The News and farmer. (Louisville, Ga.) 1875-1967, November 25, 1875, Image 2

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flttos anb Jarmer. •mill ft BITD, SSITOSS ul P&OPBIETCJS. NOVEMBER 25, 1875. BOYD AMD THE SMALL FISH AGAIN.. “Lay on McDutf! And—lie wlio first cries out, hold! enough ! You say "the effusion in the first place is adequate to the qbjeet.” 1 was aware of the object you had in view, namely, to get up some sort of matter for tlie Njtjyjs & Farmer, and as “a little nonsense now and then is rel ished by the wisest of men,” I did not hesitate to gratify your uesire. But you add "wheu wo want to catch a small fish, yre put on a small bait.” This latter assertion was un necessary, fqr ye all know that you never fish with any other sqrt of b&it, and use ■ Spools of for fishing lines, And bended pins for hooks “We think it a little above the aver age because it hit its mark.” This is accounted for on account of the brassi ness of the hook and of the fisherman. “If its force <Jid not amount to power jut, it did wore than our friend does at night—it goes home.” You ought not to expose a fellow in that way, Bob, but then “a fellow-feel ing makes us wondrous kind.” Know ing your own weakness in this line, you might nave sprlsed us just here. “We would pot tike to go again (to the .State Fair) without taking Jefferson County's back-action Keeley motor pat ent medicine man along, winch medicine is war rented to cure all diseases from the goqt to gangrene, etc. Juft s,q, Bob. If you don't know it hundreds of people all over this country do, that Drake'll Magic Liniment is be yond question the greatest remedy for pains of all kinds, (gout included) that has been discovered in this country or any other. It' your horse (but I beg pardon editors don't own horses or mules) gets the colic, give him Drake's Magic Liniment You know it won’t cure mcART disease, although a corres pondent of the Sandersville Herald re commeuded it to love sick chaps. As tq gangrene, 1 have the proot that Drake’s Magic Liniment is decided ly bcf>.efi>*ul in that dis, ..se also. You suggest in the kindness of your heart, that I take “a bottle a week.” Because 1 am the wholesale manufac turer of the drug, it does not follow that 1 should take it in wholesale doses. 1 yrquld not hesitate to give a horse or rqiiie sick with the colic, a bottle at a tlreuch, but a tcaspoonfull will cure col- Je in a mail in a few minutes. Not love colic, Bob, nonarv time. As to going to the next State Fair with you. 1 must say that that event is too far oif to discuss just now, and moreover 1 would have to pay my rail road and hotel bills, a thing newspaper pjen have not. I venture to say. however, that I think it highly probable that ere the next State Fair meets in Atlanta, that my fripnd, Bob, wdl have a fair of his own to look after, and in contemplation of that happy event l tender him iijy hearty congratulations in advance. Hememher, Bpb, that in case you dp take a rib, that Drake Magic Liniment is a “mighty handy tl)iug to have about the house.” So now, my dear ngly brother Bob, I now t)id you an affectionate adieu, hop ing that you wil} yet make the News & Fakmeii a paper lndispensible to every man m tipi county. Vou can do it if you wil}. Tie that matrimonial knot, and then you will get along better. 4dieu, That Map if Liniment Man.