Newspaper Page Text
.Dtstfot
BY I). W. B. BOUIXY,
"FRIDAY MDUNUVO. Of'T. 1. 1 07-,
MaTohkl).—Tlio Macon Telegraph
. 15!!.y*:
We learn from HamiUnn Vis
itor that a Mr. .DO. Floyd, of liar
ris count v, recently bought, “a half
interest in th<' cross roads at Wis
dotti’s store” for sl2oo—the 'first
purchase of the kind on record that
vo ever hoard of.
In tlio same issue we fin ! the fol
lowing:
Disastrous reports from Texas still
come. The conn try was submerged
fir into the interior am! oonhl ho seen
coming in tidal plat cans six feet high.
That heats tlie Visitor's paragraph
to death. What a sight that must
have been of the country coming in
tidal p'atoaus six feet high! And
yet soni j of onr daily papers presume
to imagine that they possess all the
wit, sense and intelligence of the en
tire weekly press of the State.
N. fc S. Hoar.— Wo fear that a
full delegation from Harris will not
I>e present at the rnilroad meeting in
Greenville next Tuesday. While
this is to he regretted, it is nppar
en’iy unavoidable. It is unfortunate
that the first Tuesday was selected,
•sow merchants, lawyers and others,
have more business than at arty other
time, and are almost obliged to bo
here. We hope, however, that those
■delegates who cannot attend will fur
nish alternates who can nnd will.
Harris county should be deeply inter
ested in this matter, as it is one of
great importance to her.
W6F Tho “ Georgia News” editor
of the Macon Telegraph, in noticing
our offer of prfle, spitefully adds that
he bets three to one we start another
paper in Jess than si* months. Very
likely; and if we should start another
in less than three days, it would cost
Jtccse nothin", and would he none of
bis •business.
Central Hotel.— When you go
to Columbus, givo this hotel a trial.
It is now kept by Mrs. S. K. Wol
d ridge, and that clover gentleman,
Mr. L. I. Harvey, formerly with
Bedell and Ware, has charge of the
office. The fare is good, and the
terma nro only #2 a day, or 50c. for
a bed or single meal,
——i ■ i—'
The Texas Storm. —Many lives
wore lost and an immense amount of
property was destroyed by the late
storm. Many poor families are en
tirely destitute, and help is badly
needed. Let everybody wbo can do
nate something for the relief of the
nufortunato sufferers. The loss in
Galveston alone is estimated at five
millions of dollars. Tho total loss of
life and property will probably never
be accurately ascertained.
The Greensboro Herald gives
an account of n very remarkable case
of somnambulism which occurred
near that place a few nights ago. A
negro boy, about fourteen years old,
who had assisted in taking a bee tree
end hiving the bees, in a pieco of
woods some mile or moro from home,
got up in his sleep during tho night,
and going to where tho hive had
beet) left, shouldered it and brought
it to tho house, without waking, hav
ing crossed several deep gullies and
three ten-rail fences.
B3T* The Fort Valley Mirror says
that a nan recently killed seven old
moccasins and 75 young ones in a
little mud-bole near Marshnllville.
Chicken Cholera. —Three drops
of Perry Dav is’ paio-kil'cr in half a
pint of shelled corn in first stages of
disease; if later, dilnie, and give only
one drop iu liquid form. Don’t give
more than two doses in one day.
CTTwo negroes were buried alive
in Atlanta, last week, from the caving
in of a trench which was being dog
for the foundation of a wall. One
was dug out alive, but the other suf
focated before he c old he rescued.
Goon for Boston.—The mayor of
Boston has anthorijud tho mayor of
Galveston to draw on the city for
$5,000 to assist the sufferers by the
recent storm.
Horse Disease. —A new horse
disease is spreading iu New York
and New Jersey. It is said to re
semble cerebro-spinal lucniugctis, and
is quite fatal.
