The daily constitutionalist. (Augusta, Ga.) 185?-1875, August 04, 1875, Image 4

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THE CONSTITUTIONALIST WEDNESDAY, August 4, 1875. Index, to New Advertisements. The World’s Wonder—Most Natural Curiosities of the Age—At the Masonic Hall, August 12th, 13th and 14th. Personal—Dr. E. W. Harker has re turned. Now Goods for Fall at the One Price House - Henry L. A. Balk. To Rent—Apply to M. A. Stovall, No. 1 Warren Block. To Rent—Apply to A. Bleakley, Agent, 112 Broad street. Concord Grapes—Send to Jerry Shields, care of Dr. Brown, 189 Broad street. Wanted—A Good Baker—Apply at the Globe Hotel. THE WEATHE TO-DAY. Washington. August 4.1 A. M.—For the youth Atlantic and (iulf States, Tennessee and the Ohio Valley, clear or fair weather and rising temperature, with light south east to southwest winds and rising, fol lowed by falling barometer. Thermometer, August 3, 4:16 p. m. Augusta, Ga 86 I Mobile 87 Charleston, S. C.. 86 | Montgomery 82 Corsicana. Texas. 93 New Orleans, La.. 8/ Galveston, Tex... 92 i Norfolk, Va 77 lndianola 90 I Savannah, Ga 83 Jacksonville, Fla. 86 ! St. Marks 88 Wilmington, N. C. 75 1 Weather in the Cotton District, August 3, 7:16 a. m. Augusta Cloudy. | MontgoVy Clear. Charleston.. .Cloudy. Nashville —Cloudy. C ■rsicuua Clear. | New Orleans ...Clear. Galveston Fair. | Norfolk Clear. lndianola Clear. Savannah... .Cloudy. Jacksonville Fair. | Shreveport Fair. Knoxville. .. .Cloudy. | St. Marks. ...Cloudy. Lyn. burg ..Cloudy, i Vicksburg ....Cloudy. Memphis Fair. Wilmington-Cloudy. Mobile Clear, j Observations for Augusta, August 3. Time. B Xr m ‘^ rs^?r?“ sr Weather. m. 30:13 71 Cloudy. 2p. m. 29:07 . 85 Fair. 9p. m. 30:11_J. 76 Clear. Highest temperature, 87 degrees at 4 p m.; mean temperature, 77. Rainfall, .08 H. Bass ant, Observer. CITY TOPICS. Business continues dull. The thermometer yesterday after noon at the Signal Office was 86 degs. Cloudy aud sultry yesterday morn ing, with strong winds in the early part of the afternoou. The cotton market was quiet yester day. Receipts 7, aud sales 21 bales — very light business to report. The Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows of the State of Georgia meets at Athens on Wednesday next. It promises to be a large and interesting session. The spire of the new Christian Church, on the corner of Greene aud Mclntosh streets, is approaching com pletion, and the upper part of it pre sents a fine appearance as the scaffold ing is removed. Can’t something be done to have a correct standard of time in our city? The railroads are about 20 minutes ahead of the city clock, and travelers are very much annoyed thereby. Give us a correct time. Mr. Crosby, the old man who lately escaped from the Asylum at Milledge ville and was run over near Millen, was yesteiday returned to his former quar ters. in charge of Sergt. John Cartledge, who left on the morning train with his patient, on the Macon and Augusta R. R. Iu the Recorder’s Court yesterday a young man who didn’t act well toward the sexton of a church downtown was fined f 10. It is said that all persons who disturb public worship at the vari ous churches in the city will hereafter be arrested and brought before the Recorder and their names furnished to the press for publication. The Fire at Langley. The information given in our local columns yesterday regarding the fire at Langley, S. C. was, in the main, correct, but the amount of goods damaged was not so large as intima ted at the time we gave a description of the A Serenade. We received a handsome serenande last night from the band of colored mu sicians of which E. C. Graves is the leader. The music was very fine in deed, and the band made a great de parture from the stereotyped serenade music which has become so familiar of late. The members or this baud ap pear to belong to the most conservative class of colored men who are worthy of the confidence of their employers. The music furnished is the best we have heard within a long space of time. Pictured. A handsome large photograph of the delegates to the second annual conven tion of tho National Cotton Exchange, at White Sulphur Springs, Va., taken on the 21st of July, has been presented to the Augusta Exchange by the dele gates from Augusta, Messrs. M. P. Stovall, C. H. Phinizy and C. H. Wil mans. Mr. Harper B. Campbell, Assis tant Secretary of the Exchange, has had the picture placed in a neat rustic frame aud hung in a prominent place iu the rooms of the Exchange. Personal. Mr. George R. Sibley was in the city yesterday looking remarkably well after a short stay at the Indian Spring. Mr. Robert P. Sibley is in Augusta enjoying the pleasures of a visit to the home of his childhood. We were pleased to meet Monday Mr. Edwin E. Levy—formerly a com positor of the Constitutionalist office, and son of Judge Samuel Levy, our worthy Ordinary, who is located in Ma con, but is now on a visit of pleasure for a few days to his parents. Mr. Levy is so well pleased with our sister city of Macon that he declines to re main in Augusta. The Commissioners. The Commissioners appointed by Judge Snead, of tho County Court, to examine into the treatment of the county convicts at Hallahan’s brick yard, held their liith session yester day. when five ex-convicts were ex amined. The Commissioners will soon make up their report and publish it with the evidence. Called Home. A resident of this city, who is also an Arkansas planter, yesterday received a telegram asking him to return im mediately to his place on the Missis sippi, as a flood was inevitable and his presence was needed at once. The plantation owned by this gentleman is situated about 190 miles below Mem phis. This shows that the recent rains in the West have been quite extensive, and that a dangerous rise in the Father of Waters is imminent. That section of our country has suf fered extensively of late years, but we hope it will in this instance escape an other inundation. A Sad Event. We extract the following from a let ter from Effingham county, dated Au gust Ist: „ _ One of the young boys, George Foy, who occupied a prominent position at the Hepzibah Commencement, died yes terday afternoon of Typhoid Pneumo nia He was taken sick the day after he arrived at home-and thus early in years entered upon the