—-you thought we wanted matter for the paper. iFell we’ve gpt it this time. JFe expect to smell that all pver curative cotqpqund for a couple of months, andeverytime we hear a child cry, or catch a mute kicking out his gear, throwing a nigger over a two year old sapling, or braying out of his natural tone of voice, we’ll always think there is some magic pow er at the bottom of it. Don't be afraid to take a bottle full, it won't hurt you, It'll soak through, you are so porous. It is a matrimonial necpsqjty for a couple with some of tiiat in Ui house can never say they haven’t got a s(cent). Colic indeed! why we imagine if you were to cut o|f a mules talc, and tie a little of that liujmcui to it, that another piule wouldgrqw back on i', or visa versa But we must now conclude by saying that we thank you most heartily for your Magical and masterly medicai ar ticle. so magical that we can't believe yet that it is real, fjo vf feel your way back into tl|e house, put a News & Farmer under your head, and go to sleep, and our word for it, when you wake you’ll feel better. No piore, never A FEW HINTS. Every body if crying opt hard tunes. Treasure seetty* to be universal, and money stringency to be alt provading, permeating every kind of business, and paralysing to a oertain extept, every industry. This is laid at the doqr jf a dry summer, and a poor crop. Thcpe are many other reasons. Cotton is our money crop here.— Planters calculate on getting money front no other sQgrce, and a majority of them, that hire labor to produce it, find that the expenses run away with the profits, and that at the present price, there is nq njqney at all in it. This State of things is wqrse, if qjir planner of hiring labqr is to give then) part of tbs crop. Some farmers think ft is best for the® by far, because they ijqnnt have so much money to pay out. The great difficulty is the cropping sys tem does not mean enough, or else its provisions am not enforced. If yon give a laborer one half, one third, or one fourth, the presumption is that that in the stipulated amount you are to give him for bis year's labor. That’s wbat it means, or onght to mean, just as much so as if you were giving him one hun dred and fifty dollars for the yesr, and every day, every work day of that year, belonged to yen. tq have as a return equivalent to the Remuneration, sad jhe lqst time to be promptly charged as a reduction, which you ape rightly entitled to, i tbs crupper brought qp to this standard? If he jpade po under stand this |s 'a fixed regulation qf labor that hecfnijot override? ff' hen yqu give him part of the crop you have lit* terally bought his time, and if he squan ders that time, and falls behind, you are the losing party, besides every part of your land capital suffers, because if you have to gq qnteiij® of this If bop to keep up yqur place, it if costing you eg tra for what has already been paid for. There is another bad feature i)hQipt it. If economy was adhered tq by the crop er, and bis part of the crqp husban ded tq run him from year tq year, It might bj more practicable to farm our Inijds In this way. oqt experience and bitter experience has taught the people that this is not done, and they always fall back qq ttye qwqer qf tlje lfnd (for who else if there to full back qn), and he stretobes his credit again, litteraily loaning his principal out without any sccqrity,—a dare devil risk to say the least of it, and thousands suffer yearly by the process. These are a few reasons why the times are so hard. STATE NEWS SUMMARY . Horses in Clay coupty we dying vyith blind staggers, pne man lqst six head. There has bpqi) 25 gin burned in Geqrgig this fall, according to Har ris. Tif. blffglars are burgling in Rome. \ypen people are in Ronqe. tfiey must do as jlomg does. ft is stated that Jijdgp Hopkins of the Atlanta circuit, 5?(ll soqq rqsign on accqunt of fail(l}g health. Jqe sforris if tq be tried iu Sanders* ville tlijs wepk we understand, pen. Carswell jyill represent him. The annual meeting of tfig south Georgia Conference meets this year in Amerjcus, qn the fsth of Lfgjjejpber. The Constitutionalist has changed ow. nership. and is now in the hfqds of Mr. E. 11. Ptighe, the well-knowq si}d popu lar printer. Treasurer .Jones has not succeeded in giving his bond yet, and it is fhpught Unit he v/ill not try fartlie.