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g he g me (Citizen.
Suliivan Brothers. Publishers.
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ZEN.
Volume 3,
Waynesboro, Georgia,^Friday, August 22d, 1884.
Number 15.
W' e C' '"' KHitizw
Advertising Stales:
Transient advH. payable in advance.
(’nntruet ad vs. payable quarterly.
(‘omaimili al lnns for personal benefit will be
charm'd for as advs., payable In advance.
AVI vs. occupying special position charged 25
per cent, additional.
Notices uniting rending matter 10 cents per
line, each Inserl Inn.
Notices In I.ocal A lluslness column, next to
reading, "> cents per line each Insertion.
All notices will be placed among rending
matter II' not specially ordered otherwise.
For terms apply at, tills ollloe.
Taking the Veil.
Prof. Talfouril Smith and Mir
Ellen Oreshhin, of Greeno county,! savannah News loth Inst,
wore married on the 13th inst. The | Tiie Chapel of the
fair bride being a near relative, we j Vincent de Paul was the scene of
wish the young couple all the hap-! an exceedingly interesting and im-
Conveut of St.
pinessthat falls to the lot of wed
ded love.
Pollards and i thhages art* literally
r lined in our section by a little yel
low bug. They riddle the leaves
till they are like sifter bottoms. If
any body knows ^ a remedy, we
would like toknowUt.—Ureenesboro
Jferuhl.
Nothing plainer. Just kill the
bugs and order a wet spell.
An exchange says that the "Re
publicans are frightened at the
prospect of Senator Brown becom
ing Cleveland’s attorney-general.—
They have good cause for fear, and
if we could spare Senator Brown
out of the senate, we should urge
his appointment to the attorney-
generalship.
The Wrightsville Recorder says
that several gentlemen of that town
lias seen a track in the swamp near
that place D.'.J inches long and 6G
inches broad which it is thought
was made by a “large bear.” Wo
don’t think it
Tompkins to ruA
swamp “barefoot’* j.ist for the sake
of a sensational local item. It is
wrong to mislead the public in that
manner.
IWor brother
v*; through the
Three swords which formerly be
longed to General Twiggs are now
in the Bureau of engraving at
Washington, which wore taken
from tlie New Orleans Bank by
General Butler when that city was
captured during the late war. The
swords are worth $35,000, and the
heirs of General Twiggs have
brought suit through General But
ler against the United States gov-
ernmenc for the recovery of the
swords or their value In cash. As
the old reprobate stole these valua
ble swords, we think he should en
deavor to have the rightful owners
put in possession of them without
charge or fee.
A Lizard in liis Stomach*
Stopping a Cuttle Stampede.
For the past five or six years, says i “One of the smartest things 1 ev-
a St. Louis special, John Horan, a j or saw in my travels,” said a pus-
Sunday’s Atlanta Count Hut ion
contained an engraving of the great
new building which the proprietors
of that great paper has just com
pleted, .and which they occucpied
for the first time to issue their last
Sunday’s edition. The new building
is by far the finest and most com
modious printing office in the state.
It is massive in its structure, and is
CO by 1 to feet,and is six stories high.
Into this magnificent building the
proprietors have placed one of the
celebrated Web Perfecting Presses,
capable of turning out 15,000 copies
per hour ready for mailing. The
new building and equipments cost
largely over $100,000. The Constitu
tion is now the best equipped, most
enterprising and greatest paper pub
lished in the South. It has our
best wishes for its future success.
We learn from the Atlanta Jour
nal that the remains of Governor
Alexander II. Stephens, temporari
ly placed in a vault in Oakland
Cemetery, will he removed from
that city to Liberty Hall, at Craw-
fordville, for burial in the beautiful
grounds of the old homestead. The
Stephens Memorial Association, to
whom the place now belongs, will
in due time place an appropriate
monument over the dust ot this il
lustrious son of Georgia, and keep
the place in order. There arc a
number of articles at Liberty Hall
which have been purchased by the
'association, and which will he per
manently kept there as souvenirs
«f the life and times of the great
Commoner, and which will servo to
give lasting historic interest to the
place. It is right that his sa-
ci'cd dust should rest at the Home he
loved so well, and whose generous
shelter ho never refused to any hu
man being—great or humble.
