Newspaper Page Text
TEE NEWS EPITOMIZED.
Eastern and Middle States.
The Venango House and a lumber o'
other buildings were burned at Venango.
Penn.
Officers of ocean steamers which hav.
reached New York within a few days repor
meeting immense fields of ice and an unu-ua
iv large number of icebergs off Newfoun i
land
Chalsxey Leconey. charged wit.
murdering his niece at Camden, N. J., has
been acquitted.
A fire at No. 392 Broadway, New York.
caused a loss of nearly #3A).0G0. Severn.
(jersons, including Battalion Cn.ei McGill,
■were Injured.
The West Jersey Presbytery at a meeting
in Camden, decided in favor of revising the
Confession of Faith by a vote of 32 to 10.
Expert thieves attempted to rob the Elk
Couutv Bank at Ridgeway, Penn., but they
were frightened away and escaped, leaving
their tools behind them.
Town Collector Chadbournf, of Ox¬
ford. Me., is short in his accounts from *3990
to $4000. The town will call upon his bonds¬
men to make the deficiency good.
Showman Barncti’s circus ami menagerie
arrived at New York a few cays ago after a
long sojourn in England.
James Lennap-d was killed and Thomas
Owens fatally hurt by the the colliery premature of the explo¬ riy
sion of a blast in
mouth Coal Company at Plymouth, Penn.
By the explosion of a box of dynamite in
a contractor’s tool house at Pittsburg, Penn..
David Hayes was instantly killed and Will
iam Soddy fatally injured.
At the Rhode Island Democratic State
Convention in Providence John W. Davis
was nominated for Governor, Captain John
Waters for Lieutenant-Governor, and the
rest of the 1SS7 ticket was put in nomina¬
tion.
The pottery works of Thomas Haddock &
Sons, at Trenton, N. J., have been totally
destroyed by fire.
Miss Anna Putnam committed suicide
by hanging at Danvers, Mass. Although
worth *25,000, she was harrassedby the took fear
that she would become destitute, and
her life in a fit of despondency.
Challenges have been sent from New
York to the Earl of Dunraven, owner of the
Valkyrie, by the owners of the Katrina and
Shamrock for international yacht races in
this country in the coming summer.
Grower Cleveland, Andrew Carnegie,
Seth Low, Henry E. Howland and Joseph
H. Choate, at a public meeting in >'ew
York, spoke in favor of extending that city’s
free circulating library system.
Eight freight cars were thrown from the
track near Carlisle, Penn., and wrecked.
The funeral of ex-Governor English took
place at New Haven, Conn. Many promi¬
nent people attended.
Reuben Eisenhart, foremen at the Cam¬
eron Mine, Shamokin, Penn., which had
been on tire for several days, was overcome and died
by black damp while in the mine,
soon after being taken out.
V\ ILI.IAM Bucknell, the noted Philadel¬
phia philanthropist, died of apoplexy at tlw
and of seventy-nine years. He gave *142,001
to Bucknell College, about *525,000 to bap¬
tist churches and missions, and probably kinds.
*51)0,000 more to charities of various
The Belgian steamer Do Ruyter, Boston, Captain
Webster, from Antwerp for went
ashore at Lighthouse Point, Mass., in a thick
snow storm. The crew of twenty-seven men
tot ashore safely.
South and West.
Two drunken men at nobleman, Chicago held against Count
i.eon Albert, a German up
^ >d ‘Hrniselvea shooting at
>d an- „ • e-.t through His silk hat
jjy acalp wound.
Mot- ..uM t vi ner two sisters,
.VS ai alia '.net Emma Barnes, three prorni
rent and highly respected been young lodged ladies in the of
Saybrook, 111., have suffering from the
county jail. They affecting were emotional in¬
wildest and most
sanity upon the question of Christian
science.
