The News and farmer. (Louisville, Ga.) 1875-1967, December 02, 1875, Image 2

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Retire anir Jfanner. ROBERTS & BOYD, ~X>. . W Hi) AZXA KAj^XCIIk.. DFUFMHFii ;>, BANGING AND DISHONESTY. The ohureli has for a long time grafleel iniquities by an exceedingly perverse stan larJ. As an instance of this i can recall the fact that there have been more sermons and tracts against (lanc ing, and car.l-playing and theatre-going, than against slau lor, falsehood an l de faulting. We have strained at gnats and swallowed camels. The young be liever, full of life, lias boon soured by the acidulated criticisms of men who, utterly hard in business, ready to take the pound of flesh if the law will allow, are not only not r ■■•bake 1 for their mean ness, but are held in reverence. Now, there is no true Christian who ought not to deplore uLi excess in seen ring amusement, and it is not our inten tion to delend the lives of many pleas ure-seeking professed Christians. The only no:at I would make is that these questions are not the great, the vital ones, an 1 there is need of a moral tonic from the pulpit to make man feel the meaness of lying. And I take courage in th ■ thought that the churches are coining into more sound views in this direction : that men who have tailed two or throe t imes, pay in 1 only a * w cents on the dollar and living in greater comfort than their creditors, are t-c bes •onndr d<; that lie who insists upon e vhorliitant profits or interests, because he is in a [xtsition to demand them, is an extortioner; that men or women who come to church with clothe ? unpaid tor, or move in a circle beyond their moans, or toll unfounded stories for their neighbors, steal the af fection; <).'• those who belong to others, are s i. iking hypo ad !,.„*•, however many prayers they may (.'fur, or catechisms t:t"V may ivp .t . —il itHhinjtun Gazr.ttc. 1 ha above we clip from an exchange, an 1 iv.) tiling that it embraces ami sets forth a great truth, aa i that it is point edly correct when it Says that there are evils that in their magnitude loom up to terrible proportions, ghostly in their ap ;■ mr .so •■..'••ii Bti ippe 1 or' the habili ment# oi hypo rif.i *al covering, wliiclt are sometimes hold as (.ommeudable. We 'i) think th it it i; wrong for Christ ians to mix in worldly amu-totn silts that i r • exc issive, and i r • not m iral in non > o! their feat.tr -s. and in none of their forms, either s icially or otherwise. It. is not a wh.it more harm in our opinion to lance, than it is toplay ‘mil sister ]>hebe, or, "jay bu* t siltin’ on n s ring in' limb.” if the associ g.ion is not, corrupt,inand all me 1 ml ladies should be se hilously gut : h-1 ;l | out that jiartictilar, no t •m/ > i"y iy' ■uf conside ration. We don't, tlrnk n /rally or rc ig ious!y. ~i an k,ii lof ainmu c nents are to be tolerated m mo lera'iou by ehrist ;n- . that dan ng is a crying, or even a •in • oil : only in. omu,. ii as a member may vi ■in . i. church g(iveru !: ::! by it,. \\ •• do not liol 1 with this, but then il iin* ci:nrcli t,n kivt cognizance ot t .is social ■)■< ’,ir. sm, should they overlook grosser improprieties, some of wliich are in mtioned above, some of winch are ye! to 1; i muntionc 1, such as tin* imbibing too Ireoly ot i itoxioating drinks, or even it not too freely in t>n'>— i a", thus sett ing an example to the you me that earnin' be counteracted by a con tinimuoe of such conduct, and it. may he to the permanent injury of those that are connected, or otherwis- 1 would be y.i'.ithe church. Wed 'him. the keep ing- ot t e stimulant by church members, becoming them (.fives, the c./’''. instruments oi inn,ry to a groat many outsidi an I:: great many insid ers* too. Now to say nothing of unguarded language, and a number of improprie ties that pass by as ‘'matters of moon shine,’' that, arc in comparison to dap dng like the mountain to the. mole hill ; these things in the make up of deleteri ous influence, bad examples and absolute violations that are.