life beyond To the grieved friends and relatives of the young man we tender our sympa thies. THE THIRD GEORGIA. THEIR RECEPTION AT PORTS MOUTH. Preliminary Glorification—Georgia and Virginia Embrace and Say Sweet Things to One Another. The programme for the reception of the Third Georgia’s surviving veterans was as follows : The firing of a national salute, upon the arrival of the train, at 7:15 o’clock, by the artillery corps of the Chambers Fire Company. At the depot the Georgians were received by the Old Dominion Guard Associa tion, Capt. Henry A. Allen; the Ports mouth Rifle Company Association, Capt. W. J. Wood; the Jackson Light Infantry, Capt. D. J. Turner, Jr.; ex- Confederate soldiers under command of Maj. Chas. R. McAlpine, of the Gist Virginia Regiment, and citizens gener ally. All in citizens’ dress were under the command of Col. Wm. White, late of the 14th Virginia Regiment, as Chief Marshal. The visitors were escort ed to Oxford Hall, where the wel come address was made by Hon. A. 8. Watts, Mayor of the city, followed by Capt John H. Gayle, of the late 16th Virginia Regiment; Capt. C. W. Mur daugh, late of the Gist Virginia Regi ment, and Col. D. J. Godwin, of the late 9th Virginia Regiment. Mayor Watts’ Welcome Address. Veteran Survivors of the Third Georgia : As soon as it was known that you had de cided to celebrate your annual reunion this year on your old first camping grounds, near our city, a meeting of our citizens was held, and the following resolution adopted: “Whereas, The citizens of Portsmouth have learned with much pleasure that the survivors of the Third Georgia Regiment have decided to celebrate their next annual reunion in this city on the 4tli of August next, and remembering their prompt re sponse to the call for troops to reinforce our own in April, 1861, and their gallant record during that long and unfortunate struggle, we will welcome them as becomes citizens of Virginia, and do all in our power to make their visit happy and pleasant. And, in response to that resolution, as the chier officer and representative of the au thorities of this city, the important trust is devolved upon me of welcoming you in our midst; and while I gieatly appreciate the high honor. In which my official posi tion places me, of having to welcome such distinguished guests, I regret that the re sponsibility had not devolved upon some one more capable than myself; but in per forming tliis duty, gentlemen, permit me t > say that it is no less pleasing to myseli than, I am sure, it will be gratifying to you, to state that in tendering you a welcome 1 am representing and reflecting the wishes and sentiments of not only the corporate authorities of this city—not only your brother soldiers in arms during the long struggle—but all classes of our citizens; and in their behalf I now take great pleas ure, officially and as an individual citizen, in tendering you a warm and cordial wel come to the freedom and hospitalities of our city. Georgians : I have stated that, in wel coming you to-night, I was repre senting and reflecting the wishes and sentiments of this community, but I need not stop here. I believe I am representing and reflecting the senti ments of the whole people of our renowned old State, and if you should be pleased to extend your visit to any other section, whether in citv, county or town, the sons of the “Old Dominion” and especially those gallant fellows who shared vs ith you the toils and hardships of the mighty con flict will give you a warm and hearty wel come. When 13 years ago you left your happy homes and pitched your tents near this city, the red clouds of war cast their lurid shadows over our entire land; the reveille and the tattoo was heard upo> every hill-top and in every valley, and both sides, the North and South, were marshalling their hosts for the mighty contest, the end of which no eye could then see, and the sons of the “Old Domin ion” and the sons of the “Empire State of the South” stood shoulder to shoulder in a common cause, and throughout that long, ardous and bloody struggle manifested their manhood and their courage in a patriotic devotion to the cause of their na tive land, and many of the gallant spirits sealed that devotion with their blood. That cause however sacrod is lost, the rev ille and the tattoo hushe 1 the gloomy eiouds of war have disappeared; the feel ings of bitterness and hatred engendered by the strife have subsided, and we now have the honor and the pleasure of greet ing you in a happy reunion under the au spices of peace as brothers of a common country, i said lost—but no—it is not en tirely lost—it will live, bright in the pages of history—its teachings will go down to future generations, and warn the n that guaranteed constitutional rights cannot be invaded with impunity. , , Manv of the gallant boys who pitched their tents with you, on this, their lirst old camp ground, in 1861, wiio aided by their valor on every battle-field in making glorious and illustrious the arms of the South are now absent. Not on sick leave, not on furlough, but with them the storm of battle is o’er, they have long since joined the “roll of honor;” “they sleep their last sleep, they have fought their last battle, no sound can awake them to glory again.” But their memories will endure not alone in brass and marble, but when the brass shall have corroded and the marble Grum bled, will still live green in the hearts of a grateful people. Once more, Georgians, in the name of out city and its citizens. I tender you a warm and happy welcome! Response of Col. Claiborne Snead. Mb. Mayor:—For your generous wel come I thank you. It reaches the heart and touches a responsive chord in the bo soms of all these Georgians, and I would to God that I had all the ability necessary to a proper response thereto. I wish that for but one moment I had the inspiring charm of Mercury’s golden chain, that I might tell all that mortal heart can feel but what mortal tongue cannot adequately express. Thirteen years ago a similar wel come was awarded the Third Georgia Regi ment at almost this identical spot, and in full view of the smouldering fires and crum bing walls of Gosport Navy Yard. Then, with ranks full and in the spring time of pa triotic hope,they came forth to meat the first shock of battle ; and being the first or ganized regiment of Georgians on Virginia soil here, they stood with bristling steel ready to help hurl back the threatened inva sion of your commonwealth. This was the place of our regimental birth. It was the scene of our entrance upon a military career of high hopes and anticipations, which, continuing for four long years, ended alone with the annihilation of the army of the immortal Lee. It was hero among cherish ed friends, who one year before nad been strangers, that they enlisted for a second time, and this time they cheerily entered the contest for the war. carrying with them true great hearts, every impulse qf the soul and all the energies of their nature. It was near this place within the shadows of Dis mal Swamp that.we received our baptismal tire and where comrades were first slain in battle. It was here subsequently we were received In triumph; and Rome iff her palmiest days never gavo her conquering legions a more cordial ovation than was rewarded the Third Georgia Regiment on that day by the sons and daughters of Portsmouth. This then is holy ground, for there is a sacred halo overhanging this, the locality of our first year’s military experience. And, hence, we have returned to this trysting place, here to renew, face to face, and hand in hand, a comradeship which, formed amid the fire and smoke of battle, now sur vives in the small remnant you see before you of that proud regiment that carried its flag defiantly and untouched by the hands of an enemy from our first battlefield at South Hills down to Appomattox You have been pleased to allude to ab sent soldiers, who have “crossed the river and are resting beneath the shade of the trees on the opposite side.” At this mo ment the gallant Grimes and a host of others—choice spirits and the brightest jewels of Portsmouth—pass in review before mo. Though their lips are sealed and hearts are pulseless, yet they mutely tes tify as exemplars that "The sweetest libation liberty draws Is the heart that bleeds and breaks in her cause." Will their fidelity and noble services be forgotten? No! Your beautiful Elizabeth river will sooner turn its course back to Albemarle sound than this generation aud generations to come will cease to remem ber their matchless valor. After so long an absence, we are proud to stand once more on the soil and beneath the blue skies of grand old Virginia, to take her sons by the hand and renew that affection which was formed and cemented in times that tried men’s souls. In our persons. Georgia pays her unfeigned tribute of respect aud admiration to Vir ginia, who, like the Mother of the Gracchi, has her true patent of nobility in the gen uine manhood of her sons; and I may add, in the virtues and perfections of her daughters, too. We recur to the efforts and fortitude of these noble women in every contest of this State. When we lookback at Virginia, in her first revolution, illustrated by George Washington and Light-horse Harry Lee; when we look at Virginia, in her second but unsuccessful revolution, illustrated by the peerless Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson, well may I esclaim, in the language of Ossian, “The oaks of the mountains may fall; the mountains themselves decay with years; the ocean may shrink and grow again; the moon herself be lost in heaven, but thou art forever the same, rejoicing in the bright ness of thy course.” History has written in golden letters, and poetry has thrown a romantic charm around Athens and Sparta of ancient Greece. The inhabitants of one abandoned their devoted city, and transporting their treasures and household gods to their ships, won imperishable renown at Salamis; while the other, at Thermopylae, demon strated through Leoni fas and his chosen band of three hundred followers that dis parity of numbers, however great, is small where brave men know how to die. But when we look at the changed condition of these people, and see their present degen eracy, in the words of Lord Byron— “ ’Tis Greece, but living Greece no more!” Not so with Virginia. Her present is consistent with her glorious past; for. great as she was in her past prosperity, she is grander still in her present adversity. She is Virginia, and still she is living Vir ginia forever more. There she stands, crowned with a spotless diadem of Queen of States, with a record like the face of her sons that has nothing to blemish its beauty, a record so bright as to dazzle the stars in brilliancy, a record so glorious that “The meanest rill, the mightiest river. Flows mingliog with her fame forever.” Again I thank you for your generous welcome. It conveys more than the ordi nary courtesies of life, something more pleasant than the transient pleasures of time; it teaches that this chain of friend ship among the people of this Southern land will never break however much it may be lengthened by time and strained by distance. And so far as I am individually concerned, I can say in the language of Bums, changed to suit my convenience: “When death’s dark stream I ferry o’er, The time that surely shall, come, In Heaven itself I ask no more, Than such Virginia welcome.” In response to another note of wel come, Mr. John D. Carter replied as follows : Remarks of Jno. D. Carter, Esq., of Georgia. Friends and Comrades—ln addition to what has been so gracefully said, I desire to speak as a Georgia-Virginian; a Virgin ian by birth and breeding, aad a Georgian by adoption and citizenship. i hey tell us a noble Venetian, who in the contests for power in that beautiful city and under sentence of the Chamber of Ten was banished for life from her chryetal do mains, and yet drawn back by a wild love for his native home breathed out his last sigh upon the thick atmosphere of a dun geon, happy in chains and preferring a prison near “The winged Lion’s piles, Where Venice sat in state, throned on her hundred isles,” to the full freedom of all the world besides. This morning, wnen for the first time in leu years the golden sun lifted from my eyes the misty curtain from th i green woods and broad fields of the Old Dominion, I thought of the fate of Jacopo Foscari, and the grateful throbbings of my own heart told wliat must have been the bursting agony that tore his soul when doomed never more to look upon Venice, and