August Groth, a brewer, out his wife’s
throat with a razor at Stillwater, Minn., and
then committed suicide,
Fred Jacobs, Vicksburg, 16 years old, was stabbed to
the heart at Miss. by Ellis
Adams, another boy, and died instantly.
The body of Burke Martin, who shot and
killed a white man for purposes of robbery,
was found hanging to the railroad bridge at
Iitenaba, Miss. The lynchers are unknown.
Twenty masked students of Kalamazoo
College, Mich., seized Professors Ferry and and
Trowbridge, bound them hand and foot
left them m an open field, two miles from
the college.
Two schoolboys became involved in an al¬
tercation at Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, and
George Patterson struck Edward Traulman
in the head with a stone, killing him.
Aldkrjian Charles Hillcock, of Chi¬ his
cago, was found dead in the street near
home. Death resulted from apoplexy.
The Virginia Legislature has appointed
Commissioners to meet with a committee of
foreign bondholders and confer over the set¬
tlement of the State debt.
At a recent election held at St. George, W.
Va.. Mayor Miller was elected, but failed to
qualify. The City Council then appointed D.
S. Minear, whereupon Mayor Alii 1 sr qu ali
fied. Both claimed to be Mayor, and enacted the re
suit was that no la ws were being or
enforced.
Edwin Cowles, editor and prop rietor of
the Cleveland Leader, has died in that city,
aged sixty-five years.
While Henry Greenlee and his wife were
away from home their four children were
bui-ned to death in their cabin at Eupora,
Miss.
William H. Pope, ti ller of the Louisville
City National Bank, has absconded with
$60,000 of the bank’s cash in his possession.
The Exposition buildings and street Nsb. car
bairns were burned at Plattsmouth,
The loss is heavy.
Heavy floods h.ave caused much damage
along the Ohio River. At Cairo, Ill, the
river was fifty miles wide.
The convention of the National League of
Republican Clubs has been held in Nashvill
Tenn. A reception -was Taylor given in the League’s Legisla¬
honor by Governor and the
ture at the State Capitol.
TJriTED States Senator Allison has
been re-elected by the Iowa Legislature.
The Apaches went on the war path in A-i
zona. A freighter was murdered near Point
of Rockland ranches were being abandoned.
United States troops started in pursuit of the
Indians.
The banking firm of C. L. Lewis & Co..
of W inches ter, Ind.. has failed. All the
county officials had deposits at the bank.
Fp.EsrDE.vr Joseph Stanley, of the Broad
wav and Newburg Street Railway of Cleve¬
land. Ohio, has died from injuries received
while jumping from one of his own electric
motor
Mrs. Ka the rive Drake, of Zanesville,
Ohio, was i rued to de h>hn waneizat
four vc'ir- of arc. anh ho- clothes oa-~n :,
fire from the grate she was too feeble to call
for aid.
R. R. Donnelly & Sons, printers of the
Chicago City Directory, one < f the oldest
Drinting and publishing houses :n the West,
have failed, with liibilities aggregating
$100,000.
Raimund HOLZ3AY. the notorious train
robber, now in the penitentiary at Marquette,
Mu ii.. for life, tried to mur .-r a fellow con¬
vict and was shot and seriously wounded by
the warden.
An English syndicate has bonri.t the!-.
W. Wheeler & Co. shipyard and dry doc i at
v.. - r■ ■ -, r. r ye j i.i
TVashineton.
f-je jyv 3 long fight the Senate ha?
THE DEMOCRAT, CRAWFORD VTLLE, GEORGIA.
onSraied the nomination oi ex-Govarnor
lenrv C XVarmothto bo Collector of Cus
oms'at'New Orleans. voted Eleven against Democrats oonlir
mi three Republicans
uatiou.
The delegates to the Pan-American Con¬
ference have been invited to make a trip
through the South.
The President has approved the bill to in
crease pensions of soldiers and sailors total.r
helpless from injuries received or diseases con¬
tracted white tn service of United States.