The latest invention in tho life-boat!
line is a boat with a broad line of
cork at the load-line, so constructed
that it sails equally well either side
up. It will not npeet easily; but, if
it does upset, the bottom and keel
fall right down through the centre,
and there it is, just as it vras before, a
perfect boat, only wlnt was the bot
- tom has become the top.
Whitaker’s District.
Bosk llill, Sept. 28, 137.'.
En. Visitor. —We have but little
of in‘crest transpiring .just now in our
vicinity. But farmers are quiie Im-v
picking col ion, harvesting corn, pens,
e'e., and will make syrup the nexi
year’s sub-i.itute for western me t.
From all iudiouions trying tones
await onr people and are not far dis
lari*; and the question with the nr
jur.ty is M what are we to do?”
Our opinion is that we can do but
little to avail any good until our peo
ple make up their mind; to live
within their income and estimate
that income not upon the basis of a
full crop, but upon the half of art av -
erage crop. Of course but few cm
fully meet the demands ponding for
this year’s supplies, but next year, if
they live within the estimate of half
an average, they will have a little to
add to payment of accounts; and if
the seasons should prove more pro
; Finns, and a fair average crop be
made, then we will have just so
much more to square us with the
world —this will take but a few years
to make us all independent of increas
ing debt, and then if less cotton and
more supplies are made for home
consumption it will not be long ere
prosperity will dawn as the rising of
anew sun upon the depreciated
homes and weary hearts of our peo
ple. This policy is not of easy, ae
complishinent, for we will have to
endure many hardships and depriva
tions, hut it is one the possibility of
which cannot be questioned.
At least a year will have passed
before wo can get any relief from
the present financial depression.
Congre-s, it is trnc, will at its next
se-sion bo of a different type from
the la t. one, but it does not meet
until llie 4ili of March next; and it
will take at least a year to recover
the country. The great pressure to
day upon labor is the want of a cur
rency of national and uniform value,
and make legal tenders convertible
into gold bonds and inconvertible
into legal tenders at the option of
the holders. Such u currency only
will readily respond to the demands
of trade in the transfer of the pro
ducts of labor to the consumer, and
such a currency will inevitably com
mand the confidence' of both Labor
and capital.
The withdrawal of a large volume
of currency from circulation is the
result of Radical legislation with a
view to the resumption of specie pay
ment in 1879, four years hence. Let
us look this matter in the face. If a
few short months have brought about
present financial embarassments,what
will the coming four years bring?
Distress untold to all except bond
holders and those who horde their
gains—and to many ruin will be tlio
result.
Let the notion of Congress ho as it
may, we must endeavor to he inde
pendent of its conduct, and lot faith
in ourselves be the sheet anchor of
hope. If we stem the flood wo will
have the proud satisfaction of having
achieved tho mastery for ourselves.
If national legislation brings aid to
our own efforts and secures relief, we
w ill bo grateful; and when the glad
tidings of freedom shall be proclaim
ed, the sweet waters of gladness w ill
como upon our hearts as the music of
David did over the darkened spirit of
Saul. Montrose,
Lowell Warehouse. Messrs.
Slade it Etlieredge, tho proprietors
of this warehouse, have had several
years’experience. Mr. Slade is well
known to the old patrons of Allen,
Proer & Illges, as their former book
keeper and cashier, and Mr. Ether
edge is equally well known as a local
operator iu tho Columbus market.
In addition to their experience, they
are clever and accommodating gen
tlemen, and we hope will receive a
fair share of the cotton warehoused
in Columbus.
Savannah News, —The purchase
of the Advertiser by the News will
cause no change in the name of the
latter paper. All cash subscribers to
the Advertiser will be served with
the News until their time expires.
The News we have always looked
upon as ouo of the best papers iu
Georgia; and now that it has the
whole field to itself it will be able to
make still further advancement in the
popularity which it has heretofore so
justly deserved.
—c • - •
J. S. J ones. —See the advertise
ment of this gentleman, who is just
receiving his fall stork, and which
lie is anxious to sell for the cash.
Best fall prints at. ten cents, and other
goods in prop rtion. Don't forget
the ou'.-h drygoods house when \on
go to Columbus.
