quiet;
middling, 12%a12%; net receipts, 1,055
bales; exports coastwise, 391; sales, 300.
New Orleans, September 21.—Cotton
quiet; middling, 13%; low middling, 12%;
good ordinary, 11%; net, receipts, 968
bales; gross, 1,364; esports—to Great Bri
tain, 2; to the Continent, 1,600; sales, 1,000.
Savannah, September 21.—Cotton firm;
middling, 13; net receipts, j 1,400 bales;
sales, 1,309.
Charleston, September 21.—Cotton
steady; middling, 12%a13; net receipts,
I, bales; sales, 1,100.
Norfolk, September 21.--Cotton easier;
middling, 13%; net receipts, 1,194 bales;
exports coastwise, 1,150; sales, 40.
Galveston September 21.—Cotton quiet;
middling, 13; exports coastwise, 1,756 bales;
stock, 803; stock, 1,558.
Baltimore, September 21.—Cotton dull
and weak; middling, 13%; low middling,
13; good ordinary, 12%; net receipts, 54
bales; gross, 208; exports coastwise, 30;
sales, 313; spinners, 95 bales.
££> Marine News.
Port Royal, K. 0., September 21,—Ar
rived: steamer Huntsville from New York.
I Savannah, September 21.—Arrived:
steamship Oriental from Boston; Janita,
from Philadelphia. Cleared: bi'ig Mary E.
Dana Fuller; bath schooner Stephen G.
Hart, from Providence, Sailed: schooner
Stephen G. Hart from Providence.
COPARTNERSHIP NOTICES.
Dissolution of Copartnership.
"\TOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT
El the partnership existing between J.
Murphy & E. Murphy was dissolved on
the Ist day of August last, by mutual eon
sent. J. MURPHY,
E. MURPHY,
Having purchased the entire interest of
J. Murphy, of the firm of J. Murphy & Go.,
I will continue the CROCKERY BUSINESS
in all its branches at the same store, No.
244 Broad street, Masonic Hall, and in ad
dition to the above I have just opened a
CARPET DEPARTMENT, and would invite
our former patrons and the public general
ly to call and examine.
EDWARD MURPHY.
In retiring from the firm of J. Murphy &
Cos. I take great pleasure in r< commending
my successor, Mr, Edward Murphy, to the
former patrons and the public generally,
and ask that any business favors hereto
fore extended to the late firm may be con
tinued to him. J. MURPHY.
_sepl7-fri,sun&wed
DISSOLUTION OFJOPARTNERSHIP.
Augusta, Ga., September 4,1875,
The firm of quinn & pendleton
was this day dissolved, to take effect
from the Ist of September, 1875. A. F. Pen
dleton is alone authorized to receipt for ac
counts due the late firm.
D. QUINN.
A. F. PENDLETON.
NOTICE OF COPARTNERSHIP.
Having purchased the entire
interest of Mr. D. QUINN in the firm
of QUINN & PENDLETON, Booksellers
and Stationers, we liav * formed a limited
copartnership, to take effect from the Ist of
September, 1875, under the firm name of
A. F. PENDLETOIN
As general partner, and I. P. GARVIN as
special partner. They will conduct a First
Class Book, Stationery and Periodical Busi
ness at the stand of the late firm, No. 224
Broad street, Augusta, Ga.
A. F. PENDLETON,
1. P. GARVIN.
A. CARD.
IN DISPOSING OF MY IN I'EPEST TO
my late partner, Mr. A. F. PENDLETON,
I be# leave to recommend the Dew ilrm to
public patronage. To my friends especially
I commend them, asking that any business
favors herefore extended on my account
may be continued to them.
seps-sufcwelin D. QUINN.
A. F. PENDLETON
SXTCCESSOR TO
QUINN & PENDLETON,
224 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.,
BOOK SELLER ANB STATIONER.
Newspapers, periodicals, music,
&c., a specialty.
Subscriptions taken for Newspapers and
Periodicals at Publisher’s Prices.
Having the NEWEST and BEST selected
stock of SCHOOL BOOKS. MISCELLANE
OUS and STANDARD BOOKS, BLANK
BOOKS and STATIONERY, will sell as low,
if not lower, thau any house in the city.
Be sure you give me a call before buying
eleswhere. seps-suwe&fritf
IMPORTANT TO THE
BOOT, SHOE AND HAT TRADE.