The Wrightsville Recorder brings
the following Georgia wonder to the
front: “The most remarkable man
>n all these parts is Mr. Burrell
won, who resides about sixteen
miles from this place. Among the
many vicissitudes and misfortunes
of his life, he has home tho loss of
an eye, a leg and a shoulder have
been broken, Ids head lias been
fractured, lus nock broken, or dis
banded, and yet Mr. Koa still lives.
He is about seventy years of age, as
s l>rightly as a kitten, and clings to
bfe with the tenacity of a cat. It
H otti'n times jestingly remarked
'bat the only way to successfully
'‘^terminate the old gentleman, is
j" out his head off und hide it from
os body. Ho always bears the ue-
1 'dents which he full him with tho
omst remarkable fortitude and pa
hence; he Is a good and useful - man
'oal when he Inis passed away his
" U11U! will be held in grateful ro-
v O'ciulirunoo by those who survive
him.”
•Hi we have to say Is, what a
egoless old man!
pressive ceremony last evening, the
services being the formal renuncia
tion by Miss Sarah McAndrow, a
highly accomplished young lady of
Augusta, of the allurements of so
ciety and tli(> assumption of the
vows and Habit- of a novitiate in
the Order of Our Lady of Mercy.
A large number of visitors occu
pied seats in the main body of the
chapel with the Sisters ranged near
the altar rail at tho front. The choir
occupied a position at the farther
end of the apartment. Kneeling in
front of tiie altar, and a little in ad
vance of the seats occupied by the
Sisters, was the young lady in the
costume of a bride. A long white
veil partially concealed her regular
features, an exceedingly fair com
plexion, and a profusion of auburn
hair. Above her were over seventy
lighted candles on tiie main altar,
and a large number on the two side
altars, which illuminated the chapel
and cast a riulience suggestive of
that which heightens the brilliance
a of nuptial ceremony. Near the
postulant sat six little girls, dress
ed as bridesmaids, one holding aloft
a cross of gold.
The silence was broken by the
music from the choir, followed by
an address from ltev. Father Raf
ferty, Vicar General of the diocese,
who officiated at the ceremony.—
He referred to tiie mission of the
order into which the postulant was
seeking admission, and to the al
lurements of the world which she
was about to abandon. Compara
tively, few of her sex in America,
he said, would have undertaken to
discard the enticements of fashion
and assume the duties, which under
the vows of the Sisters of Mercy,
she signified her desire to discharge.
He referred to tho prejudice which
existed in some countries against
religious orders, and extoled the
zeal which the Sisters of Mercy lmd
exhibited in war and in times of
pestilence. In conclusion, he asked
tiie postulant if she desired to enter
upon the novitiate of the sisterhood.
The response was clear and firm:
“Yes.” He then asked if she had
been subjected to any undue influ
ence in making her resolve, or
whether she came of her own free
will and choice after mature delib
eration, when she again firmly re
sponded in tiie affirmative.
The six little girls then advanced
to the front of the altar, when tiie
cross was elevated over the postu
lant. The choir chanted a number
of psalms. Meanwhile tHe postu
lant, supported by two Sisters, hear
ing lighted candles, and followed
by tiie other Sisters, walked in pro
cession down the main isle, preced
ed by the six girls,towards the chair,
and thence passed out of tiie main
door of tho chapel.
In about twenty minutes the pro
cession returned in tho order in
which it passed out, the postulant
appearing this time as a “novitiate,”
attired in a habit of the order, con
sisting of a black robe with long,
loose sleeves, a white collar and
black bonnet. Tho ceremonial was
concluded by the benedictory ser
vice and tho retirement of the no
vitiate and Sisters from tiie chapel.
The sisterhood of the order are di
vided into two classes—choir sisters
and lay sisters. Candidates for either
class undergo a preliminary “postuj
lancy”ofsix months. At the end
of t*at time they assume tho lmhit
of the sisterhood and become novi
ces. Tho novitiate lasts two years.