*, but vacate at the expiration of the allotted term. It seetqs that Muscogee, the soil mother of A as. ftf.Sryith, Gov., if willing for him tq give up the Mansion for Senatorial Chambers, at the capital, We have received the mammoth trade sheet of the Atlanta Herald. It gives the hr.sin >ss of Atlanta, and the growth and prosperity of the city a wiije circu lation. At the meeting of the Columbus bar, to do honor to the memory of Gen. Ben ing. a of number ladies were present, and elegant addresses were delivered by several members o’" the bar. 4.young man, named John Snell, liv' iug at Jonesborough, killed himself be* caqse he was not invited to a ball in the place. He must have been very fond of them, or cared very UU}p about dy. ng. There was a wfjite wpman in Macon the other day, whq raaried a negro man. The abandoned j?retch thought to es cape the law, bqt there is a law in Geor gia t}jat prohibits the intermarriage of the races. Katonton is clapping her hands and singing com songs over the prospect of soon having a telegraph office. I}er citizens are hungry for news, and per haps some of them think they can Eat one-ton qf it, John W- WafTord of Bartow county, and senator from tne 2d senatorial dis trict, resigns because his legal business is of a pressing nature, and because be thinks we have tqo njuch legislation by half, anyhow. The editor qf the Albany News has had on his table greeu corn raised this monih. Now that's right good for an editor, for its not presumed that they have any kind. Wo guess he's not ashamed to own up the corn. The Sandersville Herald says that the top cotton crop is a failure, or in other words, that it wil] not open, and says Mr. T. E. Brown has enough of it, if it would, to make five or six hales. What’s the qse to count chickens before they hatch. The Daily Athena Georgian has col lapsed. It was not so much a public necessity as its unforfunate editor was led to suppose. There ara a great many men that like newspapers before breakfast, but that never give much to support them. In Macon they Are still enjoying the vegetable luxuries of mid summer; for instance young encumbers, snap beans, tomatoes, english peas, and sich ; which will remain in full force until or dered otherwise by a colder snap of weather than they have had up to date. There has been a synod of the Gene ral Assembly Presbyterian Church in Cuthbert. There was considerable business transacted, and a nubmber of ministers present. All the churches fn the place was filled on the Sabbath fol lowing the 10th, which was the day the synod met. , Every journalist must have felt what the New York Herald expresses in this paragraph: “The truth is, there is scare ly a newspaper published, from one end of the Year to the other, that will not, if critically considered, give offense to somebody in the neighborhood or community in which it is publish ed,” Our friend H. W. J. H-, is now the happy possessor of a step-mother, and somehow or other, we cannot help con cluding that that had something to do with the temperaaoe speaoh he made in I Fort Valley not Iqqg ago. Go it Hamv t 1 It'll db tpkbtitltd if jrtHl'li steer cleat of that Editors’ Home, of Bourbon ddtori ety, in the Macon Faitgrodhds.' ~ Hott. Junes Wood has decided that the Ait Line Solid shall be seld by true* tees, to satiety some bondholders, Wti mer and others. The bunds are princi pally held in York and Baltimore. The first mortgage amounts to 14,246', QOQ; occurred interest up tQ date un paid |70d,000. The toad extends from Atlanta to Charlotte, N. C. a dis tance ef 265 miles. THE CHrIsTIAn'sABBATH. The fqHqwiqg Jitter fey tfee lion, Daniel Webster was recently published in the Christian Union: Marshfield, June 15, J 852. Professor Pease —Dear Sir:— l have received your very able and interesting annual report of the conditiqu of the New York Sabbath-school