IT" Ti <* j opu'aFon of New Y ■
. State is 5,000,000.
Dangerous Places.
The Albany Mews speaks as fol
lows in regard to a great evil exist
ing in this country:
T he mi erable deal-f ills nnd hell
ho’us all through the country, yclept
country stores, with some honorable
exeepli ns, are nothing more nor less
tii.iu dens of thievery and pl ies for
training and educating negroes of low
morals and stupid intellects the art
of bringing in other people’s produce
for a little bei zinc, a r and handker
chief, an old pistol, or a email bit of
frictional currency. The keepers of
these cross road s id shops and ihiev
ing debaucheries, are a thousand
times more to blame than the poor,
ignorant negroes who make them
rich on produce and stock stolen from
employers’ fields, store-houses and
barn yard-, and deserve greater pun
i-fitncnt. Nineteen times out of
twenty they know as well as the thief
'oes th t the articles brought to them
in the night time for sale, are sto'en
property; but, as in nineteen cases
out of twenty they are. there exactly
for that sort of business, they take the
goods, conceal them, pay a pittance,
become parties to the crime and shel
terers for the rogue against detection
and punishment.
Such men are scoundrels in a four
fold sense. They take stolen goods
knowing them to be stolen, and are
therefore as bad as the thief. They
impose upon an ignorant race, and
demoralize the labor of tho country;
and therefore, are bad citiz ns, ami
ought to bn driven out by the negroes
themselves. They rob their neigh
bors and justify the theft among ihe
thieves, and thus inflame one race
against the other ; and therefore
ought to he sent to the chain gang.
They are the means of getting many
negroes into the elatebea ofi.be law,
filling our jails, and burdening the
tax-payers wiih the expenses of trials
and imprisonment; and therefore, it
is Atlit; duty of every good negro, and
every decent white man in the land
to assume the role of detective, and
bring the scamps to justice.
Such creatures have no sense of
moral shame, and less regard for the
moral turpitude of their crimes, and
therefore public sentiment, forcibly
expressed, should visit them with
swiftness and certainty.
Reports from Wisdom’s Store.
Judge Coleman says tho world is
just what it always was, but tho peo
ple have changed to an alarming im
possibility.
Mr. Bulwcr says, in nine cases out
of ten poverty is only an idea. Some
with ten thousand dollars a year, suf
fer more for want of means than oth
ers with only three hundred. The
reason is, the rich man Ims artificial
wants. Ilis income is ten thousand,
and he suffers enough from being
dunned for unpaid debts to kill a sen
sitive man. lie who earns a dollar
a day, and doesn’t run in debt is the
happier of the two. A calico dress
paid for fits much better than a silk
one for which you have run in debt.
There is really more happiness among
the working class that) among those
who are called rich; al w ays provid
ing that poor folks do not, in a small
er way, emulate their rich brethren.
On the 24th nit., a little boy about
four years old murdered a little girl
about one year old by driving a ten
penny nail into the top of her head.
Both were colored, and living‘on Mr.
Pickens Murrah’s plantation.
A little colored boy, aged about
ten, living on the plantation of tho
widow Nelson, was almost instantly
killed, on the 10th ult., by the mules
running away with a wagon.
Mrs. Benton, wife of Charlie Ben
ton, and daughter < f John M. Nel
son, died at her father’s residence on
the morning of the 2Sth ult.
Messrs. White and Bryant deserve
praise for having put our roads in a
good condition.
Honest Beck has been known for a
long time, and considered a good,
hard-working, harmless mule, but a
few days ago, as Bob Garner was
riding Iter a little faster than a walk
she accidentally feil down and broke
his foot.
Wo have had splendid
Saturday afternoon and night were
almost a continued shower, and Mon
day and Monday night the same.
From some accident i t the post-of
fice at La Grange tho wrong mail
sack was sent aere last Friday, and
consequently the L i Grange Reporter
did not reach here until Monday.