Miss McAndrow became a postu
lant last February at the convent,
and last evening in taking the vows
of the novitiate was given the
name of “Mary Joseph.” The vows
which she took arc for life, by which
she is bound to poverty, chastity,
obedience, and the service of the
yoor sick and ignorant,
master stone-cutter, residing on
Magazine street, lias suffered from
what doctors in 8t Louis and other
cities have regarded as an intesti
nal disorder. He lias twice been in
hospitals in 8t. Louis, and lias
spent the greater part of his earn
ings with a view to securing some
permanent relief. Last Thursday
Horan was at work in tho stone-
yard when he was suddenly taken
ill. Fearing that lie was going to
vomit blood, lie closed His eyes, and
leaned for support on the stone on
which he was working. lie then
experienced a terrible pain in His
throat. Next he vomited. On re
covering and looking around, lie
found that he had not parted with
a portion of his lungs, as the pain
and sensation he experienced led
him to fear he had done, but with
a species of reptile of surprising
dimensions. Horan immediately
called His fellow workmen, and to
their astonishment pointed out the
wriggling reptile ho had just eject
ed from His system.
It was stretched out on the stone
clippings by one of the masons,
who on applying his rule to it found
that it was fully H inches long.—
From the head to within two inches
of its other extremity the reptile
was about 1L inches thick. It is
now in the possession of Dr. Y. II.
Boyd, of Easton avenue. Mr.
Horan’s sufferings for five yoars
have been terrible. He could not
work lor more than an hour with
out being compelled to rest. Often
lie had to remain away from work
two or three days a week, lie had
no appetite, and when he did take
food was rarely able to retain more
than a small portion of it. Seldom
did he obtain an unbroken night’s
rest. He frequently declared that
he could feel something turning
around in his stomach. Tiie doc
tors told him that his intestines
were growing together. Since ho
had vomited the reptile his brother
had come to the conclusion that he
must have unknowingly swallowed
it when working in the neighbor
hood of Dallas, Texas, some 7 or 8
years ago, at a place where the
water was impure.
sengcr from the West to a newspa
per reporter, “was a cowboy stop
ping a cattle stampede. A heard
of about six or eight hundred lmd
got frightened at something, and
broke away pell-mell with their
tails in the air, and the bulls at the
head of the procession. But Mr.
Cowboy didn’t get excited at all
when lie saw the heard was going
for a straight bluff, where they
would certainly tumble down into
tiie canyon and he killed. You
know that when a herd like that
gets going, they can’t stop, no mat
ter whether they rush to death or
not. Those in the rear crowd those
ahead, and away they go. I wouldn’t
have given one dollar a head for
the herd, but the cowboy spurred
up his mustang, made a little de
tour, came rigid in front of the
herd, cut across their path at a
right Jangle, and then galloped
leisurely on to the edge of the bluff;
halted, and looked around at that
wild mass of beef coining toward
him. He was cool as a cucumber,
though I expected to see him kill
ed, and I was so excited I could not
speak. Well, when the leader got
in a quarter of a mile of him, I saw
them try to slack up, though they
could not do it very quick. But the
whole herd seemed to want to stop,
and when tho cows and steers got
about where the cowboy had cut
across their path, I was surprised
to see them stop and commence to
nibble at the grass. Then the whole
herd stopped, wheeled straight
hack, and went to fighting for a
chance to eat where tiie rear guard
was. You see that cowboy had
opened a big hag of salt lie had
brought out from tho ranch to give
the cattle, galloped across the herd’s
course, and emptied the bag. Ev-
ry critter sniffed that line of salt,
and of course that broke up the
stampede. But I tell you it was a
queer sight to see that man out
thereon the ledge of that bluff qui
etly rolling a cigarrette, when it
seemed that he’d he lying under
two hundred tons of beef in about a
minute and a half.”
Mil*>s of Locusts.
Late advices from Vera Cruz,
Mexico,say that myriads of locusts
have appeared in that stale, and
notwithstanding immense numbers
of them have been killed great de
struction to crops lias resulted. In
Yucatan and Southern Mexico, 100
square miles are covered with the
pests. Corn, grass and other crops
have been utterly destroyed. It is
said that thousands of miles de
pendent upon the small crops will
have to ho supported by the gov
ernment for thq next six months.