watch “From out the wave her structures rise as from the stroke of the enchanter’s wand.” If I may be pardoned for this further personal reference, May of the year 1865 was closing when, as a boy-soldier in a gray jacket and cap somewhat the worse for service in the winds and weather of the tented field, I drifted off to Georgia; but there was no merry-making here then and no gladsome gatherings on the verdant lawn to crown the fair May Queen. The tempest had been abroad in its anger, and darkness curtained the hills; the plow stood still in the furrow of promise, and briars cumbered the garden of beauty. The blood of the best sons of the Old Dominion was yet red upon her fields and the ruins of her pala tial mansions were yet smoking from the torch of the destroying foe. The pic ture upon the coat of arms or the grand old Commonwealth was sadly reversed, and the fair form of Virginia, with buckler itattered and helmet broken and plume in the dust, lay beneath the foot of the victor, pale, bleeding and ghastly. And when I reached Georgia it was the month of roses, but from that terrible “ March to the Sea ” there was hardly “ A rose of the wilderness left on its stalk To tell whore the garden had been! ” The arch of the “Constitution” was broken—the marble pillars of “ Wisdom, Justice and Moderation,” that supported it, were shattered on the ground, and over the ruins of the fair temple trod the iron heel of the invader. For merry-making there was mourning in Virginia, and the rose and the magnolia gave place to the cypress and the yew tree in Georgia. ft had been my fortune to mingle with Georgians first as they stood shoulder to shoulder, “ ’midst death-shots falling thick and fast as lightning from a Summer cloud,” upon the en anguined fields their devotion and valor helped to make illustri ous; and I had found them unflinching in danger, impetuous in the charge and firm and faithful in the shock and din of battle. It became my fortune to meet them in their own homes and by their own firesides; and I found them noble in their hospitality, the tenderest as the bravest, the loving as the daring. The names of Walton, Troup, Johuson, Jenkins, Cobb, Stephens, Lump kin, Gordon, Walker and lianse Wright have gone into history as represen tatives of the host of noble men who have stoo I foremost as statesmen in the councils of the nation, foremost in the country as jurists upon the benoh and ad vocates at tiie bar, foremost as chieftains and leaders upon the fields of war, and foremost in the lists of gentleman and pri vate citizens. These, and such sons as these of Georgia, are prominent m the full gaze of the world as types of her manhood, her genius arid her chivalry, that must command admiration through all tho cy cles of the rolling ages. But the inner life of her whole people is not portrayed in the same blazing letters upon historic pages, and must be known and anpreciat ‘d from the miuglings of social relations. These it has been my privilege to enjoy; aqd I know of what I speak when I assert that from where she peeps over the crest of Lookout Mountain to where her beams dance upon the sparkling tides of the Atlantic, the moon of these August nights smiles not down upon happier firesides and more re fined homes, nobler matrons and more High-toned men, fairer maidens and more devoted patriots, indeed, truthfully may it be recorded of the Empire State of the South: “Her sons are brave ami her daugh ters are virtuous.” Between Georgia and Virginia there ex ists the alliance of common interests and the alliance of common sufferings; there is the alliauoe of twin-sisters in a common government, which they together helped to establish and together strove to pre serve in its youthful purity and vigor; there is the alliance of common engage ment in a common cause, an alliance in the widespread desolation of common de feat, and an alliance in the quid? and ear nest re-establishment of the old-time oon}- mon prosperity and power. But there is between them more than this and more than all these—there is the alliance of blood which’is thicker than water. While Georgia wis colonized by Oglethorpe and his exiies at Savannah, her broad and lovely domain was settled and conquered from the savage and built up for the most part by bold pioneers from the Old Dominion; and side by side, "in one rofi buriq.l blent ” lie the chivalric sons of Georgia and of Virginia all over the hills and valleys of our Sunny South. Thank God, to-day tnere is no “shaking hands across the bloody chasm,” as here these yeterans stand upon the very spot on which they were first united as a martial band, to revive the soldierly intimacies welded in the heat ot battle and to renew the pleasant social re lations formed fifteen years ago with this goodly and warm-hearted people. Geor gia and Virginia! Forever may they re main such twin-sisters! For myself, I can only proclaim, that proud as I am of hav ing been born and nurtured in 3. x gsk no higher destiny than to die and be buried in Georgia. More Light ! —lf you want your stores and houses brilliantly illumi nated, send to George D. Connor, 53 Jackson street, for your Kerosene. Price, 25 cents a gallon. my9-tf — 1 ' Strictly Pure White Lead, Linseed Oil, Turpentine, Varnishes, Window Glass, Colors and all house Painters’ Supplies at George D. Connor, my9tf 53 Jackson street. <♦*- Oriental Cream. —The most elegant and delicate preparation for the skin ever invented. Removes tan, pimples, freckles, morphew, &c., &c., at jull-d&ctf W. H Tutt & Remsen’s. Landreth’s Turnip Seed.