Dentistry. —Attention is called
to the cud of Dr. Pool, in this issue,
who will take pleasure in doing any
work you may need in bis line.
Frost and Ice.— There was a
heavy frost ami ice in Now Hamp
shire on the 23d ult. Vegetables of
i all kinds were destroyed.
1875. FALL OPENING. 1875.
J. g. Jillg’
' CASH DRY GOODS HOUSE,
€}©!shi&!m!Sj = 13-eorgia.
The nnr’ersi -u-! cn ! !s tie- aUcnt’c nof Ids customers end friend-- to hip lwge and attrac
tive Mock, in racing <-v.;r thing v w and desiiulde. Having visitedtlie Northern market*
at u m it . dv.mta: >- ->r lia.e. and o! e,B great inducements to cash purchasers.
New i m ps G i d* for immediate wear, embracing beautiful Gray Silk T*. pirns and Flai ls.
New Coll it; aed Ct IV IV.mats -s amt Overskirtßlack and (Moral MUs*
O 1 . sud id do a. Hamburg tdginps. choice Flints. Felt Shirts anil Flannels.
,j .-mu, 'I we d*, (and: -d mores, block and colored Alpacas. Mann Hl*-s Quilts.
]i>’ll bin tines, black 1' idimcres amt Bombasines, Towels and .Napkins.
I>„ .t Fall Ihints at Ten Cents ! B 1 -ached and brown Sheetings and Shirtings.
Orders hr mail or oth , • is ■ pronp'iy filled. J S.JnNFS.
03“ The Marietta Journal was
told by a g ntinman the other day
that human spittle was ns deadly
to poisonous st akes as their bites
were deadly to man. He say's while
picking up a bundle of straw and
trash under his arm, while cleaning
a fluid, a ground rattlesnake, four
feet long, crawled out from it and
fell to lire ground at his feet. He at
once placed his heel upon the head
of the snake.and spit ,in if a mouth.
Shortly nfie; wards Me spake showed
symptoms of inactivity and sickness,
and he picked it up by its t.-sil and
carried it to the house, and showed
it, to bis wife, telling her he bail spit
in its mouth and that it was poisoned.
At the expiration of fifteen minutes
the snake was dead. To further ex
periment, he came across a blowing
adder (snaki), which ejected from its
mouth a yellowish liquid. He caught
it and spit in its mouth, and it died.
Hu caught mini her blowing, .and it
refused-to open its mouth. He spit
upon a stick and rubbed the spittle
upon tlio adder’s note, and it died.
Afterwards he canto across a black
snake, regarded ns not poisonous,
and lie caught it, and rpit in its
month. Instead of the spittle killing
the black snake, as it did the poison
otts reptiles, it only made it stupid v
siek, from which it recovered. This
conclusively shows that poisonous
snakes have as much to fear from the
! spittle of man as man has to fear from
I their bites.
■■ ■ *——~*
g-tgF“ Some persons in India were
seized with spasms, accompanied by
foaming at the mouth, after eating
peaches. The fruit was analyzed,
and found to contain a considerable
quantity of poisonous virus. After
inspecting tlio tree, a iPad dog was
found buried bene T.i, proved by ap
pearances to have died of hydropho
bia. The vivas had penetrated the
soil, next the sap of the Irce, and sub
sequently transmitted hr-elf to the
ifuit. The poison seems to have lost
some of its power in transit, as all
the patients recovered.
A St. Louis man avers that.,
mosquito bars are unhealthy—that
the carbonic acid gas, being unable to
penetrate the net work, is breathed
and rebreathed into the system. lie
says that, this summer, for the first
time, he slept under a bar, and woke
every morning with a headache and
bad taste in his mouth, after an nn re
freshing sleep, although, for ten years
previously, he had enjoyed slumber,
and awoke free from pain. lie advi
ses all wishing healthy sleep, to use
no bars, and leave their windows
open. lie says that five cents worth
of oil of pennyroyal will last a week,
bv putting a few drops on the pillows
each night, and will effectually pre
vent mosquitoes or bed-bugs.