— o
are now prepared to supply our friends and the trade generally with
BOOTS, SHOES, HATS AND TRUNKS,
At Greatly Reduced Prices.
o
Our Wholesale Department
Is complete, and we will sell to the trade at NEW YORK JOBBERS’ PRICES
Our Retail Department
Is well supplied with Miles & Sons’ Boots, Shoes and Gaiters; Ziegler Bros’ Ladies’ But
toned and Lace Boot*, Shoes and Gaiters; Dunbarr A Co’s Children’s Buttoned and
Lace Boots; Sellers & Co.’s Children’s Buttoned and Lace Boots; and full lines of other
desirable goods.
Small Profits and Large Sales is our Motto.
No trouble to sh w goods. An examination of our goods and prices invited.
CALLAHER & IVIULHERIN,
seps-suw&flm 289 Broad street.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Retrospective aad Congratulatory.
rpWO AND A HALF YEARS Experience
J in Augusta, as a groceryman, gives
rise to many reflections in glancing over
the situation here as we found it and as it
is at the present writing. r l eas, Coffees,
Sugars, Flour. Soap, Spices, and in short
nearly all the necessaries as well as luxu
ries of life, are now sold at a closer margin
than ever before.
The establishment of the CHINA TEA &
COFFEIi STORE, the Pioneer Cash Grocery
of Augusta, has changed the whole ruinous
system of buying goods on long credit, thus
paying twice their value to keep some poor
merchant from ruin as the victim of anoth
er dead beat. Look at the facts: In Sugars
I sell two pounds more for one dollar to
day than • ould be bought at retail of any
merchant in Augusta one and a half years
ago—and Sugars are higher now in market
than previous to my advent among you.
I sell a better article fifty per cent, less
than was sold then, or even now, as I am
prepared to prove.
My Teas are imported direct, at?d the
quality is guaranteed, thus saving many
profits to the consumer.
In Coffees, look also at the change.—lt is
no longer necessary to risk having this de
licious beverage ruined by the experiments
of any would-be cook of the fir *, as I have
a complete assortment of all grades, care
fully roasted by steam and ground fresh
on the premises, in any quantity to suit
the purchaser.
Revolutions never go backward! What
one year has accomplished another can im
prove and perfect; and I only ask, as a re
ward for laboring for your interests in the
past, that you should continue to cheer
and enc >urage me, and I trust the day is
far distant when any resident of Augusta
or vicinity will regret having made my ac
quaintance or of giving to me their gener
ous patronage.
The public’s obd’t servant,
R. N. HOTCHKISS,
sepl2-tf Red Gilt Front, opp. Fountain.
Fruitland Nurseries, Augusta, Ga.
PJ. BERCKMANS, Proprietor. Orders
• for I rees, Plants, Bulbs, Seeds, etc.,
etc., left with the undersigned will be promt
ly attended to.
GEORGE SYMMS, Agent,
No. 221 Broad Street,
septl-6m __ Augusta, Ga.
WIRE HAY BANDS.
JOEING AGENTS for the EXCELSIOR
WIRE BANDS, we will always have a full
supply at low figures.
PHI NT UP BRO. & POLLARD,
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants
sopll-lm
Cotton (tins and Presses.
TYTE CALL the attention of parties wish
▼ V ing to purchase a GIN or PRi-SS
to our Neblett A. Goodrich Gins and Smith’s
Improved Presses,
PRINTUP, BRO. & POLLARD,
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants
sepll-lm
Notice to Consignees.
PORT ROYAL RAILROAD COMPANY, /
Augusta Agency, Sept. 10, 1875. i
ON and after this date consignments of
Cotton from Way Stations to Augusta
will only be delivered upon surrender of
receipt issued by Agent at shipping point.
Receipts issued for cotton consigned to
( rder must be properly endorsed by ship
per before cotton will be delivered.
Shippers and Consignees will please be
governed accordingly.
W. H. TREZEVANT,
sepll-12 Agent.
MANSION HOUSE
PORT
SITUATED AT THE TERMINUS OF
the Port Royal Railroad, where connec
tion is made with the fast sailing, first class
steamers Montgomery and Huntsville,
sailing to New York every Friday.
Round trip from Augu-ta, S3O.
This is an entirely new and elegantly fur
nished house. Situation unsurpassed, sur
rounded with magnificent live oaks, com
manding a splendid prospect of the sur
rounding country, the Beaufort and Port
Royal Rivers, aud offers unusual attrac
tions to travelers or to parties who desire
Board or to spend a few days near the salt
water.