A cour.T of inquiry was appointed to in¬
vestigate charges Commander of"cruelty and B. H. oppression McCalla,
made against the Toni ted States steamship
commanding Commander McCalls is al?*>
Enterprise. American resident at Ber
charged by disgraceful an CoaduCt at that place.
miKla with
Thf. President has approved the act
providing for an Assistant Secretary of
War.
Foreign.
While a Progressist meeting was crowd being
held at Koemgsberg, Germany, a of
Socialists stormed the hall, auda sharp fight
ensued. The police arrested a large number
of persons.
Four persons were killed and fourteen in¬
jured in a train wreck at Carlisle. England.
Rioting took place at Setuhal. Portugal,
and the military fired into the crowd, killing
two and injuring twenty others.
The great railway bridge over the River
Forth Scotland, was opened by the Prince
of Wah s s.
Several Nihilists ware an’vstod near the
Anitchkoff Palace, in St. Petersburg, where
the Czar and imperial family are residing.
Rudolph de Guehby, a school teacher,
aged fifty years, was arrested at Kingston, being
Ontario,'for assaulting pupils, and was
conveyed to the Pembroke jail when lie was
seized with spasms and died.
Hungary and Austria were visited by
violent snowstorms, which practically section. sus¬
pended railway travel in every
Abraham Lincoln, son of the United
States Minister to England, has died in
London after a long and painful illness,
The President of the Transvaal, South
Africa, has been insulted by a mob and the
flag of the Republic torn down.
A shoe factory at Weissanfels. Saxony,
has been destroyed by fire. Seven of the
employes lost their lives in the burning
building.
A dispatch from Melbourne, Australia,
sa vsthat; Henry George was welcomed at the
Town Hall by the Mayor of the city.
The Cza.i* of Russia has received a Giroot
ening letter from a woman who signed her¬
self “Tcliebrikova.’’ The writer said that
unless ho modified his reactionary policy Paul ho 1.
would meet the fate of Peter ill.,
and Alexander II.
The French and Dnhomans have fought a
second battle in Africa, t;;e natives being
beaten with heavy loss.
Major Wissmann, the Gorman officer,
attacked and routed tha Arabs in East
Africa.
FIFTY-FIRST CONGRESS.
In the Senate.
49th Day.— Mr. Ingalls, on motion ctf Mr.
Sherman, wa • elected to serve as President
pro tenu of the Senate during the absence of
Vice-President Morton on his proposed trip
to Florida... .The House bill for the appoint¬ United
ment of two persons International to represent Conference the at
States in the
Madrid in reference to industrial property bill
was passed.... Mr. Allison introduced a
granting a discharged bounty of $100 by to vohmteeiy^ of disc
the late war reason
incurred in line of duty before > r ving two
5t&i Day.—M r. Mitchell offered a resolu¬
tion, which was agreed to, instructing the
Committee on Fq- gn Relations to consider
the advisability* advancing the Turkish
mission to a the mis^ Um. »f Btates the second M»u.-ter class, of with $12,
a salary to Dolph introduced > bill authoriz¬
000... .Mr. a
ing the Secretary of the Interior to establish
such rules and regulations, and to provide
such penalties as he may deem best, to secure
the regular attendance of all children in
Alaska where schools are maintained by the
Interior Department... .The bill to establish
uniform salaries of $5000 for United States
District Court Judges was passed.... Mr.
Snooner spoke in opposition to the Blair bill.
51st Day. — A joint resolution for hiking
the census in Alaska was passed....A day by Mr. re¬
solution offered the previous
Voorhees in regard to the lease of the fur
seal islands in Alaska to the North American
Commercial Company was reported back
adversely from the Finance Committee. ...
The relations of the press to executive sessions
were discussed.