Association, and read it with great pleasure aud in etruction. It is gratifying, very gratify ing, to learn that in a city wuere viee and immorality run riqt with impunity a few humble Christians have devoted their time and energies to the cause qf religion ; and I fervently pray that yqur labors may be crowned with success. The Sabbath-school is one ot the great institutions of the day. It leads Our youth in the path of truth and mo rality, and makes them gqod men and useful citizens. Asa school of relig ious instruction it is of inestimable value. Asa civil institution it is price less. It has done more to preserve our liberties than grave statesmen and grip ed soldiers', it, then, be fostered aud preserved until the end of time. 1 once defended a man charged with the awful crime of murder. At the con ciqsiqu of' tlie trial lasted him what could have induced him to stain his hands with the blood qf a fellow-be ing. Turning his bi’qod shot eyes full upon me, he replied: “Mr. WebsteV, in my youth I spent the holy Sabbath in evil amusement in stead of frequenting the house of pray er and praise." Could we go back to (he early years of all hardened criminals, 1 believe, yes firmly believe, that their subsequent crimes might thus be traced back to the neglect of youthful religious instruction. Many years ago I spent a whole sab bath with Thomas Jetfersou at his resi dence in Virginia. It was iu the mouth of June, ana the weather delightful. While engaged in discussing the beau ties of the Bible, the iquud of a be 1 broke upon our ears. Turning to tbe sage of Monticello, 1 remarked ; “llow sweetly, howyery sweetly, sounds that Sabbath-bell!” The distinguished statesman for a mo ment seemed lost in thought, and re plied. "Yes, my dear Webster, yes, it melts the heart; it calms our passions, and makes us boys again.” Here I observed that man was an an imal formed for religious worship ; and that notwithstanding all the sophistry of Epicurus, Lucretious, and Voltaire, the Scriptures stood upon a rock as firm, as unmovable as truth itself; that man, in his purer, loftier breathings, turned the meuial eyes toward immorality; and that the poet only echoed the general sentimeutof man’s nature iu saying. The soul, fee are iu her existence, smiled At ihe drawn dagger, and defies it point. Mr. Jetferson fully concurred in this opinion, and observed that the tendency of the American mind was in a different direction; and that the Sunday-schools (he did not use our more correct word Sabbath) presented the only legitimate means under the constitution of avoid ing the rock on which the French Re public was wrecked. “Burke,” said he, “never uttered a more important truth than when he ex claimed that a religious education was a cheap defense of nations, liaikes has done more for our country than the present generation will acknowledge. Perhaps when I am cold he will obtain his reward. I hope so. I earnestly hope so. I am considere 1, Mr. Webs ter, to have little religion, but now is the time to correct errors of this sort. I have always said, and always will say that the studious perusal of the sacred yolunje will make better citizens, better futher*. aud better husbands. Of the distinguished Kaikes he was clarum et venerabile rumen." I took the liberty of saying that I found more pleasure in Hebrew poetry than in the best productions of Greece and Rome; that the “harp upon the willows by Babylon” had charms for me beyond anything in the blind man of Smyrna. I then turned to Jeremiah (there was a fine fol o of the Scriptures before me of 1458) and read aloud some of those sublime passages that used to delight me ou my father's knee. But I fear, my dear friend, I shall tire you with my prolix account of what was a plcasaut Sabbath, spent in the compauy of one who has filled a very large place in our political