*from any point of argument obliged to be sinful: (to say nothing of inward twitching), o'.’.'dit not to ho overlook,' 1 entireiv, and as wo do not want to bo understood as oxen 4:11,1 0./7 k>>ui of inri oriv, ivo •will eoncludo by say.ing (tint we hope that, for the growth and on | of the church everywhere, that ro/ynootee will h given to a!! violations wherever an I whenever they may expect* I OoNTltimn I;!. I axo tii r n rxs /'r r rot to x. Stei.i.avili.k. Ca. Mi-'-ms. Imhtous :—-It has been seen, n l . 1 . It for a ion ; time by our farmer s, that sooner or later A REGULAR BATTLE would have to bo fought in this section, for Jirea I, and in eat to go with it. Ac tive operation i have commenced, but it is rattier too soon to say which si 1 ■ will gai 1 the victory, iam fully pursuit ie I however, that tilts is no Joe Morris af tair, which will en 1 in smoke, leaving no more trace oi its existence to guide the future historian, than the flitting shadow of a 1 owl on a moonlight night; lor this move is HEAPED BY WHITE VIEX, who are determined to throw off the yoke of oppression, if cotton goes to eight cents a pound. (lathering the short crop of cotton, has been no seri ous obs' iV 4 to sowing grain, the weath er lias been exactly right, and our farmers for one time, have acted in no cor lance with the dictates <jf‘ l prudence and common sense, by putting in full crop i of wheat and oats on goo:l hnul. Should the rext year prove to be a fa vorable 013 for small grain, such an impetus will have been given U> brea I aid meat raising, that we may expect to witness at no distant day, a complete REVOLUTION, ii the system of farming, which will prevail in this country until the owner of broad acres will scarcely be able after “paying opt” at the end of the year, to buy enough powder to fire a salute on Christmas Eve. Every argument lias long ago been exhausted to induce our farmers to forsake the old beaten track, every step of which is marked by the mouldering fragments of broken fortunes, and wet with the tears of 111H113’ bitter disappointments, seem ingly to no purpose, but necessity, that mother of many other things besides invention, has at last forced them to make A RADICAL change in the usual programme, and they are so well pleased with them selves about it, that the effect is visible. A spirit of cheerfulness has taken the place of that “sct-up-all-last-night” kind of a look, which generally follows a shoit crop and low prices, and the time once spent in writing “guano cortifi c ites,” is now devoted to “hog and hom iny'’ talk with each other. It would.do your e litorial hearts good, to see the preparation, that have been and are vet being male to keep the wolf from the door. IFhile a great many of our small farmers, have been in the habit of rais ing more or less grain every year, our largest planters, who have hitherto al most entirely neglected this crop, are trying to sow enough this season to make up for lost time. I know one who lias six hundred acres in wheat and oats, all dragged, brushed and harrowed in the inost ap proved style, and now showing beauti fully above ground. He has also en closed for his 110ns a goo l pasture, in which t hey have free access to water, woods, orchards and lyoiii/i.? vn hr s’udh-rs, where they are regularly fed by a careful hand, hired expres i yfor t his purpose. 11 is stock ; comprises some fine specimens of the Berkshire and Neapolitan, as well as | the native breeds, and all are in splcn i did order. This man takes the News j ii Fu’.mku. From the difficulty of procuring good seed, and the heavy labor necessary in preparing so milch land, it might be inferred that the work had been done in a slovenly manner, and that a great deal of light inferior grain ha 1 been ! used in planting; but I have noticed that the work of preparation has been very thorough for Southern farmers, and tiiat the best varieties of wheat and uits have been purchased without re gar 1 to price. Our spike-nose shouts are receiving ‘,-narke i attention,’ and have improved wonderfully from a short stay in the pcafiilds. It is refreshing to hear a regular cotton-plant ing, meal-buying, cora-huving. debt-ridden farmer trying to call bogs as if it w. 13 no new thino but I glory in his spunk. It lias bee 1 said, that death an 1 taxes are unavoidable, and sure enough the Collector has visited us, the third an 1 last time, an 1 I must say that lie ili'l his best to render his presence agreeable, by keeping up a continual smile. We have had enough cool weath er to infuse a spirit, of activity into the sportsman, and The shrill toot, toot, of the hunter’s horn. Disturbs the calm of the early morn ; While the supple fox with swift rebound Marks time to the notes of the long eare 1 hound. ■I The partridge, clad in his brown-speck led suit, His craw full of peas, is ready to shoot; i And the green-head drake in all his I 11 repeating the same old. old story. j The coon and the posum as in days of yore | Make tracks nocturnal to the frog pond shore, I Unconscious that the sable hunter's dog Has struck a trail upon a poplar log. Timotiiv Linkix\v a■rt •: i : STATE NEWS SUMMARY. Sn:rlorsvi!l is ornamenting her ceme tery with shade trees. Sandersville wants n'tisfyid Fair next year, what say the sister counties. There was a negro man lty th*. nan;e of Jordan Chambers, assassinated by unknown parties in Washington county, on E. J. Mayo's place, lie was a wit ness lor tint Statu in the late insurrec tionary trials. I hey have had a Centennial Tea Tarty in Atlanta, at a Rhode Island ■table, find several gentiemeu from An gust.-i ngd other places contributed to it. Fat Walsh and James Gray, show ered in, among other tilings, - a beauti ful fan, and several elegantly bound poems of Moore, Jtvron, & \ Miss Bertha Peek presided. ,She has no idea of hi ling her light under a bushel. Ho i John Collins is now spoken of in the list of prospective Governors. Whi next;' Gem Colquitt had better keep his lamp burning. Findley of the Gainesville Southron, i/rmt.s elorpi :mt ovir a possum parade, which, by the way, is somethin new, and he exhausts Webster's Unabridged dic tionary, telling in touching language, how they peaceful preainbiiiate.l 'by his door, hung to a poplar pole. Home e liters can get enthusiastic over a dead mule or a stale joke, but this possum enthusiasm over awes us. Cover lor Smith has offered a reward of live hundred dollars fyr the parties who burned a gin house in Houston county on the 2otn of November. It belonge 1 to Smoake and Duncan. liro. Woo l is on track ofacollard hea l four feet, and a half in diameter we hope ho will free it. Corn in Dalton is selling at 35 and 40 cent,? per bushel, 40 ctC is the ruling price. In Atlanta, Warrenton. Macon, and other pliatfs in the State, shocks of an other earthquake has been left precepti bly. Considerable alarpi was creatodin some localities. Mr. Moses Green, in Burke county, came to his death a few nights ago, by falling aecross a sharp chicken epop in his yard. We suppose in the dark he stumbled, and was unable to avoid the obstacle that caused his death. The Grand Jury of Greeuo county, asked the representatives to put a tax on dogs of one dollar per head, and for every pistol in the county, five dol lars. The new Atlanta hotel, called the Ma khain House, contains 107 sleeping rooms, 2 miles of piping, 14,000 feet of sewerage drains,and other convenieueies to boot. In Ilart comity when an editor calls they give him a hat or something of the kind. We wish the practice would ex tend down this way. Two negroes after setting some stores on fire in Lumpkin the other day, were found in the woods dividing their stolen merchandise. The LaGrange Reporter says, that Joseph Rutledge, who is fanning for 1 Col. E. A. I'Tost, has raised some re ! markable corn. Out of each joint grows a well developed car, not a nubbin. The exploring expedition has killed an alligator 11 feet 8 iuolie3 long, and have sent it to the State Gelogical office in Atlanta. The roughs