52d Day. —The message of the President,
making known his approval of the agreement
made with the Chippewa Indians in Minnesota
for the cession of their lands, transmitting the
report of the Commissioners, and recom¬
mending an appropriation to complete the Senate, a siir
vey of the lands, was presented Blair in Educational
read, and referred... .The
bill came up for debate, and Mr. Plumb spoke
in opposition to it.
53d Day.—A number of private bills were
passed... .Mr. Wilson introduced* a bill pro¬
viding that the charge of desertion against shall
any soldier who served in tlie late war
be no bar to his right to pension, when it can
be reasonably shown that the j^n disability in¬ on
account of which he claim- - mu was
curred w hile perform mg actual serv ice i n
the volunteer army....In executive i >1011
the consideration of the “leakage’ of secret
session proceedings was continued.
In the House.
55th Day. — In Committee of the Whole,
the largest Daficieiicy bill was passed .. - .Mr.
Cutcheon, from the Comniitteo on Military
Affairs, reported the Army Appropriation £21,458,220,
bill. The total appropriation i-.
an increase over the appropriation for the
current year of $033,001. The estimates sub¬
mitted bv the Department aggregated $25,-
611,645. few pri¬
56th Day.—A fter the passage of a
vate pension bids, Mr. Cutcheon called up
the Senate bill providing for an Assistant
Secretary of War. Passed—yoas, of 136; Feather- nays,
100.... The contested election case
ston against Cate, from th First Arkansas
District, was considered.
57TH Day.—T he contested election case of
Featherston ag ainst Cate was taken up....
Bills were introducer! by Mr. Owen appro¬
priating ?35,003 for the erection of a monu¬
ment to the division of regulars at Gettys¬
burg.....Representative K ms ! »orted
favorably from the Committee on Military
Affairs his bill appropriating £200,000 to b<*
gin the reoonstriietion of the military post at
Jefferson Barracks. Mo.
58th Day.—C onsideration of the cont si
election case of Featherston against Cate, of
Arkansas, was resumed, The debate had
not concluded when the House adjourned.
5 r JTH Day.—B y a party vote of 147 to 138,
the House decided tiiat Vv . H. L’cte, the v itz
ting member from the First Arkansas Dis
rri'd. was not elected a R .epi esentative in the
List Coagr* led led, by waselect<y!. a vote of
145 to JtiTi. that L. P. Featherston
and he appeared and took his seat.
00th Day.—T he greater portion of the day
was consumed in a discuss.on of a bill for th?
compulsory attendance of wit tic 4 betor/
registers and receivers of land offices, hue no
action was taken A number of P* in.ic
buildings aopropriation bills were passed.
Two-thirds of all the children born in.
Connecticut in 1839 were boys.
An inventor of Belfast, Ireland, has
mad< a pneumatic tire for bicycles that is
claimed to destroy alt vibration. It is
about 2 i inches in diameter, and consists
of an outer covering of rnbber inclosing
an inner air-tube. Air is pumped by a
foot -blower, and a valve prevents its re
turn.
A MODEL LOW-COST HOUSE.
Dcscription and Expense of a Small
and Inexpensive Structure.
(Copyright by the Antlior.)
Carpenters and builders are good fellows
who perform an immense amount of skillful
work for insufficient compensation. They
are called hard names if a knot the size of a
pin-head appears in an otherwise perfect
structure. They are abused for a small leak
in a roof after a furious cyclone started a
few shingles instead of leveling the house to
the ground. They are blamed for an uucon
trolable spring in the cellar and so on, with¬
out rhyme or reason, to the end of u long
chapter of complaints. serious accusation against
But there is one
them that admits of little or no excuse. They
invented and they perpetuate the dry goods
box style of architecture.
Fancy for a moment that th thousands of
common place box structures that an obser¬
vant traveler sees from a car window had
.c
5
b
IS I Jffii m
?ia« i Us#iiS^ts£,
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« -------rs-awf lsaPo ip? q
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,
perspective view.
beauty of form and color. Then consider
that with about the same materials anil at
about the same cost l'oe labor these houses
might have been all the fancy enormity pictures of them.