aud literary annals. Thanking you for your report, and heartily concurring with you in the truth of your quotation, that “Righte ousness exalteth a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people,” I remain, with high regard, your friend, Daniel W ebstkr. MONEY! MONEY!! MONEY!!! All accounts due this Shop first Oct. TO MT CUSTOMERS I will say that I have waited with you through the Spring and Summer and now that pay day has oome 1 must have my money or my business must stop. So don’t delay, but come and help your Mechanic to live, for the demands against him for stock and Material, must bo paid promptly. Respectfully, G. H. llarkell. Sept. 80 1875.—2 m. N otioe to Debtors and Creditors. ALL part.a* indebted te the recent Arm of Roberta A meKeniie mid to J L Roberta, deceased, individually, ere requeued to come forward and maka immediate payment, end tboea holding accounts against the Arm or (aid daceaaedr will patent their claims properly atteated according; to law Mas 8 J Roexars 44|)ijqietratris Bullion ami Fancy Dress Fringes in all the yew shades and la est Styles, ift C. Grgy & Qo.’s Ten efifes of '_Jet)ta£ky ,/eaps, very cheqp at retail, beral teriys to tlie trade- C. Gray !f Go’s, Fine Bed Blankets at very lw prices, at C. Gray <£* Co's. 200 boxes of New Bucking*, 200 dozen of Bodies at 60c. per doxen. 10 pieces ol new B ack Cashmere. 6 piec a fine Biack Silk, at C. Gray <£ Co’s. 100 pieces fine Heavy ranging fom 50q to 5 dollars per yard. C. GRAY & 008. 1866 I&T4BL.ISHfiD 1866 J. P. WEATHERSBEE, WHOLESALE and retail dealer in Foreign ami Domestic D<y Goods, Augusta, Ga, has just returned fiom New York with a full tine of Fall and Winter (foods, which ha is of feriug et prices in keeping with <he times. In order to reduce bis unusually heavy stock he calls attention to the following quotations: 4-4 Toft Fiuinsh Bleaching |O C 5-4 Round Thread sea island, 10c Cadcoes from 6J to 10c All Wool Rod Flannels, 20c Canton Flannels 10 aud 124 c Double Width Waterproof Hoods, 75c Bleached Hose, 8, 10 and lojc Large White Bordered Handkerchiefs, 5c Kentucky Jeans from 10c up Pure Biass Pius, 5c paper Boulevarde Felt Skirt* as low ss 75c And other goods at oorrespoudiug figures. Don't forget the place. No 279 Broad street, corner Campbell and Broad, next door below the well known hardware store of Uessrs, ft',,iop. Brown A Cos. PALMER HOUSE ft • <?GO Broad &t M Augusta, Ga. Baird $2 00 D y Single Meals 50 Cents. Mrs. S. J. PALMER) Proprietress' H, D, mift.iv, tl rk, MIND READING,PSYCH M NCY.FASC mation.S iui Charming, Mesmerism, AND MARRIAGE GUIDE, showing how eith er scx msy fascinate euil gain the love and affection of any person they choose instantly. 4UO pages. By mail 50 oeoU. HUNT & GO., 139 south, 7th at, Philadelphia Set* fork Illustrated Weekly FINE CU ROMOS. I HAVE AN ACENCY rOK THE NEW IOKK ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY! a .large and interesting paper, wliieh U Worth g 150 per annum, and the choice of one qf tbrpe of the liutat specitqone of ti)e-CRBORIC AKT ex font i hare them on exhibition at my office, and shall be glad to await on those who may feel disposed to subscribe and get one of thesq elegqnt premiame U f DUNCAN, MD - JEFFERSON COUNTY-• * Whereas, Sarah J. Roberts, applies for Letters of Administration on the Estate of John L. Roberts, deceased' These are therefore to cite and admonish ail persons interested tJ be andwppaer at my office ou the First Honda/ in January nsxt, to show cause, jf any they can, why said letter* should not bs granted. N. DJLHL. Ord'y. Nov. ?sth, 187$ rT UNQ JO fIgNT. Will be reutedt hq Fjret Tuesday ia Decem ber foy th. ypath I 7A,"l hq nUirided interest of AVank Na*worthy, minor: oonuruing Are hundred Meres iu a plantation, four mi'e* east of LoW|f?iU : H L kUKPHY, guardian. ' yoii wish lo fliul iHe BfcST JJkHGEST & CHEAPEST aasoitiqem of (food* f Do y,ou wish to tywhe money fy saving iflprjfies t P,9 yon wish to huy where goods are sold at bottom prices, t Do you wish to find the place wtieie tho stock of gods Has been greatly increased in quantity and variety f Do* you wish tq trade wjth the merchants whosp grrqfesj; efforts are rmr>lqyed to purchase goods in the ymkeis, and who alio giye their cqstoip rs the jpeqefit of the saiqe f Then go to WaßttEH. EfIYS A•.. 