Table supplied with everything the mar
ket affords. Fresh milk, butter, fish, veg
etables and fruits in their season.
Best of Cooks and Attendants.
Terms liberal.
C. E. WARREN,
je26-tf Proprietor.
NOTICE.
ALL persons having left Watches, Clocks,
Jewelry, Guns or Pistols for repairs at
J. Kaplan are hereby notified to call for
them within 30 days from date, or they will
bo sold at auction to pay expenses.
I will sell my stock of Clock-, Watches,
Jewelry, Fancy Goods, Pistols, Musical In
struments, Ac., 25 per cent, below cost till
September 29th, to close business.
JACOB KAPLAN,
150 Broad street.
Augusta, Ga., August 26th, 1875.
aug26-30
THE MOST PERFECT MADE.
LEMON SUGAR, ETC.
ctONE THIRD ISSAVED^s
in quantity by their perfect purity and great
strength; the only kinds made by a prac
tical Chemist and Physician, with scientific
care to insure uniformity, healthfulness, deli
cacy and freedom from all injurious substan
ces They are far superior to the common
adulterated kinds. Obtain the genuine. Ob
serve our Trade Marks as above, “Cream”
Baking Powder, “Hand and Cornucopia”
Buy the Baking Powder only in cans securely
labelled Many have been deceived in loose
or bulk Powder gold as Dr Price’s,
Manufactured only by
STEELE & pmpp
Chka *°' ***
mohlß-tuthsasuyU
FINE TOBACCO.
IJSE the Calhoun Chewing Tobacco, the
best ever sold in Augusta.
For sale by
Bep7-tf Q VOLGEK A CO.
RAILROAD SCHEDULES.
CHANGE HE MHEDULH
Charlotte, Columbia* Augusta li. R.. )
Genebal Passenger Department, 1
Columbia. S. C.. June aoth. 1876. )
THE FOLLOWING PASSENGER SOHED
ulewillbo operated on and after SUNDAY
the 'loth instant:
GOING NORTH.
Stations. Train No. 2. Train No. 4*
Leave Augusta 8:27 a. in. 4:15 p. ni.
| Leave Graniteville* 9:13 a. m. 6 : 11 p. in.
Leave Columbia
Junction .12:58 p. m. t9:05 p .in
ArriveatColumbia i:08 p. m. 9:17 p. in.
Leave Columbia.... 1:18 p. m.
Leave Winnsboro.. 3:35 p. m.
Leave Chester .15:10 p. m.
Arrive atCharlotte 7:32 p. in.
No. 2 Train makes close connection vip
Charlotte and Richmond to all points North
arriving at New York 6:05 a. in.
Train No. 4 makes close connections via
Wilmington and Richmond to all points
North, arriving at New York at 6:16 p. in.
GOING SOUTH.
Stations. Train No. l. Train No. 3
Leave Charlotte.... 8:30a.m.
Leave Chester.... . 11:02 a.m.
Leave Winnsboro..l2:3B p. m.
Arri’e at Columbia 2:42 p. m.
Leave Columbia... 12:52p. in. 3:40a. in
Leave Wilmington
Junction I3:i7p. m. 4:isa. u>.
Leave Granitevillo.t7 :l6 p. m. *7:36 a. in.
Arrive at Augusta... B:o6 p. m. 8:20 a. in
♦Breakfast. tDJnner. tSupper.
South bound trains connect at Augusta for
all points South and West.
4S-THROUGH TICKETS sold and BAG
GAGE CHECKED to all principal points.
4W Sleeping cars on all Night Trains.
A. POPE,
General Passenger and Ticket Agent.
JAMES ANDERSON.
myi9-tf General Superintendent
Magnolia Passenger Ponte.
POUT ROYAL RAILROAD, )
Augusta, Ga„ July 19th, 1875. j
THE FOLLOWING PASSENGER SCHED
ULEwiIIbo operated on and after this date:
GOING SOUTH-TRAIN NO. 1.
Leave Augusta 8:00 a. m.
Arrive Yemassee., 1:00 p. m.
Leave Yemassee ...1:30 p. m.
Arrive Port Royal 3:25 p.m.
Arrive Savannah. 4.45 p. m.
Arrive Charleston 4:15 p. in.
GOING NORTH-TRAIN NO, 2.
Leave Charleston 8:10 a. in.
Leave Savannah 9:06 a, in.
Leave Port Royal 9;45 a. m.
Arrive Yemassee *ji:oo a. in
Leave Yemassee... i:00p. m.
Arrive Augusta 0:45 p.m.