It seems sometimes that the the
offense referred to calls for Legislative cor¬
rection.
The cut given herewith shows what might
have been in many a now unsightly box neigh¬
borhood except for the dry goods de¬
signer. A small and inexpensive structure
presenting an attractive appearance from
every point ot view because it shoVYsfiV.'S and
“breaks’’ that please the eye and appeal to
the imagination.
Below u ill be found a somewhat detailed
description Size of Structure: of this design: Extreme width ((front),
26 ft.; depth (side), 31. ft. 6 inches.
Height of .Stories: Cellar, 7 ft.; first story,
9 ft.; second story, 8 ft.
Materials for Exterior Walls: Foundations,
stone or brick; first story, clapboards; sec¬
ond story and roof, shingles. finished with
Interior Finish; All rooms
white plaster and soft wood trim, Stair
case, newels, rails and balusters, hard wood.
Exterior Colors: Body of first windows, story, pale
yellow; casings of doors and cor¬
ner boards, water table, cornices, bands and
v-W-.-Drf =1
T-r- !
^U0tcJuy>v., & 'o
a
//.V'/ /£■'' »ouio.. Of
4-, vl 4
t. J 7 'll |j
/£,l o"x/3Zi''
SK! Tf
£>.
//-> A „
%
FIRST FLOOR.
veranda posts and rails, white; shingling on
side walls and roof,silver stain; outside doors,
white with yellow panels; b.inds, white with
yellow slats; sashes, dark green; brickwork,
red.
Accommodations: The principal shown rooms by
and their sizes, closets, etc., are addition
the plans given herewith. Ill
thcr<- is a cellar under the whole house with
an inside and im outside entrance thereto,
and the garret loft is floored to provide
storage Special room. Features: All the windows except
those of the cellar are glazed with double
thick glass. The porches are ceiled and
finished with oil in natural colors, . The
“swell" front and the “swell" side increase
the sizes of important rooms and give variety
and interest to the exterior. Tip front
parapet is roofed with t in level with its too
at the sides and rising a iitt'd in the center to
carry off rain and snow. To the obstTver on
I r
Id
I N tA-3
//:o >. /Zlo' Ci
. : JO/t'/-v'i
,-j ta&nxsxESaa (v U L
i
Ek-rcsprsjJ II
:
i 1 //.'o'y. /s-o'i I f VS f n VI
& y
SECOND FLOOR.
the ground the Parapet ha, the appearance
Of enclosing the floor ot a balcony.
Cost: In the neighborhood of the city of
New York, wher« the o are no unusual aiffi
cuities in excavating a:ul no unusual ernenses
in transporting materials, $ 1500. It is well,
outs of th 18 Tie ■' >f de
to -ay that no o i-.i be given
that have not been prov° bv actual cor
struction. i t is a 1 wavs clifticuif, but not im
possible, to let the contra/:, i or a small house
at the right figure. Most contractors prefer
larger work, and the high bids of a few of
them easily discour * a man of small faith
But the determined man wno submits com¬
plete drawings and specifications to all (if
necessary) reputable bu biers in his neighbor¬
hood usua.ly h uc*:w? lr*.
it. W Skiiwu,-.. Architect.
A DEED rOE S22,UUU,U00*
A. Wealthy Pittsburgcr TrauslV i*h i!»*•
Property to iiis Soil.
Ex-Judgo Thomas A. Mellon, of Pittsburg.
Penn., aged and feeble, has filed a dew
with the Recorder transferring all his v.r '
rea 1 rate — $22,000,000— lo son. Andre*
W. Mellon. Judge M Tlon Fit own'd arid ,,r r, Ai>- .
in aimo3t every ward in •.burg
gkany. He is said to have bad more ti.a :
1000 dwelling houses, t* . ,'sa large trausf a.noun
of unimproved property, fhe rat <
includes consideraoie real estate ui the lar
Wert. The personal property of Judge
Mellon i» divided among his otaer eiwMrr >
GEORGIA RAILROAD CO.