— All the varieties, fresh aud pure, just received at W. H. Tutt & Remsen’s. julld&c-tf. Monthly Sale Day—Property Sold. Yesterday, the first Tuesday in the month, was the legal sale clay in the county, but there was only a small number of persons present at the Mar ket, where the sales took place, and the bidding on real estate offered was not very active. c. v. walker, auctioneer, sold the following property : One-half interest in the foundry and machine shops of Pendleton & Board man to Wm. Pendleton, surviving part ner, for $5,500. Lot corner of Kollock and D’Antig nac streets to Henry Stellings for sl,- 400. Farm near Bel-Air, Ga., consisting of 27 acres, to Henry Hicks for SIOB. Confederate currency belonging to the estate of A. P. Robertson, deceased, amounting to $329,596, sold for $1.50. BIGNON & CRUMP sold a number of horses and mules, varying in prices from SSO to $lO5. Guanahani Guano, Now, when our farmers have had a good season for the maturing of their wheat crops, the value of Guanahani seems to be fully appreciated. We have heard and seen numbers of testi monials from the most respectable, in telligent and practical farmers in Mary land, Virginia and North Caiolina, who speak of its valuable fertilizing properties. The yield, in many in stances, is stated to be heavier where it was applied than Peruvian and other high price fertilizers used side by side on the same soil, in equal quan tities. The demand for application on wheat alone must be very heavy this fall—the agents iu many sections are being called on now, far in advance of the season, to have their orders taken for wheat seeding. On grass and vege tables it lias met with no superior. Cotton and tobacco crops doiug very well. Guanahani stands second to no guano or fertilizer on the market, and we see for it a bright future, and hope the Guanahani Guano Company will make suitable arrangements to*meet the heavy demand they will be called on to supply. We copy the above statements re garding this first-class and popular fer tilizer from the Petersburg (Va.) News of July 9th. Messrs. Geo. T. Jackson & Cos. are the agents of it at this point. The Commissioner of the State of Geor gia highly commends this manure, and guarantees that it is fully worth the cost price. August Flower. —The most misera ble beings in the world are those suf fering from Dyspepsia and Liver Com plaint. More than seventy-five per cent, of the people in the United States are afflicted with these two diseases aud their effect: such as sour stomach, sick headache, habitual costiveness, impure blood, heartburn, waterbrasb, gnawing aud burning pains at the pit of the stomach, yellow skin, coated tongue aud disagreeable taste in the mouth, coming up of the food after eating, low spirits, etc. Go to the drug stores of F. A. Beall, M. E. Bowers, and Barrett & Land, Wholesale Dealers. myl4-dfeow&c. Eureka.—California Water, for the toilet and bath, at jy2s-d&ctf W. H.Tutt & Remsen’s. Fragrant Sozodont— For cleansing and preserving the teeth, hardening the gumbs, &c., at jy2s-d&ctf W. H. Tutt & Remsen’s. Beautiful Toilet Sets—at very low prices, at W. H. Tutt & Remsen’s. jy2s(l-d&ctf Take Notice. —Strictly Pure White Lead, Linseed Oils, Turpentine. Ready Mixed Paints of all Colors, Varnishes, Brushes, Window Glass aud Putty, at lowest prices, at W. H. Tutt & Remsen’s. je2o-d&ctsepl3 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. Leeches. —Two hundred of the finest Swedish Leeches, just received at W. H. Tutt & Remsen’s je2o-d&ctsepl3 “Neuril.”— The instantaneous cure for Neuralgia. Depot, No. 291 Broad street. ap7-ly Consignees by the South Carolina Railroad, August 3, 1875. Augusta Factory, J F & L J Miller, R N Hotchkiss, J H Alexander. H E Clinton, J B Moore. Mrs E Hayne, Miller & D; G G Hull, J II Trump, li A McDonald, J M Clark & Cos, Derry & L, Miss A Woods, Roberts & Cos, Mendleson A J, O’Donnell & B, W L Hubbard & Cos, E W Harker. F. K, Huger, Agent. FINANCE AND TRADE. THE AUGUSTA DAILY MARKETS. Constitutionalist Office, l 6 o’clock P. M., Aug. 3, 1875. j Remarks. Dullness in all branches of trade was so apparent to-day that it is noxt to impossi ble to make any remarks that will prove of interest. Financial, Gold—brokers buying at sl.lO ami selling at $1.13. Sdver—buying at $1.04 and selling at SI.OB. New York Excli mge scarce, buying at %a3-16 premium, and selling at % pre mium. Savannah and Charleston exchange, buy ing at % off and selling at par. Sterling Exchange nominal and little do ing. Cotton Market. The Augusta Exchange reports the mar ket quiet to-day witii middlings quoted slightly better than yesterday. Receipts, 7 bales, and sales, 21 bales. Quotations were as follows: Low Middling 13% Middling. 13%a14 Good Middling 14 Bagging, Ties and Twine, Quiet and unchanged. We quote; Bagging— Domestic—(2% Jbs), 15. In dia, 11%a12%. Ties—s%ao. Twine—l6alß. Tljo Meat Market, Bacon to-day ruled firm at yesterday’s prices. We quote: Clear Ribbed Bacon Sides 14% a Dry Salt Clear Ribbed Sides 13% a Dry Salt Long Clear Sides 13% a Bellies ~ 18% a Smoked Shoulders 11% a Dry Salt Shoulders 10 a Sugar Cured Hams 15 a Big Hams — a Tennessee Hams 14% a Lard—iu tierces, 15%; in cans, kegs or buckets, 17. The Corn, Oats and Wheat Market, Grain generally was firm during the day with but little change iu quotations. We quote: Corn.— Car load prime lots in depot: White, $1.10al.l2; Yellow and Mixed, $1.G7a1.08, sack Included. Wheat.—Choice White active at $1.50: Prime White, $1.45; Amber, $1.35a1.45; and Red, $1.30a1,35, each according to grade. Oats.—Red Rust Proof, 75a85; Feed, 70a 75. Corn Meal and Bran. Corn Meal— We quote City Bolted, $1.07; Western, sl. Stock Meal—9oasl.7s. Bran— Wheat Bran per ton, $25. The Hay Market. Hay,— Dull; Choice Timothy, car load lots, $1.35 per hundred; Western mixed, $1.15a 1.25 per hundred; Eastern Hay, $1.45a1.50 per hundred; Northern, $1.25.* Country Hay—sl per hundred. The Flour Market. This market was steady to day. with no change from previous quotations; but there are strong indications of an early ad vance, on account of an anticipated rise in Wheat, caused by the late injury to crops in the West. city mills quotations : Supers $6 50 Extras , 6 75 Family 7 50 Fancy 7 75 WESTERN QUOTATIONS: Supers 5 75 Extras 6 25 Family 6 75 Fancy 7 25 European Money Markets. London, August 3—Noon.—l rie 13%. Paris, August 3—Noon.—Rentes, 66f. 65c. United States Money Markets. New York, August 3—ltoon. —Gold opened at 112%. Stocks dull but steady. Money 2%. Gold, 1.12%. Exchange—long, 487%; short, 490%. Governments dull, but little better for some. State bonds dull and nominal. New York, August 3.—P. M.—Money easy, 1%a2: Sterling firmer, 7%; Gold firm, 12%a12%; Governments dull and steady: new fives, 14%; States, quiet and nominal. European Produce Markets. Liverpool, August 3—Noon.—Corn, 345. a34s. 3d. New Orleans Produce Market. New Orleans, August 3.—Oats quiet: Texas, 64a65; choice Western, 66a67. Hay firmer; new, 28; old prime, 29. Pork firm at $23a23.25. Bacon easier; shoulders, 10%; clear rib, 13%; clear sides, 13%. New York Produce Market. New York, August 3—Noon.