A Cane Without Hope.
A Yount. (Orl Murdered.
Syc.ymouk, III,, August 14.—Kit
ty, tho 17-year old daughter of
Heck Mitchell, a farmer, three miles
west of hero, was killed by Louis
Taylor, a farm hand, yesterday.—
The murdered girl’s parents had
left the house for this city, leaving
the girl at home alone with Taylor,
who was working near tho house.—
The daughter of a neighbor was to
pass tho afternoon with Kitty.
When sho arrived at 2;80 p. m., she
made tho horrible discovery that
Kitty was a corpse, and that her
clothing had been set on liro by
Taylor who Hail evidently attempt
ed to outrage hoc. Two hundred
men set out on his trail, and finally
discovered him near a creek. Tay
lor run into the stream and killed
himself with a pistol shot In the
head. His body was recovered.—
Tho mother or the murdered girl
became insane when she saw the
dead hotly of her daughter.
Jno. R. Booker, of Macon, Ga.,
writes: “In 1878 I was attacked
by the most ravenous sort of can
cerous sores, that ate great holes
into my flesh and spread rapidly
over my body. I received the very
best medical attention; was dosed
with mercury and potash until I was
so crippled with mercurial rheum
atism that I could scarcely hob
ble about; my throat and mouth
were badly ulcerated; my hair be
gan to fall out. So wrecked was
my general health, that I became
a physical ruin and my life was
a burden. For a long time I was
bed-ridden, and my suffering was
so intense that I prayed for death
as a relief. I exhausted tiie whole
catalogue of patent medicines, in
each case following the directions
religiously. Eacli in turn seemed
to aggravate the malady, and none
of them benefited me in any way.
When life was apparently hopeless
I commenced taking S. S. S. To
this Specific I owe my life. In ton
days I commenced improving, and
in a short time was perfectly well.
My hair has grown out thick; my
health and strength have returned;
the ulcers in my throat and mouth
are entirely cured; my appetite has
returned, and for the first time in
years I enjoy my food. Every sore
lias disappeared from my body.—
L weigli as much as I over did in
my life, and am perfectly healthy
in every way. The very germs of
tiie cancerous affliction are de
stroyed. Not only is the terrible
malady that was preying on my
life, and which every one pro
nounced incurable, entirely cured,
hut I am also relieved of the had
effects of the mercury and potash
mixtures that I was fed on for
years.”
Beware of Potash and Mercury
mixtures, gotten up to imitate our
specific, they are dangerous.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis
eases mailed free.
The Swift Specific Co., Drawer
8, Atlanta, Ga., 159 W. 23tl St., N.
V., and 1205 Chestnut St., Phila.
Thore is a man living near Wood-
vllle, on tho Athens branch, who
eats all the large-sized tadpoles that
ho can catch. They are skinned,
thotlcsh is white, and are said to he
flavored something like oysters.—
The gourmand says he has eaten
everything that Inhabits the section
except the turkey buzzard, and in
tends to try one of these birds nice
ly baked.
An average base hall player In
dulges in a good deal of disjointed
chat.
Tiie Starving Indians.
Virginia City, Nov., Enterprise,
The starving to death of the
Blackfeet Indians is a disgrace to
the United States government.—
Some of its agents evidently need
hanging for murder of the worst
kind. The Rev. Father Prando,
who has just left tiie dying rem
nant of Indians, says he could not
bear to hear the pitiful, incessant
cry of the famishing children for
food which lie had not the power to
supply, nor to see the agonizing
tears of tho mother whose Imho is
dying tor tiie want of nourishment.