Stone Montain Route.
Office of General .Manager, \
Augusta, Ua., Sept. 21, 1S89. .
/COMMENCING i SUNDAY, 22nd, Inst .
/ the following Passenger Schedules will
bo operated:
-= FAST LINE >
No 27 West 1)aii,y. No. 28 East Daily.
Lv Augusta 7:45 am Lv Atlanta 2:45 pm
Ar Athens 11:40 a tn Ar Cr’dville 6:54 ”
Lv Athens 8:30 a m Lv Athens 3:50 pin
Ar Wash’t’n 10:40 am Ar Wash'tn 7 20 ”
Lv Wash’t’n 7:20 a m Lv Wash’tn 4:20 pm
Lv Cr’dville 9:42 a m Ar Athens 7:00 ”
Ar Atlanta 1.00 p m|Ar Augusta 8:15 pm
No. 1 West Daily. No. 2 East Daily.
Lv Augusta 11:05 am Lv Atlanta 8 00 am
Lv Macon 7:10 pittjAr am Lv Cr’dvllo 12:24 pm
Lv Camack. 12:55 Athens 5:15 pm
Lv Wash’tn 11:10 am Ar Wash’t’n 2:20 ptu
Lv Athens 8:50 am j Ar Camack 1:12 pm
Ar Cr’dville 1:32 pm Ar Macon 6:00 pm
Ar Atlanta 5.45 pm Ar Augusta 3:15 pm
No. 3 West Daily. No. 4 East Daily.
Lv Augusta 11:00 pm Lv Atlanta 11:15 pm
Ar Cr’dville 1:54 ami Ar Cr’dville 3:58 are
Ar Atlanta 0:30 am ai’ Augusta 0:45 im
Union Point & White Plains It. K.
Leave Union Point *10:10 a m >v 5;40 p in
Arrive Silnam 10:35 a m 6:05 p 111
Arrive White Plains 11:10 am 6:40 p 1U
Leave White Plains *8:00 a in *3:30 p in
Arrive Siloam 8:35 am 4:05 pm
Arrive Union Point 9:00 am 4:30 pm
♦Daily Except Sunday
J-*f Superb Improved Sleepers to Aug¬
usta and Atlanta.
No.27 and 28 stop at, and receivepassen
geisto and from following station only}
Grovetown, Harlem, Hearing, Thomson,
Norwood, Harnett, Crawfordville, Union
Point, Greeneslioro, Madison, Rutledge, Litlio
Social Circlo, Covington, Conyers,
uia. Stone Mountain and Decatur.
Parlor ears on 27 and 28 between Au¬
gusta an d Atlanta.
Train No. 54 on Athens Branch gives
passengers for No. 28 on main line ! ■
minute.-, for supper at Harlem.
J. W. GREEN.
Geu’l Mutineer
E. R.DORSET, (Jcn’l Passenger Agent
Joe. W. White, T. I’, t
Augusta Ga.
The Best Spring
©MEDICINE®
IN The World is
RRR
AS A SPRING 1)11
MEDICINE,TO ANDTWlEf^l/
■ OP CURE Y
AILMENTS THE GENERAL J I I
0FTHE
SYSTEM,TAKE till
\
HOW?
"Can the world know a man han a good
thing it.”—V unless he advertises the possession
of andkkiiii.t.
> ★ ★ ★
H- WRITE US
wherever you live, and I
we will ship you a
o fine instrument on 15
Days’ Test Trial in
your own home.
* ★ *
NO CASH REQUIRED
Until you have tested and approved Our freight
both ways if instrument fails t-> pleas'*'in cither
Style, price fair or quality. < furs, th" risk, yours only
to give and full test, and buy if fully pleased.