—Flour firm Wheat firm. Corn steady. Pork firm at $21.10a21.15. Lard heavy; steam, 13%. Sprits Turpentine dull at 31%. Rosin steady at $1.05a5L.75 for strained. Freights firm. New York, August 3—P. M.— Flour 10al5 cts. better, but not active, buyers not dis posed to pay iu advance: Southern Flour shade firmer; common to fair extra, $6.10a 6.85; good to choice $6.90a8.50. Wheat, Spring, opened 2a3 cts. better and in good export demand, and closed quiet at about la2 cts. decline; Winter. 2a3 higher, and rery firm; $1.52a1.58 for Winter red West ern; $1.58a1.60 for amber do.; $1.54a1.60 for white Western. Corn opened la2e. better for sail, aud unsettled for steam, but clos ing quiet; 83%a86% for steam Western mixed at the closing; 85 for good; 86a88 for good to very choice sail do.; 76a82 for heat ed Western mixed; 88a89 for yellow Western. Western Produce Market. Louisville August 3.—Flour quiet and unchanged. Grain—the demand fair and firm. Wheat, $1,25a1.35. Corn, 76a80. Oats 70. Rye nominal. Provisions quiet but steady. Pork, $22. Bulk meats—should ers, 8%; clear rib and clear sides, 12%a1?%. Bacon—shoulders, 9%; clear rib and clear sides, 13%a13%; hams, 13%. Lard, 14%a 14%. Whiskey, $1.16. Bagging quiet aud steady. Cincinnati, August 3.—Flour excited and higher; family. $7.25a7.50. Wheat excited and higher, but unsettled; red, $1 65a1.75. Corn quiet and firm at 73i76. Oats, demand fair and market firm at 72a75. liye quiet and unchanged. Pork, demand fair, mar ket firm; small sales at $21.25, held higher. Lard quiet but firm; steam, 13%; kettle, 14%a14%. Bulk meats quiet but firm; shoulders duff, 8%; clear rib sides held at 12; clear sides, 12%. Bacon quiet but firm; shoulders, 9%; clear rib sides, 12%a13; clear sides, 13%. Live hogs, demand fair, mar ket firm; receipts, 893; shipments, 252. Whisky, de i and fair; firm at $1.17. St. Louis, August 3.—Flour active and higher, and more buyers than sellers; superfine Fall, $4 50a5.00; extra Pall, $5.25a 5.50; double extra Fall, $5.75a6.50; treble extra Fall, $6.60a57.00; family Winter, in cluding fancy, $7.25a53.25. Wheat firm; No. 2, red Winter, $1.50a1.52 bid. Corn higher, 67 bid; regular, 70. Fresh oats higher; No. 2, 60 bid. Rye, inactive and lower; No. 2,80a85. Pork higher: small lots, $22a22.25, latter delivered. Lard nominally unchang ed; Summer, 12%. Dry salted moats firm er; shoulders, 8%; clear rib, 12; clear sides, 12%; some holding sides %c. higher. Ba con irregular but iu the main higher shoulders, 9%a9%: clear rib, 1i%a13; cloir sides. 13%a13%. Whiskey steady and un changed at sl.lß. Live hogs higher, ship pers, $7.40a7.70; bacon grades, $7.45a7.75: butchers, $7.60a8.00. Cattle steady and un changed. Receipts—flour, 1,000; wh<at, 40,000; corn, 9,000; oats, 9,000; barley, 1,000; rye, 1,000; hogs, 388; catLl>‘, 15. Chicago. August 3.—Flour in fair demand and market firm. Wheat excited and so unsettled that accurate quotations cannot he given; No. 1 Spring, $1.37; No. 2 Spring sold at $1.28 on spot; closed at $1.23 on soot and for August; $1.21 all the year; No 3 Spring, sLlo%at.l7; rejected, $1.05a 1 06. Corn irregular, but in the main lower; No. 2, 72 on spot; sold at 73% on spot; 73 bid for September; 60 for all the year; re jected, 69. Oats opened firm, but closed dull; No. 2, 51 on spot; 44% for August; sold at 46 for August; 40% for September. Bariev in speculative demand and prices higher; 10 for September; 8% for October. Rye inactive; new No. 2, 83 for spot, 80 for September. Pork—demand active and ad vanced to $21.25; $21.10a21.15 for August, $21.30a21.35 for September, $21.50 for Octo ber. Lard in fair dema and and advanced to $13.40; *l3 45 for August, $13.62%a13.65 for September. Bulk Meats very linn and holders asking higher rates-shoulders, 8%; short rib middles, 11%; short clear do., 12. Whiskey quiet and firm at $1.17%. Re- C( ,ipts—7,ooo barrels flour, 75,000 bushels wheat, 136,000 corn, 16,000 oats, 790 bar.ey, 725 rye. Shipments—s,3so flour, 100,000 wheat, 24,000 corn, 52,000 oats, 140 b .riey, 2,000 rye. Afternoon call of the board: Wheat higher; $1.24a124% for August; $1.24% for September. Corn a shade lower at 71%a 71% for August; 72%a73 for September. Oats easier; 41 for August; 40% for Sep tember. Pork and lard quiet and un changed. Baltimore Produce Market. Baltimore, August 3—Flour active and strong and 20 cents higher for Baltimore grades—Howard street super, $4 50a5.00; Rio brands, $7.25a7.50; family, $8.75; other grades unchanged. Wheat active, strong and sc. higher-Pennsylvania red, $1.40; Maryland, $1.30a1.50; amber, $1.52a1.55; white, $!.30a1.55. Corn active and higher for Western and dull and off for Southern white— Southern white, 85a86; yellow, nom inally 88. Oats firm and unchanged. Rye dull at 90a95. Provisions quiet and steady; hams, 14%a14%. Lard steady—refined, 14%. Coffee quiet and strong and unchanged. Whiskey firm at $1 22. Sugar quiet and firm at 10%all. Liverpool Cotton Market. Liverpool. August 3—Noon.—Cotton tending upward; middling uplands, 7%; middling Orleans, 7%; sales, 15,000; specu lation and export, 3,000; to arrive, % higher. Basis middling uplands, nothing below low rnlddhng, deliverable August aud September, 7 3-16: do., deliverable October and November, 7%; basis middling up lands. nothing below low middling, deliv erable September and October, 7 5-16; ship ments new c op, basis middling uplands, nothing below low middling, 7 7-10. 3 P. M.—Sales of American, 780 bales. New York Cotton Market. New York, August 3—Noon—Cotton quiet; sales, 243 bales; uplands, 14%; Or leans, 15, Futures oponed strong at for September, 14 17-32a14 9-10; October, 14% il4 7-16; No vember, 14%a14 13-32; Decomber, 14 13-32a 14 15-32; January, 14%a14 11-16. New York, August 3—P. M.—Cotton easier; sales, 644 bales at 14%a15; consoli dated not receipts, 1 200; exports to Great Britain, 335; to continent, 700; not receipts, 28: gross, 60. Futures closed steady at decline; sales, 32,400 bales, as follows: August. 14 5-32a 14 3-16; September, 14%a14 5-32; October, 14; November, 14; December, 14 1-32; January, 14 3-16; February, 14%a14 13-32; March, 14 9-16a14 19-32; April, 14 25-32a14 13-10; May, 14 31-32a15; Jqqe, 15 5-32a15 3-16. Boston and Philadelphia Cotton Mar kets. Boston, August s.