It lias done its deadly work among
the children, weak women and de
crepit men. Tiie tongue of Father
Prando grows painfully eloquent
when he says: “We [meaning the
government] pen up these helpless
Indians on gameless reservations,
and hid them live on their arid
plains, whose boundaries they are
forbidden to cross, thus prohibiting
them from exercising that holy law
of nature, self-preservation.” The
Montana papers say it is generally
believed that the government lurn-
ished sufficient supplies if properly
delivered, to support the Blackfeet
that are now dying and famishing
for food. The Helena Herald says:
“Such a dire calamity should not
come upon dumb brutes, and when
it (loos exist among human beings
within tho reach of a civilized com
munity, the remedy should bo as
prompt and as effective as the exi
gency demands. It is by some
body’s fault that these poor crea
tures are neglected and left to die
of starvation. Tho very thought
that such a state of things exists
among tho Indians of the moun
tains and In the territories is re
volting to all our natural impulses.
As there is a Just God, may we not
expect a retribution for the fearful
sin of turning a deaf ear to the pit
iful cry for bread?”
Fuss Over a Flng.
A dispatch from Pittsburg, Pa.,
dated the 11th Inst., says: Max
Seoinburg, the Austro-Hungarian
consul In that city, this morning
hoisted a small Austrian flag over
the doors of his consulate, in honor
of the fifty-fourth birthday of the
Einperor of Austria. Chief of l*o-
llee Brown, who has been making a
vigorous fight against swinging
signs and street obstructions, imme
diately ordered it down. Nohoin-
burg refused to comply with the
order, and Brown filed a suit to
compel its enforcement. Sehom-
burg claims that the order is a di
rect violation of the treaty between
tho United States and Austria,
which states explicitly that consuls
can hoist their flag over tho
entrance of their consulate.
A Hare Fruit.
Augusta News: Mr. Emanuel
Green, who lives out on the Wash
ington road, three miles from the
city, brings the News a quart of
ripe dates, raised on his place. Mr.
Green brought tho scion or plant
from Louisiana three years ago,
and set it out on his farm. Last
year the tree produced a small
quantity of fruit, Hut the present
season it is well loaded, which is
another instance of tiie geniality of
this soil and climate. The fruit is
of a mild sweet and delicious taste,
and is probably the only tree of
the kind hearing fruit in tiie state.
doing to Keep Warm.
A sale of 4,000 large cases of
white and colored blankets took
place in New York on Wednesday
of last week. Buyers from nearly
all the leading drygoods houses in
tho country were present. The
amount realized by the sale will
exceed $000,000. In noticing the
sale the New York Times says:
“The purchases were generally in
small lots, seldom more than ten
bales of a lot to any one buyer.—
Most of the goods went directly to
Western and Southern jobbers, al
though a large lot of the white
goods went to Eastern houses. The
bidding was spirited throughout,
and more than the lots offered could
easily have been sold, The great
New York houses secured hut few
of the goods, and this was regarded
by those present as indicative of a
healthier condition for the trade
enerally. The prices also were
considered fair, in view of tho de
pression everywhere prevailing,
and were better than those realized
at the spring sale.”
At a deptli of 540 feet work oil the
Americus artesian has been tempo
rarily stopped. Casing is down 408
feet, and as the shoe of the casing
has been broke, it enn lie driven no
further. Telegrams have been sent
to Mr. Brush, under whose charge
the well is, and lie is expected at
once. Six-incli casing will probably
he put down, and work begun again.
Glto W. Marshall,
MERCHANT TAILOR.
217 Seventh St., Augusta, Ga.
I mu now better prepared (ban ever to
manufacture) garments of the very latest,
style, nl the I,invest. Prices, A full stock of
sultlngk for Spring und Summer just receiv
ed.
A FUEL LINE OF IMPOUTED ANI) DO
MESTIC
Buying all my GOODS Foil CASH I am
able to guarantee the lowest prices possible.
Suits, or Single Garments, made
to order at the shortest notice,
in the latest Fashion and Satis
faction Warranted, .
All orders from my patrons In Waynesboro
and vicinity will receive, prompt attention.
Tiie Feeble Grow Strong.
When Ilostcttor's Stomach Hitters ia Used
to promote assimilation of the loud and en
rich the blood. Indigestion, the chief ob
stacle to uu acquisition of strenght by tho
weak, is an ailment which infallibly suc
cumbs to the action of this peerless correc
tive. Loss oi llesli and appetite, failure to
sleep, und growing evidence of premuturu
decay, are speedily counteracted by tho
great invigorunt, which braces up the phy
sical energies und 1'ortitles the constitution
against disease. For sale by all Druggists
and Dealers generally.
muy2’81by nex rg mr
Waynesboro, Ga.