The most singularly named man in
New York is Walter R. T. Jones—
the middle initials standing tor Re
stored Twice. Ilis parents first had
a son named Walter, who died. Au
otlier boy was born to them, and
christened after the first, with an ad
dition, Walter Restored. He died,
and a third male child was born and
received the name he now bears,
Waiter Restored Twice Jones.
fTET In the recent, great storm in
Switzerland, near Geneva, a man was
killed by a hailstone striking him on
the temple, and another had his wrist
broken. An extraordinary number
of small birds were killed by the hail;
one person is said fo have picked up
five hundred.
i—
C The soda water privilege for
the Philadelphia centennial, has been
sold for $45,000, while the privilege
of dispensing 1 iger beer to the visi
tors brought $30,000.
A man in Concord, N. 11., after
firing at a partiidge with a revolver
seven ti nes without killing it, threw
the weapon in disgust, and knocked
the bird’s head off.
A failin' in lowa recently
gave a daughter a lead mine as a bri
dal present.
NSC Fifteen thousand persons are
out of employment at Fall River,
Massachusetts.
i A Denver boy pujied out the
bung of n beer barrel and stuck in
his thumb; the barrel rolled over and
broke the thumb so badly that it hud
to be amputated; and the father of
;ho boy sues the owner of the barrel
for $5,000.
—
Thomas Crawford, of Clarke
county, is eighty five years old and
never swore an oath, never took a
chew of tobacco, and never loaded
and fired a gun.
A colored female in Wayne
county recently gave birth to a baby
weighing twenty four pounds.
7T3T Cobb county claims a young
lady who, in a somnambulistic state,
milks the cows-'tid sweeps the house.
£3?“ Seven trees in the neighbor
hood of Irwinlon were struck by
lightning and set on Lire one day re
cently.
- *-©*
Cggr There are two hundred and
thirty-one organized military compa
nies iti Georgia—fifty-eight armed.
Cgy Land around Thomaston is
worth from five to fifteen dollars an
acre. Around Bartlesville it is and
has been selling for from thirty to
one hundred dollars per acre.
83s?*Mr. Wm. Holmes, of Wash
ington county, was thrown from his
horse into a gully, the horse falling
on him and breaking bis back.
J? 55“ General Longstreet has bought
one hundred acres of land in the
neighborhood of Gainesville, and will
make that city his future home.
Our national debt is $2,131,-
000,000.
2W” About 100,000 Spanish troops
have been sent, to Cuba in the last s x
years, and most of them are in the
grave.
EST* The picture of Morse, the
adapter of lightning to telegraphy,
has been destroyed by lightning in
New Orleans.
QWf" Murray county, Kentucky,
has a bright individual. He built a
hogshead in his house about four
times as large as the door, and instead
of taking the hogshead to pieces to
get it out, he knocked out the side of
his house.
Geologists Lave discovered
that the ground of southern Indiana,
Kentucky and Tennessee, is slowly
rising at the rate of about a foot ev
ery twenty-four years.
* garni
Of” An English lady is willing to
make affidavit to the fact of finding
a frog in the centre of a boiled po
tato.
22?“ The salt works at Key W est
Fla., have yielded about 10,000 bush
els of salt this season.
BUT NONE
Until you get our
Complete Price List
It will pay you well,
Dolton Brothers
214N.55t. St. Louis.
Columbus Dental Rooms,
W. T. FOOL, Phoprif.tor,
Georgia liom“ BuiUing, Columbus, G;i.
VINHGAR and SWEET I'IDEK.
The nndi r.dcned propo-es to furni-ih to the
trade and for family use a superior article of
Pure White TVine and Cider Vinegar,
and Street Cider,
at price - that defy com petition—.all things
considered. Those articles are superior to any
made in the South—having receive,! the first
premium at our last State fair as tire s: : .
Or te’s so’icited ami satisfaction guaran
teed . Address DARWIN G. JON hid,
to tl Atlanta, Ga.