6, H. AUEMSUART, f-r Doors, Sashes, Blinds, Sa h Doors, Houldings. FAIPH OILS, Leads, etc. 403NT9 yOR Fairbanks Standard SOAIISISe 182 and 184 Bay Street, SA VANN AH, - - GEORGIA wtsmber 30, 1875. Cm 014 Established Oil ft Paint House, No. 6, Whitaker Street, SAVANNAS, GSORQIA. Burning Lubricating and Paint OILS; English and American WHITE LEAD. Freuch and American ZINC WHITE COLQKii Dai AND IN OIL* * Brushes. Window Glass. PUTTY, VARNISHES, TURPENTINE. Mixed Paints, all Colors and Shades. SEF.OSENS OIL TA£S. WEST ife SON’S KEROSENE AND ALADDIN Oil, (The best iu use.) JOHN OUTER, Whitaker Stcorner Bay Lane. September 30. 1875 3 s B LTiMOKII Eye anil Ear Institute NOSJFRiNKLINST.BtL’T. Julian J. Chisholm, M. D., Professor of Eye and Ear diseases in the University of Maryland, Surgeon in charge. This institution is tbo oughly organised and fitted up with every convenience for ihe treat ment of Eye and Ear diseases. iy For fun her information, apply to the aknre <jbl Q s deyat home. Agent- wanted. Outfit tjP-L/V and terms free. TRUE A CO , Augusta. fn dhnA per day at home. Samples worth 91 tree. Sriasos it Cos Portland, Maine. Shun Drug: Poisons. MEDICINE RENDERED USELESS! voLfA’s electro belts and bands are endoraed by the most eminent physican in the world tor the cure of rheumatism, ueau ralgia. liver complaint, dyspepria. kidney die eats, aches, pains, nervous disorpers, fils, fe male complaints, nervous end general debility, and other chronic diseases of the chest- head', liver, stomach, kidneys and blood, Book with full particulars free by Volta Beot Cos, CIN.O. wanttd Address Marion Supply Cos., Marion.O MARYLAND EYE AND EAR I sf. 66 N. CiLai LES St. Baltimore, M. D. UEOKUE RLULING, M. D„ lata Prof, of Eye |nd Ear surgery in the Washington Umver-ty, surgeon in charge The large handsome residence or the late CnaKLis L'sßholl has been fitted up with all the improvements adopted in the latest schools or KUHor*. tur the special treatment ol this class of uiseases. Apply by letter to* (JEGItaE RUELING, M. D., JJurgeon m charge. Puces* eluced iwniT. It costs less, and wfll out wear the best)of any . S} I !*' . New price list aud sample card to AVbBILL OHEUiUSL PONT CO. BURLINO SLIP NEW YORK, OR 112 EAST RIVB ST., CLEVELAND, O. ADVERTISER’S GAZBTTtf. „,4 Jour al of Information for Adve.tisers- Edition, B.OOU copies- Published weekly. Terms, $2 per annum, in advance. Fire specimen copies (diAerent dates) to one addresi for 85 Cts Office No. 41 Park Row, New York. GEO- T. ROWELL A CO, Editor and Publishers WEEK guaranted to Male and Female Agents, in their locality. ■B m M NOTHING to try it. Par W m m ticnlarsFree. P. O VICKERY 4 CO„ Augusta, Me. Tftree Months Trial, 30 ets VOLUME XII. The Warrenton Clipper, yf • J. HAM, Editor and Proprietor. A paper for the Home Circle—takes any where on sight—and Whose influence and eir culation is not bounded by local limit* . er*oclo * Two Ceut -stump for e specimen eeftyi Advertisements inserted on liberal term*. publish qnly -the very Bast of the be t. Nothing heavy or dull ever admitted to oqreplnms. AJdr.gs, THE CLIPPER Warr.men, (j a W W ARP MJfIAR? Fall n*y Goodft. JAJIEB A m AT ft CO., 194 A 194 Brood Street Augusta# Georgia. Y/17 CULD Respectfully inform Ito citizans of Jefferson and eoutixnous Coantias. that the If are now rreaiTin* the pnifaat aud Best Asserted Stuck of . r , STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODfc^ Suitable foi Fall and Wintar ass, that baa over been la Angnata. I With an active experienee of over thirty yeers in the business, harior boueht at the re..