40,000 Southern Homes
Supplied by us since 1870 on this TEST TRIAL
PLAN, first introduced in the Louth by us. Fi.ir
cst me thod of sale nossible, and a great benefit to
those at a di.stanc* cannot visit our ware 1 iom»
ALL RISK SAVED
By this trial plan, and purchasers absolutely as¬
sured perfect instrument:; at the very lowest
possible cost Selling only the best instru¬
comprehensive ments made, that ! stand the most severe and
tests, wt do not fc-.ir to send them out
on trial and let them stand sold) Ilicir merit*
All we ask is the privilege of shinping on ap¬
proval. No suit, no pay. Our freights if w- fail.
EASY TO BUY
From live us by either correspondence. No m.ttter whether
you ten or a thousand miles from us.
'.o™U?
One price only. No more, no less. Large
Discounts from makers prices. All tompe
tition met. Complete outfits free. All freight
p* d. Lasy installment*, h very inducement that
* n y f^‘ r dealing hou ran oiler.
Write for Valuable Information.
Catalogues, Circulars, Special
Fall Offfars 1880. Copy of now
Paper “Sharps and Flats"
ALL FREE. Address
SS
SAVANNAH, CA.
MY SON
“DeD with the men who advertise. You
will r*ever lose ny it.” A»ilh. L ANKL1N.
PftT Write L & B. S. M. H. abc J*
BUT COME
and See.
Ghas> Bergstrom
--IS STILL AT IDS OLD STAND IN
SELLING THE BEST GOODS
2 YT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES.
SUC11 AS
Dry Goods, Provisions, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Hats
And Anything Else You Want.
'Bergstrom’s (’asli Store.
IS Tin: PLACE TO BUY GOODS.
C. W. lOHLBFSS,
Augusta Marble and Stone Works,
-Corner Washington and Ellis Streets
A.xig usta, ■ djard,.
Leading Monument Business for Artistic Work,
--AND REASONABLE PRICES.
legwork for the country carefully boxed and delivered at Augusta depot fra# at
charge. (aprB ly.)
Geo. R. Lombard & Co.
i
WORK.B,
Abovo t’jiasHoiiKer Depot, AUGUSTA, (iEOIUHA.
-SELL THE CHEAPEST AND BEST
ENGINES & BOILERS.
3’- , ( uouipleto *«]£ and JtftU-ouUfiM
1 ./mKngiiH'FrliiK’Supplies,Cotton, Grain,Saw Mill (in'!
Labor-saving Machinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Belting,
% .Sawn, Inspirators, Injectors, etc.
Large Stock to Select From.
Prices Low. Goods Guaranteed.
Write for (Mronlflrs. t-yf Castings of every kind, anil new work (light and heavy)
piojnptly doi.e. Best outfit South.
GIN WORK N 7.:; d ,£ffS’K”ra and well done. tffWhei
is firm meutloii this Papeb.
McKinnic, Augusta Brewing Co.,
Fenwick 4 Nelson Sts. OA.
EXPORT BOTTLED BEER
, .._ \ SPECIALTY.N......
of Beer Guaarateed Pure and
WHOLBSOMK,
Jesse Thompson & Co
MA NUFCTU/tEIt8 OF
DOORS, SASH, BLINDS,
Mouldings, Brackets, Laths,
Lumber and Shingles.
-DEALERS IN
Window Glass and Builders’ Hardware.
Plaining Mill and Lumber Yard, Hale Street,
*. ear Ontral Kuiload Yard, AUGUSTA, (1A*
FURNITURE.
FOJt PRICES ON FINK, MEDIUM AND CHEAP FURNITURE:
We Beat the World on Low Prices,
-Parlor .*:uits in Plush for $34.00, Bedroom Suits at -11.00.
c;« to l LUMIAt; A BOWLES,
THE LEADERS!
838 Broad and 837, Ellis Streets, Augusta, Georgia.
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A. J‘. SCHWEERS,
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