GEO UGIA —Harris Corxi Y.
v. .1 IV . T !. executor of J'V Ptv-d, late of
said ccn.ity. deceased, applies for letters of
di-mi Am—
Ail j arsons concerned r.-e hereby notified
to hor can . ; f rn they have, by tbu first
H unlay in November next, why said appli
cation should not 1 w grant-1. (liven under
my hand officially, Aug. 2, 1875.
augG-ti j F 0 WILLIAMS, Ord'y.
J. H. HAMILTON,
WHOLESALE & RETAIL GROCER
Junction Franklin, Warren and Oglethorpe Sts., Columbus, Ga.
MY LARGE STOCK OF
GROCERIES AEsTIA PROVISIOKS,
is now full and will be sold at J lie lowest possible prices for Cashl
Ragging, good and heavy, at 12d.
Iron cotton Tii-s of different patterns til oc.
Large stock Flour of all grades. Bacon and bulk meats.
Large lot best Black Seed Outs. Corn r.rnl Meal.
' Lard—choice leaf in tierces, kegs and buckets-
Molasses and Syrup in variety.
Sugars and Coffees of every grade. Choice Teas.
Domestic Dry Goods, including Osnaburgs, Sheetings, Checks, Stripes.
Cotton Yarns, Arc. Wines and Liquors, Shoes, Tinware, Ac., <fcc F
I guarantee satisfaction in,all things. 11. C. Farli.y and Bolus Jsitkr.
SON' are with me, and cordially invite their fiieuds to call on them.
My stock will always be kept/nil ahd complete. No charge for drayaee
Respectfully, J. H. HAMILTON; '
'DAS'iI-B. AC FI FIVE. A
Ksasil- • - ZCZZ *?:•——> usretEJ*!'
jig a ®j|i -J|fß|jL Ague! ate
WM Is srnn.and iiaiomlkss remedy for Chills and
Ais rjf I'bwer, Fever and Ague, Dumb Ague, Inter
-11l /T iAGUtINrI y 'T b mitteut Fever, Bilious Fever, and ail diseases
N’H&j sAt * If#' having a malarial .origin. It contains no Qui-
If SI? e ’ Galorticl, Arsenic, or other hurtful drug,
fy Vilnle 1 erfi>nning a cure almost literally in
Am ninety-ni e cases out of a hundred, Agneine
J- _ <Lj( not li.jnre the most delicate person, either
• ;nf ' , P t or ad " ]t - 11 nearly tasteless, and
; produces none of the discomfort which usually
• -'I df -Mb - . - -b,, Y a-V- tomes of tak-'ng medicine. Silently, but sure
ly. it attacks nml destroys it;-.; tua!..rml poison which has been absorbed by the system re
storin'! the sufferer from this m -t cnerv ;ting of diseases to health and strength once more*
Unlike Quinine, it produces no injuiior.s afu'-r effects
The proprietors Guarantee a Cure, and instruct their agents to Refund the Money in ev
ery ease of failure There is abselately so m--.it in giving this remedy a trial, as your money
will be letorned if you are not cuicd. V.'hy purchase unreliable remedies when is
Warranted to Cure? ’Riu'unnt! in and Neuralgia, when the suffering is potiodicrl, are usu
ally canned by malarial poison in the system, and can be cured by the persistent use of Ague
ine. A box should always be kt-pt in tlio bouse in readiness for the first symptoms of chills,
as then the disease can be broken up at once. It Agueiue be taken occasionally during the
sickly season, an attack of ague may often he avoided altogether.
A-ueine is for sale in this county by Dr. T 8 Mitciieu, Hamilton, Ga , and dealers gen
eraliy. Don’t fail to eive it a trial. Prepared by Richardson & Cos, Brooklyn, NY.
A(I PEINE. .^ JggSKa,il * 5^ i A~<HtIE 1 Wbl
’ 209 COOKING STOVES
FOR SALE AT PRICES TO SUIT HARD TIMES, BY
|3L, Sz OO.^
who invite tba attention of the public to their large and complete stock>
consisting of
a-aacl ©TOVSIS
(Charter Oak and other first-class patterns),
Grates, Hollow Ware, Wood ami Willow Ware, Silver, Plated and Britannia Goods,
Crockery and Glass Ware, Pocket and Table Cutlery, of our own importation.