of Macon have left off burglarizing, and are now incendiariz ing. The editor of the Darien Gazette* ventures this assertion, that there has been more building done in that city this year than any other in Georgia,and includes without fear of contradiction, the whole South, lie’s certainly has his sights raised. Grubbs of the Gazette, is making in" quiries about a Johnson county belle* ami lEilkiuson county girl. He must have feminine fever or love on the brain. [contributed, j RAISING HOGS. Messrs. Editors : — J propose to give you my experience on raising fattening hogs. I put them up the first of April and made a pen with good sized poles, notched well down in eacli corner of the pen, and se‘ large forks On the outside, and then put a good cover over the pen. in this pen I put up several small shouts looking very badly. I feed the shouts once a day with one pound of shell corn to each hog, scatterd over the pen. About dusk 1 also give the shouts the slops, from the kitchen, once a day, and occasionally I gather vege tables from the •garden—parsley, etc., and give them. I have some nice shouts but they are not fat; I also have a pan of good manure. This is the best and fastest way to raise manure I know of. 1 think a pen 12 feet square is long enough for six shouts, and as the pan is being filled with manure, raise it with pole (. One pound of corn per day for each, hog is not enough. My shoal s are very nice, and are in good order, but nothing like fat. 1 think to give the shouts one pound in the morning and one at night, with the slops and vegetables, will not only raise the hogs, but fatten them ready to kill. 1 believe with the present stale of things this is the best and cheapest way to raise our meat. If the pen is properly attended to through the year, aud kept well littered with straw and leaves, six shouts will make the pen l'rotn four to five feet deep in ma nure. Warm weather is the time to put hogs in good order, and fatten them be fore winter. It takes less feed. The colder the weatiier the more it takes to fatten hogs. I hope the mem bers of the Louisville Grange will try Hi i experiment by raising hogs in pens another year, and give the result in the News & Farmer. Ghamohi:. THE HcLEODS. RenvuikuhUf II it: 1 nry of thr Family. "The Quitman Reporter chronicles the sa l death of a young man named Samu el McLeod. lie was sitting on the railroad track, stupefied by drink. The cowcatcher struck him and carried him a short distance, when he fell to one side and was caught under the wheels and so horribly mangled, his friends could scarcely recognize him. He was the last of seven sons. At the breaking out of the late war between the states this was probably one of the largest families to be found anywhere in this section—numbering seven boys and five girls—none of whom were married. Among the first volunteer companies, the three oldest boys enlisted arid went to the front. In the course of a year or two the next oldest Reached the re quired age, and joined the army. When the Southern armies surrendered, there was not one of them left to return to their once happy home. Thus had these aged parents seen the lives of their first five s >ns sacrificed, one by one, in vain upon the alar of their country. They had still two sons left, who, at the Close of the war were small boys. Grad ually they grew into manhood, and in the latter part of 1873, the youngest of these was killed in a difficulty in SWaynesboro, T,manual county. Notice. —All teachers of Public Schools in Jefferson county must hand in their reports by the 10th of Dec., or they will receive no benefit from the School Fund. I). G. PHILLIPS, Nov 10th, 1875. C. S. C JEFFEHSONRIFLEMEN. You and all of yon, are ordered to he and appear at your Drill Ground on Friday, Dec. 3d, promptly at 10 o’clock, a. m. Kvcry man must he in attendance, Imporant. By order of (’apt. J. 11. Polhill, J, W. Lyon, O. S. wk ff ■ 8)L • fx- 1 • "'it 'snvari ||A^r*a!A yu wr CfcoJ ■dlupinj. V. ui Udju* 41 C G c, ghay & co, Y & C o Jiulliou and -Fancy J)r css Fringes in al! the new shades and la est styles, at C. Gray & Co.’s u.:d Ten cases of /Leiitucky Jeans, very cheap at letail. Lb-rai terms lo the trade. C. Gray 4' Co’s. j_ Fine lie d /bankets at very low prices, gt C. Gray cO Co’s, 200 boxes of New Jinehings, 200 dozen of JZuches at 50c. per tloxt n. 10 pieces ol no w /lack Cashmere’ 5 [ iec s fi.m Ji nick Silk, at (j• Gray tfr Co*s, 100 pieces lmeZ/eavy Cnssimeies’ raiigieg f ora 50c, to 5 dollars per yard. €. GRAY & COS. l 9 4 B P 19 4 DPO AD ST 195 A D 5 n a* ■ 9 i. > _ r Nr w Ycrk IHustrfited Weekly FINE CLIAOMO S. I IIWB AN AGENCY FOR THE NEW StOEK ILLUSTE >TEO WEEKLY, a large and iuterostixior p ;l p e r, which is w .rth % i f>o p -r aiiuuin, and tho ehoice of one of three of th. tinoat ipociinons of the CHROMIO Al*T*x taut I have them on exhibition at my oilice, iud sha.il ho glail to await on tlio.se who may j ;el disposed to stibscrioe and pet. one of these elegant premiums ’ P DUA’CAN, &1 D Mind reading.psych m ncy,fasc matioruS )ui Charming, Mesmerism, AND MARRIAGE GUIDE, showing how cith er sex may fascinate and gain the love and affection of any person they ehno.se instantly. 400 pages. Ity mail 50 cents. HUM' & GO., 139 sodth, 7th st., Philadelphia Prices eJiiC.d OP TUB 1•„ costs less, and will oufc wear the bestjof any other New price list, and sample card to AVtitiUi cjhkm c*i. p %int co. HURLING SLIP NENV YORK, OR 132 EAST RIVE ST., CLEVELAND, O. Slims Hnisr Poisons. MEDICINE RENDERED USELESS! VOLTA’S ELLCTHO BtLTS and BANDS are endorsed by the most, eminent physical! in tin* world tor the cure of rheumatism, neau lalgia liver complaint, ihspcpiit, kidney dis ease, aches, pains, nervous disorders, fits, fe male complaints, nervous end general debi iiy, and other chronic diseases of the chest he id, liver, stomach, kidneys and blood, Book with lull particulars free by Volta Bedt C o , Cin.O, VVJSEIv guarantee! to Male and female Agents, in their leuulity. .Jvfcs S m Costs NOTHING to try it. Par B 3 titulars Free. P, O VICKERY ij- Cos., Augusta, Me, BALTiMORB Ejc and liar Institute MO 55 T'K \NKIjIN ST. BA L’ A'- .1 ULTAN ,1. Chisholm, M. I)., Professor of Kye and Kar diseases in the University of Maryland, Surgeon in charge. This institution is thuoughly organleej and lilted up with every convenience for die treu,- incut ot Eye and liar diseases. u.V J For farther information, apply to the above MA R V L K ND EYE AND E^TW. 06 N. Chai.les St, Baltimokk, M. D., Gfc'OKGE It RULING, M. f)., late Prof.' of Eye nj t'. ir surgery in the Washington Ukiver.tr, surgeon in charge The largo handsome residence ol' the late Cnsltuis L,\itKu|.i. has been fitted up with all the improvement* adopted in the latest scliooi,s of H'kotk, U r tha special treatment 01 this class ordiseases. Apply by loiter to" OEGRGE KUKLLNG, M. D., Surgeon in charge, J jIY per day. business lionom ;V 'PLi U4>IU pie iuli hiesntive. Ane-h Address Marion SnpplyCo., Marion,O Mti'lfK f pilE shop of I L Kobcfts, dec'll, are now 1 open, and all parties wanting anything in the Blacksmith or Wood work line, will ph a-e givu uio a trial All work warranted lo give satisfaction P PEOHEULS 1860 E-STJ BUJSlti:f> iB6O J. P, WEATHERSBEJE, 4A7IIOLEH-iLE and retail dsaler in Firclf;* v find pameetic Dry CJoods, Augusta, Ua'i lyi3 jint Itgurnad fiom New fork with a full Iriie of Fall auJ Winter lioods, which he in of faring at prices in keeping with the times. In order to reduce his uuusually heavy stock lie cails attention to the following quotations. 4*4 Toft Finiash Bleaching 100 5-4 Round Thread sea Island, 10c Ca icoes from (ij to Hlc All Wool Red Flannels, 20c Canton Flannels 10 and ffijc Double Wicfth Waterproof (roods, 75 c Bleached IJose, 8,40 and 10£c Large W hits Bordered Handkerchiefs, 5c Jve.littlcky Jeans from 10c up Bure Brass Pins, 5c paper Boulevarde Felt Skirts as low as 75c And oilier goods at corresponding figures. Don't forget the place. No 27!) Broad street, corner Campbell and Broad, next door below iho well known hardware stare of ilossiv, Hrown & Cos. 0. 