— Cotton quiet; mid dling, 14%; gross reeepts, 134; sales. 35. Philadelphia, August 3.— Cotton firm; middling, 14%; low middling, 14% ; good or ordinary, 13% ; net receipts, 13 ; gross, 25. Southern Cotton Markets. Charleston, August 3.— Cotton dull: middling, 14%; low middling, 14; good ordinary, 13% ; net receipt-, 154 bales. Savannah, August 3.—Cotton quiet; mid dling, 13%; net receipts, 7 bales. Galveston, August 3.—Cotton unchanged; middling, 13%; low middling, 13; good or dinary, 12; net receipts, 21; gross receipts, 25; exports coastwise, 207. Mobile, August 3.—.—Cotton nominal: middling, 14%; low middling 13%; good ordinary, 13%; net receipts, 6 bales; ex ports coastwise, 103. New Orleans, August 3.—Cotton quiet; middling, 14%; low middling, 13%; good or dinary, 12; net receipts, 40 bales; gross, 07; exports to Great Britain, 281; coastwise, 86; sales, 75, Norfolk, August 3.-Cotton quiet; mid dling, 13%a14; net receipts, 81 bales; ex ports coastwise, 31. Baltimore, August 3.—Cotton quiet and firm: middling, 14%; low middling, 14%; got and ordinary, 13%; gross receipts, 51; ex ports coastwise, 25; sales, 10. Memphis, August 3.—Cotton steady; middling, 14%; net receipts, 47 bales; spies, 100. Railroad Schedules. Magnolia Passenger Route. PORT ROYAL RAILROAD, Augusta Ga. July 19th, 1875. THE FOLLOWING PASSENGER SCHED ULE will be operated on and after this date: GOING SOUTH-TRAIN NO. 1. Leave Augusta 8:00 a. m. Arrive Yemassee ;v 1:00 p. in. Leave Yemassee i:3O p. m. Arrive Port Royal 3:25 p. in. Arrive Savannah 4:45 p. m. Arrive Charleston.... 4:15 p. m. GOING NORTH-TRAIN NO, 2. Leave Charleston 8:10 a. m. Leave Savannah 9:06 a.m. Leave Port Royal 9:45 a. m. Arrive Yemassee *11:60 a. m Leave Yemassee i:00p. m. Arrive Augusta 6:45 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. WEDNESDAYS and FRIDAYS. To Charleston daily connection is made as heretofore. Passengers from Port Royal and station between Port Royal and Yemassee make daily connection to Charleston and Savannah. ♦Dinner. R. G. FLEMING. T. S. DAVANT, Superintendent. apr2s-tf General Passenger Agent. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE, Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta R. It.. ) General Passenger Department, | Columbia. H. C.. June 20th. 1875. ) THE FOLLOWING PASSENGER SCHED ulewillbe operated on and after SUNDAY the 20th instant: GOING NORTH. Stations. Train No. 2. Train No. 4’ Leave Augusta 8:22 a. in. 4:15 p. m. Leave Grauiteville* 9:13a. m. 6:ii p. m. Leave Columbia Junction 12:68 p. m. t9:06 p .m ArriveatOolumbia i:08p. m. 9:17 p. m. Leave Columbia 1:18 p. m. Leave Wiuusboro.. 3:35 p. m. Leave Chester ts:io p. m. Arrive at Charlotte 7:32 p. m. No. 2 Train makes close connection vie Charlotte and Richmond to all points North, arriving at New York 6:05 a. m. Train No. 4 makes close connections via Wilmington and Richmond to all points North, arriving at Now Yorkat 5:15 p. in. GOING SOUTH. Stations. Train No. l. Train No. 3 Leave Charlotte.... 8:30 a. m. Leave Chester 11:02 a.m. Leave Winnsboro..l2:3B p. m. Arri’e at Columbia 2:42 p.m. Leave Columbia... t2:52p. m. 8:40 a. in Leave Wilmington Junction t3:l7p. m. 4:15 a.m. Leave Graniteville.t7:ls p. m. *7:36 a. m. Arrive at Augusta.. .8:05 p. m. 8;£0 a. m. ♦Breakfast. iDinner. tSupper. South bound trains connect at Augusta for all points South and West. **-TMROUGH TICKETS sold and BAG GAGE CHECKED to all principal points. Sleeping cars on all Night Trains. A. TOPE, General Passenger and Ticket Agent. JAMES ANDERSON. myl9-tf General Superintendent. CHANGE OB' SCHKUULK JN THE GEORGIA AND MACON AND AUGUSTA RAILROADS, ON AND AFTER SUNDAY. JUNE 13. 1875, the Passenger Trains on the Georgia and Macon and Augusta Railroads will run as follows: GEORGIA RAILROAD. DAY PASSENGER TRAIN WILL Leave Augusta at 8:00 a. m. Leave Atlanta at. 7 :00 a. m. Arrive in Augusta at 3:30 p. m Arrive in Atlanta at 4:00 p. in. NIGHT PASBENGEE TRAIN. Leave Augusta at 8:15 p. ra Leave Atlanta at 10.30 p. m. Arrive in Augusta at 7:io a. m. Arrive in Atlanta at 6:25 a. m. MACON AND AUGUSTA RAILROAD. MACON PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusta at 8.00 a. m. Leave Camak at I:i0p. m. Arrive at Macon . 6-. OJ p. m Leave Macon at 5:30 a. m Arrive at Camak 10:00 a. m Arrive in Augusta 2:15 p. m. HARLEM AND AUGUSTA PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Augusta at 4:15 p. m. Leave Harlem at 8:06 a. m. Arrive in Augusta at 9:65 a. m. Arrive in Harlem at 6:10 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 for Macon ana all points beyond. Passengers leaving Augusta at 8 a. m. will make close connection at Atlanta with trains for Chattanooga, Nashville. Knoxville, Louis ville and all points West. First-class Sleeping Cars on all night trains on the Georgia Railroad. jel3-tf S. K. JOHNSON. SupT._ SOUTH CAROLINA RAILROAD. Chaeleston, February 5. 1875. On and after (SUNDAY, 7tli instant, the fol lowing Schedule will be run on the SOUTH CAROLINA RAILROAD : Between Charleston and Augusta. Charleston time ten minutes ahead of Au gusta time. DAY PASSKNGEB TBAIN. Leave Charleston 9: 15 a. m. Arrives at Augusta 5:15 p. m. Loaves Augusta 9:00 a. m. Arrives at, Charleston 4:45 p. m NIGHT EXPBKSS TBAIN Leaves Charleston 8:30 p. m. Arrives at Augusta 7:45 a. m. Leaves Augusta ....6:00 p. in. Arrives at Charleston 6:30 a. m, AIKEN TBAIN. Leaves Aiken 8:<io a. m. Arrives at Augusta 9:00 a. in. Leaves Augusta 2:45 p, in. Arrives at Aiken .4 :00 p. m. NO DAY PASSENGEB (COLUMBIA) TBAIN. NIGHT EXPBESS TBAIN. Leaves Augusta 6:00 p. m. Arrives at Columbia 6:30 a. m. Loaves Columbia 7:00 p. m. Arrives at Augusta. 7:45 a. m. Night Train out of Augusta make close con nection at Columbia with Greenville and Co lumbia Railroad. Passengers for points on the Greenville and Columbia Railroad will avoid a tedious delay and hotel expenses at night in Columbia by taking this route. Elegant new Sleeping Cars on night trains between Augusta and Charleston. 8. B. FICKENS. 8. 