Manufacturers of Tin, Copper and Sheet Iron IVare of every description.
Prices as low as the lowest. [Columbus, Gn., Nov. 28, 1874.
A. M. ALLEN. A. G. BEDELL. J. S. GARRETT. J. M. O’BRIEN.
ALLEN 5 BEDELL & CO A
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants,
if' i/J “2?WABEHOTTSB,
©©EHimlsaas, => Georgia*
THE \SINGEB
V > M
A GAIN -| TP.ICMPUANTS
THE W O Tl E 13 5 S A. W AED
AGAIN RECEIVED BY
“THE WORLD’S FAVORITE,”
£?3“ Fee the following Sewing Machine Sales of 1874:
The table of Serving; Machine sales for 1874 shows that our sales last year amounted t*
241 G 79 machines—being a large increase over the sales of the previous year. The tabls
shows that oi r. sai.v .; . cun those or any other company for the period named by the nuffl'
her of 148,8"2 machines, or : urly three times those or ant otheb company.
It may be further stated that the sales oi 1873. as compared with those of 1872, shows
relative y iargi: inni ee beyond the sties of oilier makers. For instance, in 1872 we sold
4-3,000 in, re machines than anv o.lter company ; whereas, in 1875, the sales were 113,245
machines in excess of our highest competitor, and in 1874 our sales were 148,852 machines
more than any otiier company.
SALES TOR 1874. SALES FOIt 1872. ,
The Bivr,rß Vi tNTTACTri-.rNr. fo. sold 241,679 219.758 Increase 21,™
Wheel >r & IVil'iut Jianiitccttuing 00, 92.827 174.088 Decrease.. . 21.261
Hv: s .winy Mifbine Cos. estimated 35.000 145,000 Decrease UP-#*
Domestic Sewi g Machine Cos 22.7<K) 49.554 Decrease....
Weed Sewing M tcliine Cos 20.495 42,414 Decrease 21,949
Gtovcr & Bike' Sewing Machine Cos, est’d 20,000 52,010 Decrease 32,010
Remington Empire Sewing Machine C 0... 17.C08 9.183 Increase 8.42
Wilson 8-wing Machine Cos 17.525 22 CSC Decrease W®
G 9d Mcdtt'i s wing Mm bine Cos 1 .214 18,897 Decrease 3 '6y
Wilcox & Gibbs Sewing Mu tbineCo 1 '1.710 33,639 Decrease.... 19,9-9
13.529 18,930 D crease 5 4M
V'cior S-wine Mae'-iim-Co 0 2 2 11 9 i Decrease.... 5 66*
Florence S twins Mm hide Cos 5 517. 15,793 Decrease l#rj!
Secor Sewing M chine t 'o 4,541 3.450 Increase l.***
J E Braunsdorf& Cos, .Etna 1,838 4,242 Decrease,... 2e> w
Onr New Family Machineemluodics new and essential principles—simplicity of construe
tioa, e i-c of op-ration, uuifornmv If ; ■ i-e fiction :-t ■:y rpjt-ei, capacity for rangeand vs
riety oi work, tine or coarse—leaving ail rivals belli ( I it
Test the Si vGlk before purehasir. ;.1 ! \7 ther. T.-rms eu^y —payments light.
Singer Co-
C. A. YCHBURGiI M tniiiccr for South Carolina. Georgia aod Florid*-
Office at Savannah. Ga. Blanches—Atlanta, Athens. Augusta, Macon and Thomas vili*
Ga : C.hiarlcston and Columbia, $ C; Ja ksonville and Tallahassee, Fla. -
:: 1 your address to either of the above offices for a catalogue of the celebrated BaXA*
G lots-fitting Paper Patterns—the best and most stylish .patterns in imuket*