11. RHEMSIIART, O/ ./L/. K /.V Doors, Sashes, Blinds, Sa h Doors, Mouldings. ALSO PAINTS, OILS, LEADS, etc. AGE2TTS POP. - • ’ ’ " ■ *1 Fairbanks Standard SCALES. 182 and 184 Ray Sired, SA VANN All, - - GEORGIA Seteinber 30, IS?S. Cm Old lhstnl>lilicd Oil&Pdint Mouse, No. 5, li' hit alter Sired, SAVANNAH, G2OP.QIJL Burning Lubricating and Paint OILS; Englifch and American WHITE LEAD. French and American ZINC WHITE, 10L0RS DAY 2ND IN OIL- Brushes* WLcU w Gla?-s> PUTTV, VARNISHES, TURPENTINE. Mixtd Paints, all Colors and Shades TANARUS" "f* T? r“*. * rs MM m* WN' M*} ■*< W<u ma U m,tLt 1 1 i_aa m 2 k west & son’is KEROSENE AND ALADDIN OIL, (The best in use.) JOHN OLIVKES., W hitaker St, corner Baj* Lane. September JO 1H75 3. ADVtRTISER’n'gXzETtV. ~~ A Jmtr ai of Information for Adve-tisers* Edition, IMHM> copies- Published weekly. Terms, jnr u'liiimt. in advance. Five sp ciuienropids (diftjreut dates) fo one address for *<-\> cts Office No. 41 lark Row, New York GEO. I*. ROWELL <Xr CO, Editor and Publishers Thri e IVlonihs IVi and. 33 cH VOLUME XII. TheWarrenton Clipper, H 4V, J. 11AM, Editor and Proprietor. A paper for th** Home Ciicle—takes any where on sight—and whose influence and cir culation is no: hounded by local limits . i3/ Enulo e Two Cent stamp for a specimen coo/. 'cr J Advertisements inserted on liberal terms. LtrWe publish only “the very B -et of the be-t-’’ Nothing heavy or dull ever admitted to oar colums. Addr.ss, THE CLIPPER Wamnton, Ga “A Repository of Fashion, Fleas tru and Instruction.” HARPE R B Z\ R , at YTv a m nm 1 U JLI U b JL iIA 1 Xi J ) Notices of the Press. 1 lie Bazar is edited with a combinat ion of triet and talent that we se'uoin tiad iu auy journal; aud the journal itseff is the organ of the great world ot fashion.— Boston Travilcr. The Bazar commends its.-lf to every niem an i trustworthy as a fashion guide, its stones and es.savi, its poetry and squibs, are all iu vig orating to the uiiud.— Chicago Evening Journal. Tiiiuis. TOSTAGE FREE TO ALL SUBSCRIBERS IX TIIE UNITED STATES. ITakpkr's Bazib, one year $4 00 00 sncludes payment of U. S. postage by the publishers. Subscription to Harper's Mugnninc, Weekly and Bazar, in one ddHhss for on<e gear, $lO 00; or, two of Harper's Berio (lit ala, to one address fur one year. $ 7 00: postage Jn e • An liztra Copy of cither the Magazine. Week ly or Bazar null he snpplied gratis for every Club of Five Subscribers at $ 1 00 each , in one. remit lance ; or, Six Copies for S'JO 00, without extra copy, postage free, Back J\ umbers eau be supplied at any time. The Annual Volumes of Harper's Bazar, in neat cloth binding, wid be sent b,- express tree of expense, lor #7 (() often. A complete set Comprising Bight Volumes, sent, on receipt of cash at tiie ra:e of $5 ‘25 per vol.j freight at tx pense of purchaser. l*r miiietattention will be given in Harper ’ Bazar to such illustrations of the Centennial ln'ernMional Exposition as tAay be peculiarly appropiiut to its columns. Newspapers are. not to copy this advertsement without the express order 0] Harper <j* Brothers , Address liAIU'KU & BROTH EKt; N. V. PALMi;it HOUSE SCO Bioid St., Augusta, Gu Board $2 00 P r D y Single Meals 50 Cents. Mrs, S. J. PALMER, Proprietress* n. J. hYaufcY, irk, LIN'D TO KENT. Will he reuledt lie First Tuesday iu Decem ber for tbw yeaWr 1 7(1, tlio undivided interest of Frank Nasworthy, minor; containing liva liuodred acres in a plantation, four m i os east of Uouisville. II I. MURpIIY, (j,i aril inn, / FAIN TS, OIL, ETC, ;' TfTfn A T Y L 0000 ERRRR ”” SBSSS t AA Y YL OORR ”S T AA Y Y L O ORR SSSSS AA A A Y Y I. O o IIRRRR S ' -<?