Through Tickets sold and Baggage checked
to all principal points.
Passengers from Augusta and stations be
tween Augusta and Yemassee, can only make
connection through to Savannah by taking
Train No. 1, on MONDAYS, WEDNESDAY'S*
and FRIDAYS.
To Charleston daily connection is as
heretofore.
Passengers from Port Royal and station i
between Port Royal aud Yemassee make daily
connection to Charleston aud Savannah,
•Dinner. R. G. FLEMING,
T. S. DAVANT. Superintendent..
apr2s-tf General Passenger Agent.
CHANGE OF SjCHEDIJLE
UN THE GEORGIA AND MACON AND
AUGUSTA RAILROADS.
ON AND AFTER SUNDAY. JUNE 13. IB'*6.
the Passenger Trains on the Georgia ana
Macon and Augusta Railroads will run as
follows:
GEORGIA RAILROAD.
DAY PASSENGER TRAIN WILL
Leave Augusta at 8;00 a. m.
Leave Atiauta at 7 :ot> a. m.
Arrive in Augusta at 3:30 i. m
Arrive in Atlanta at 4:00 p. in.
NIGHT PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Augusta at.. 8:15 p. m
Leave Atlanta at 10.30 p, in.
Arrive in Augusta at 7:40 a. m.
Arrive in Atlanta a;;.. 6:25 a. m.
MACON AND AUGUSTA RAILROAD.
MACON PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leave Augusta at 8.00 a. m.
LeaveCamak at... i:iop. in.
Arrive at Maoon 6.00 p. m
Leave Macoa at 5:30 a. m
Arrive at Camak 10:00 i*. in
Arrive in Augusta 2:15 p. m.
HARLEM AND AUGUSTA PASSENGER
TRAIN.
Leave Augusta at.. 4:i5 p. m.
Leave Harlem at 8:05 a. in.
Arrive in Augusta at 9:55 a. m.
Arrive in Harlem a". s.io p. in.
Passengers from ATHENS. WASHINGTON
ATLANTA, or any point on the Georgia Rail
road and Branches, by taking the Day Pas
senger Train, will make connection at
Camak with trains lor Macon ana ail points
beyond.
Passengers leaving Augustaat 3 a. m. will
make close connection at Atlanta with trains,
for Chattanooga. Nashville. Knoxville, Louis
ville anil all points tYest.
First/class Sleeping Cars on all night trains
on the Georgia Railroad.
JeiML. S. K. JOHNSON. Sup L
SOUTH CIAROLINA RAILROAD.
Charleston. February 5. 1875.
On and after SUNDAY, 7th instant, the fol
lowing Schedule will be run on the SOUTH
CAROLINA RAILROAD :
Between Charleston and Augusta.
Charleston time ten minutes ahead ot Au
gusta time.
DAY PASS ENGEB TRAIN.
Leave Charleston -taps a. ni
Arrives at Augusta ~g-i 6
Leaves Augusta a! m!
Arrives at Charleston ,
NIGHT EXPRESS TRAIN *"' ‘ ‘‘
Leaves Charleston 8:so m
Arrives at Augusta . 7 ts a ui
Leaves Augusta. “Y.'.t'm p. in!
Arrives at Charleston s -ao i
AIKEN TRAIN. ‘
Leaves Aiken B . w .
Arrives at Augusta *Voo a in
Leaves Augusta .V.\‘\ a-u it t
Arrives at Aikeu... ... “.iiS £
NO DAY PASSENGER (COLUMBIA) TRAIN.
NIGHT EXPRESS TRAIN.
Leaves Augusta #:o c. m
Arrives at Columbia
Leaves Columbia t-eo v>. ni *
Arrives at Augusta. 7 w * n
Night Train out of Augusta make dose con
nect nm at Columbia with Greenville and Co
lumbia Railroad. Passengers fm point* .V
the Greenville and Columbia liaihWf w .w
avoid a tedious delay and hotel expo" aI U
night in Columbia by taking t his route.
Elegant new Sleeping Cars on ntgfeft c.ufr.s
between Augusta and Charleston.
S. B. PICKENS, S, S. SOLUMON*
General Ticket Agent. si,.;,
feb6-tf
NOTICE.
ONE MONTH AFTER DATE (my hus
band consenting) I will become a free
trader, and do business in my own name
MARY L. SMITH,
Augusta, Ga., Sept., 18,1875.
The above notice ie given with iuy con
sent. H. SMITH.
sepU-lm,