-* Auetjou and Sl.aghurin, Me. of the Latest House, in Mew “ f Goods exclusively for CiSil, ti|yp |re enabled offer morp 1 SUBSTANTIAL BARGAINS f Than was ovar aoau in tj)ia even when wa, 4 cei)U Pir a 9 d G)d ft* currency **f. .cojiiiry• Call and examine tneir Stock and prices end CONVINCE YOURSELVES of tho fact that they are aemoff poods cheaper than they were aver before offered in Asraiu. f. Fnhy aware that no lasting benefit can bo derived from malting exaggerated statements ip Advertising, it is with the most implicit confidence iu their ability to do all they daim iu tUb above advertisement that they invite the attention of nil buyers of Dry Goods. „ . 71115 . JAUtKS A. GRAY & CO.'fi October 7, J 475. 3pi 1 1 NEW GOODS, LOW PRICES, At Wholesale and Retail. 4 AC. S. XBAISr Goodrifhe* Old Stand, Broad Street, . - - Augusta, Georgia. rpHE CITIZENS of Jefferson and adjoining counUes are respectfully invited to call rnf L examine my Largennd well selerted Stock of new f FALL AND WINTER DDY GOODS u“ r •*> a r * nd of ,ho >““ “and heat atyUa, and m? rUlthS inm IaQW ii no j Home id the South. . T^ f B BRINBON of JefForton eoqnty bti boon tecured, and rnrue* b ,§ friend* to e*U *nd •** him when they anything in the Ory Goods Liue. will take especial pittas \n Ailing any ordor* that may bo tent him. hsk to cobt&uc* IPy ®Wi it to call nod examine my goods and price*. 001 7 8m M. S. KEAN. C. V. WALKER, hr £ mm mu, WSOLSSALS AND R37AIL FURNITURE DEALER. 317, 319 and 321 Broad St., * - Augusta, Ga. AUCTION HOUSE. 317, FURNITURE ROOMS, 319 and 321, A FEW DOORS ABOVE PLANTERS HOTEL, ta amuse Mack tf beaut fit FUKNtiUiiK suite ted from (be best Factories, - aat and West GO* D ALL FiUSH, Pill ES WARRANTED TO PLEASE- September 30, 1875. 3m. Clothing! Clothing!! HATS AND FURNISHING GOODS. THE ATTENTION of my friends and buyers general! is called to Ihs large and well stl lected stock of the above goods, which has just been received and will be .old at Prices to Suit the Times. Give my a call, gatialactfon guaranteed. Respectfully, J. C. LEE, n. s. croßD^nsr, *®P 30 3m 238, Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA. Furniture for Everybody! NEW STYLESt NEW PRICES: jr. x. i nsr :□ s .a. it , selling at price* CHEAPER tb*u *ver b*for# offered in this city. Complete Bed Boom Hot* *t from S9O 00 to $375 OO per Set. PARLOR AND DINING ROOM TETS, Of every Style and Price. BEADSTEADS, WARDROBES, BUREAUS, WASH STANDS and CHAIRS. In full Seta or by the single piece. Mtis Hair, tfttton and Spring Matrasses. In fact I hav* *v*rything that can be found in a first-class FURNITURE establishment, aud I defy any market in the Htate to compete with me in PKiuES. I have on hand a Very large stock of common BED STEADS to which I invito the attention o the Trade. I will sell them a*cheap (freight added) as they can be bought in either thf Northern or Western market*. 1 alee keep e full e ook of Clooke rad Loosing Glasses on hand ep 30 3m J. LINDSAY, Savannah, Ga. brown &c garm, UAITVTAOTUIMO AKB DSAI.IRB IN BOOTS AHO OES * ?0R :M:B3lsr ’ WOMEN AITS CHILRDEN. HalWMi BWns i Sole, aad Ename Leather* always an hand. Pine hd-*tiched BooU for only RIO. W* pay the highest eneh prise for Bide* and Fan. Wa will duplioata any bill ia our iina boughtin Savannah Aucusta or Maoon, and we guarantee all eur work to giva satisfaction Harness, Buddies, Beets and Bhoes Repaired at abort notica. The celebrated Vacium Oil Blacking. for preeerriag batabaa. boots and shorn al ways aa hand. Giva he a trial Louiiviljb, Oa. SepfoibW li.UTf. 3m A KEITH. ri&SS&Sk mMISZwJ BMB A !ii HARNESS, MIDLIS. bridles,, OOLLSRS, ■WHIPS, HOBBS, SLA2TZBTS, Jkc,, &e.