• AA YLOORR S T A A Y " LLLLL 0000 R R SSSSS PAIN r AND OIL DEPOT, NO 3 BOLL ST., OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. W POLBSALE ANDBiBTAIL. LDBiICATiNff 0 PAINT OILS* BURKING OI'I SP3OIALTI3S. LOWEST MARKET PRICES, Kerosene and Ilian Test Bußkt&a Oils. Mixed Paints, Ready for Immedi ate Use. Call and Catty’ abb Prices, C. Gilt <iG TAYLOR, t- . im 3 BULL STREET, OPPOSITE POST OFFICE. dec 2d-6m SAVANNAH, GA, AT WHOLES ALE. I boots. Shoes, Hats, Ktv a.W. <Sc CB-Y 141 Congress St. Savannah Ga W OULD RESPEGITOLLY INVI IE TIIE ATI ENTICIN' OF COUNTRY AND CITY Me reliant* to their usual Comple stock in LADIES TRIMMED HATS. MEN and BOPS BLACK WOOL IIATS, MEN and BOY’S BOOTS and SHOES. INFANTS FANCY MOROCCO BOOTS, MISSES PEG’D and MACHIFE SEWED SHOES, CHILDRENS PEG’S, and COPPER TIPPED BUFF BOOTS, WOMEN’S PEGGED and MACHINE SEWED SHOES, Orders entrusted to us will receive prompt and careful attention. 6m. \E W AND ELEGANT Fall D**y Goods, JAMES A. GRAY & CO. ) * 194 a 196 Broad Street Augusta, Georgia. Respectfully inform the citizens of Jefferson and contiguous Counties, that they ff are now receiving the Largest and Best Assorted Stock of STAPLE AND FANCY DRY GOODS, Suitable foi Fall and Winter use, that has ever been in Augusta. U iih an active u*i><ienee of over thi-ry years in the busings, having bought at the reer-nt SO BST ANTI A), BARGAINS 'I lmn was ever seen in Ibis Market, even, when Cotton was 4 cents per pound and Gold the cUi-reuey t ihe couniry. Call aud examine tlu ir Stock aid prices an.l CONVINCE YOURSELVES of the fact that tlu y are #>•* (?•,cheaper than (hey Were ever before oXrec’ in Aiwusta. FdIU aware Mmt. u.. In-ti.ig beneSt can he deriVcd from making exaggerated statements ill Auveitisiiu. >' is wuh the mosi impicit confidence in their ahil ty to and ■ all they claim in the uhove adverusemeut that they invite Iho atteuii/*n of all buyers ol Dry Uouds. oAMI’S A- GRAY & GO October 7, 1#75. 3m ‘ • ■■■ miVm—lauow——QMWWwrixuia nan ■■■ WOBBm 1 T i „ rrT | Mß ,„| ) - 1 At Wholesale sml Hetaii. 2A, s. jsz ;ni 3sr Goodrielics Old Stand, Broad Sired, - - - Augusta, Georgia, i ' I ‘ HE CIiIZEX.S of J/fl'rsoii and adjoining comities are re.*pectt'..lly invited to call an IN L examine my Large and weii sele'ted .Stock ol new FALL AND WINTER DDY GUO DS i&wuS ssr * nd ** - ~ Ihe services of Mr. E BEN ]J. BifINSON of JefT-raon county has been secured, and he invites his trtetids to call and see him when they wish anything in the Dry Goods Line. 11c will take especial pains iu tiling any orders that may be sent him. All 1 ask to convince any one, is to call and examine my goods and prices. 0 oct 7 3m - M. S. KEAN. —— r> Furniture for Everybody! YEW STYLES! YEW PRICES: 190 Broughton St - Savannah, Ga,/ i now have oik. ol the Finest sticks of Furniture ever offered iu this Market, which la” at from 11 P ” CC “ CHJiAJt>EK tllau ever before offered iu this city. Complete Bed Room Sets OO ,o $375 OO per Set. $ PyVRI.OII AND DINING GOOM TE’I'S, ( Of every Style an 1 Price. Jf BEADSTEADq WARDROBES, BUREAUS, WASH STANDS ;ind GHAUf “ In full Sets or by the single piece. * Moss, Hair, Mitlon and Spring Matrasses. In fact I have everything tiiat, can be f.tmd in n first-class FURNITURE establishment, a tu I defy any market iu the Stale to compete with me in PRICES. f R ‘ 1 have on hand a very large stock of common BED #TEADS to which I invito ihe attention V u the Trade. 1 will sel! them as cheap (freight added) as they can be bought in either t-hf Northern or Western maikets. 1 also keep a full sock Of Cloctu end Looaing Glasses on hand srp 30 3m J. HINDS AY, Savannah, Ga- BROWN <Sc KZE3XTH, MAircPAOsw.aß ak: dsalbeb in BOOTS AND SHOU^, POP. nviEisr, WOMEN AND ' GHILRDEN. #JJ . |/■ ' % Harness, Hip, Gull Skins, Sole, and Euamc ✓ • Leathers always on hand. Fine haud-stichod Loots for only $lO. We pay the highest cash prioe lor Hi Jos and Furs. We will duplicate any hill iu our lino bought in Suvanuah Augusta or Macon, and we guarantee all our work to give saiiafactWn Harness, Saddles, Hoots and Shoos Repaired at short tiotf£6. 'l’uo celebrated Vaiium Oil Blacking, for preserving harness, hoots and shoes always on hand. Give us a Hal. 1 misvillc, Cu. September 10,1875. 3m HKOIVN & KBIT IT- HARNESS,' miML B All AJ JU.E S 'OOIgLSRSr 7 ■wsirs, A D.O3ES3, BLANEDTO, * Arc , &c. >