8. SOLOMONS. General Ticket Agent. Supt. fobc-tf Geo. T. Jackson. John T. Milder Walter M. Jackson. Marion J. Verdery. (11, T. MIN & CO, PROPRIETORS OP THE GRANITE MILLS, AND General Produce Merch’ts. DEALERS IN FLOUR, MEAL, GRITS, HAY, CORN, OATS, PEAS, CRACKED COEN, PEA MEAL, Bran, Middlings, Etc. as- Orders are respectfully solicited, and prompt attention promised. apr2s-t,f till# tautUiif JOB DEPARTMENT. o THIS DEPARTMENT of our office has been completely renovated, and enlarged by the addition of NEW AND FIRST-CLASS MACHINERY AND MATERIAL And we are better prepared than ever before to do EVERY DESCRIPTION 0E JOB WORK, From the Smallest Card to the Largest Poster. Among the great variety or JOB WORK we are prepared to do, might be enumerated the following : BUSINESS CARDS, VISITING CARDS, WEDDING CARDS, DANCE CARDS, RAILROAD TICKETS, BALL TICKETS. SHOW TICKETS, ELECTION TICKETS, SHIPPING TAGS, NOTE CIRCULARS, LETTER CIRCULARS, ENVELOPES, BILL HEADS, NOTE HEADS, LETTER HEADS, INVOICES, ACCOUNT SALES, MONEY RECEIPTS, SHIPPING RECEIPTS, COTTON STATEMENTS, POSTERS, HAND BILLS, PROGRAMMES, DATE LINES, We have facilities for d©ing work in ANY COLOR, OR VARIETY OF COLORS that may be desired, or in Francis & Loutrell’s Celebrated COPYING INK. Call at our office and examine specimens of PINE JOB WORK,. WE KEEP THE Best Stock of Papers and Cards in the Market, And always guarantee our work to give perfect satisfaction in every respect We are supplied with the LARGEST WOO T> TYPE of any office in the South, and are therefore enabled to do this class of work better than can be done in this city. Country Merchants can send their orders to this office, and have their work promptly attended to, and save money thereby. CONSTITUTIONALIST PUBLISHING COMPANV. 43 JACKSON STREET. Groceries! Groceries! WE respectfully call the attention of consumers to the following line of CHOICE FAMILY GROCERIES: MAGNOLIA HAMS, BREAKFAST BACON, BEEF TONGUES, MACKEREL, PICKLED PORK AND BEEF, SUGARS, all grades, CAN GOODS, CRACKERS, all kinds, MUSTARDS, Gordon & Dilworth’s Preserved and Brandy FRUITS, Cross & Blackwell’s CHOW CHOW and MIXED PICKLES, PEARL GRITS, WIIEATEN GRITS, Irish and American OAT MEAL, JAVA, LAGUIRA and RIO COFFEE, PARCHED JAVA and RIO, and GROUND JAVA COFFEE. Also a full assortment of Wood and Willow Ware. TUBS, BUCKETS. MEASURES, Barrel Clovers and C'li nriiH. BASKETS. Ladies’ Work and Traveling Baskets. Work Stands, Fruit and Flower Baskets, Market, Clothes and Hamper Baskets. FEATHER DUSTERS, all sizes. HAIR BROOMS and DUSTERS, COB WEB BRUSHES, BLACKING BRUSHES, SCRUB BRUSHES, long and short handle. WRAPPING PAPER and PAPER BAGS. We are agents for PERRIN’S HONEY, Put up in Tumblers and Cans, from % to 5 Its. each. Also MAPLE SYRUP in half and one gallon cans. JAMES G. BAILIE & BRO. aor2l-tf The Last Ten Bales OF THOSE DAMAGED SHEETINGS and DRILLS will be opened on Mon day Morning, August 2d, at C. J. T. BALK’S, This is positively the LAST LOT of those Goods, damaged at the recont tire at Langley, S. C., that will be offered in this mane et, and in order to prevent spe ula tors from getting hold of them, NOT MORE THAN FIVE PIECES will be sold to any one person. The price will be marked on each piece in plain figures, at the rate of about. #3.00 For #3.00 Worth! In consequence of the extraordinary rush during the past week, it was impossible to avoid delay in the dolivory of purchases. This week none of these goods will bo sent out. Call early and get first choice, at C. J.T. BALK’S. augl-tf Tlie Pines, AIKEN, S. C. THIS centrally located establishment is now open for the reception of Summer Boarders. The house is capacious, airy and within one minutes’ walk of the Ac commodation train from Augusta. Fare first class. Aiken is well known to be the most pleas ant Summer resort within an. hundred miles of Augusta. Just one hour’s ride. Three trains daily each way. Board S3O per month. P. B. WILLIAMS, augl-suwefrsu Proprietor. DODGERS, GUTTER SNIPES, MEMORANDUMS, RECEIPT BOOKS, POSTAL CARDS, WEDDING INVITATIONS, PARTY INVITATIONS, DEPOSIT SLIPS, NOTES, DRAFTS, BANK CHECKS, BANK NOTICES, SOCIETY SUMMONS, SOCIETY CERTIFICATES, DRUGGISTS’ LABELS, PRESCRIPTION BLANKS, SCHEDULES, TIME TABLES, BILLS OF FARE, CATALOGUES, PAMPHLETS, SOCIETY BY-LAWS, BADGES, LAWYERS’ BRIEFS. JAMES LEFFEL’S IMPROVED DOUBLE Turbine Water Wheel. POOLE & UiniT, Baltimore, Manufacturers fc r the South and Southwest. Over 7,000 now in use, working under heads varying from two to 240 feet 1 24 sizes, from 5% to 96 inches. The most powerful Wheel in the Market. And most economical in use of Water. Large Illustrated Pamphlet sent post free. Manufacturers, also, of Portable and Stationary Steam Engines and Boilers, Babcock & Wilcox Patent Tubulous Boiler. Ebaugh’s Crusher for Minerals, Saw ami Grist Mills, Flouring Mill Machinery. Ma chinery for White Lead Works ami Oil Mills, Shafting, Pulleys and Hangers. SESID FOR CIUCUL.AKS. deea-l y FAIRBANKS SCALES THIE STANDARD! Also, Miles’ Alarm Cash Drawer. Coffee and Drug Mills, Letter Presses, Ac. Principal Scale Warehouses: FAIRBANKS Ak CO.. Jill Broadwny, N. Y. Fairbanks A Cos., 166 Baltimore st., Balti more, Md.; Fairbanks & Cos., 53 Camp st.„ New Orleans; Fairbanks A C0.,93 Mam st... Buffalo, N. Y.; Fairbanks A Cos., 338 Broad way, Albany, N. Y.; Fairbanks A Cos., 403; St. Paul's st., Montreal; Fairbanks A Cos., 34 King William st., London, Eng.; Fair banks, Brown A Cos., 2 Milk st., Boston, Mass.; Fairbanks A Ewing. Masonic Hall, Philadoldhia, Pa.; Fairbanks, Morse A Cos., 11l Lake st., Chicago; Fairbanks, Morse A Cos., 139 Walnut st., Cincinnati, O.; Fair banks. Morse A Cos., 182 Superior st., Cleve land, 0.; Fairbanks, Morse A Cos„ 48 Wood st., Pittsburgh; Fairbanks, Morse A Cos., sth and Main sts., L misvillc; Fairbanks A Cos., 302 and 304 Washington Av., St. Louis; Fairbanks A Hutchinson, San Francisco, Cal. For sale by leading Hardware Deal ers. jy4-satuthAc3m NOTICE. THE Books of Account of W. A RAM -BEY, Agent, having been placed in the hands of Messrs. Harper jfc Bro., Attorneys at Law, No. 225 Broad street, Augusta, Ga., for collection, all persons indebted, by note or account, are requested to make immedi ate payment of the same. Timely atten tion to the above will save expense and lit igation. HARPER A BRO., Attorneys for W. A. Perry, W. A. Ram sey. Agent. jy29-thsututf ICED MELONS! ICED MELONS ! IfiOß SALE AT THE AUGUSTA ICE 1 MANUFACTURING COMPANY’S ICE HOUSE, opposite the “Constitutiona list office. PRICES FROM 25c. lo 50c. jy2B-3