Miss 8. A. Gbesiiam, Principal,
Mrs. 8. C. Sfavmakk, Assistant.
First SessionJanuary, February and
March.
Second Session.—April, May and Juno.
Vaention.—July, August and September.
Third Session.—October, November and
December.
Tuition.—$2.00 per month.
The second session will be five, ns the Acad
emy reeeivas tho benefit of the Common
School Fund.'
Pupils entering at any time before the first
of April, and sett ling promptly affile end ol
each mont h will get a deduction of fifty cents.
No extra charge for fuel, Ac. junll’&ttf
main
A Fixture or the State House.
Among other nominations made
by the Georgia Democratic Conven
tion last week was that of Hon. N.
C. Barnett, for secretary of state.—
Mr. Barnett is perhaps one of the
oldest office-holders in the world,
being now 90 years of age, and hav
ing held his present office since 1842.
Mr. Barnett was born in Columbia
county while yet it was an Indian
wild, and as an infant had several
narrow escapes from tiie tommn-
liawk. He grew up to he a mail of
splendid physique, six and a half
feet in height, lean of ffesli, with
long, crane-like neck, suggesting
the popular impression of kuklux.
When elected secretary of state 42
years ago, lie was a man of much
prominence, but has held on to his
office so long that people forgot tiie
existence of both man and office.—
Mr. Barnett lias made during his
long tenure an honest and efficient
officer; no one opposes him, no one
wishes or expects any one else to
he secretary of state, and when lie
dies Ids memory will he honored as
one of the patriarch fathers.
Couldn't Tull u IJu.
Chicago Iloruld.
Coming up in a cable car last
night from Cottage Grove avenue,
and elderly man remarked to his
companion:
“They may heat Jim Blaine, hut
I don’t believe it.”
“Why?” was the response.
“Well, 1 Judge the man by tho
hoy. I knew him down in l'enn
sylvania forty years ago. Ho was
a most charming lad, and lie had a
way of gliding along in tho world
as if he was greased. He and I
were hauled up in school once for
stealing apples during recess, und
wo agreed to tell the same story,
and stick by each other. When tho
teacher asked me what I had to
say, I niudo the explanation
agreed upon, hut Jim elaborated
his story at great length. Ho was
an orator then as well as now, and
when he had got through the teadV
er took me by the ear and said:
‘“I am pained to discover that
you are a liar,’ and then he belted
mo over the head with a ferule.—
Just as 1 began to holler, Jim crept
up to the teacher and begged him
to stop,saying: ‘i’ll forgive him,
and 1 hope you will. 1 bear him
no ill-will.’ The teacher was so im
pressed with Ids magnanimity that
he hit me once more for luck, and
then ordered mo to my seat. It
maybe possible to heat that kind
of a feller, hut ho never was down
ed In those day.”
ONE bF THE MOST COMPLETE INSTI
tutlons in the United Slates. Actual bus!
ness with real College money and real goods
Send for circulars. S. L. OSBORNE,
Side Proprietor, Library Building
Julll'84 am Augusta, Georgia
goffer @°Pfeg e
ROME, GEORGIA.
' An excellent School In one ot tho most bountiful
mil healthy cities otthc South. Magnificent halldlng,
tail tlrst-class equipments. Semi for catalogue.
— L. 11. UYVALTN1SY, President.
augl’H-lbm
OT Kentucky Unlvornlty
r week-day h
omphjtetho Full Diploma Bu*li.«
fecKH. A vernge Total Cost. Including Tulil-
l.-ar l in a family, ftM. Telegraph
rue. Ladles -ecelved.
ipil« la*
etlonl* |T
el nl emir-
•tleVh
. it- ;i n Imtleu. Tills hc'in'.lflil cltV l» untod
ml - i-iv. nn I H on haling llailroad
>e ,t -f'i. F r iretihir-mi I full Particular
\V1 l.ium •». MM IT lit Lnlnfton, Ky.
T—ui female
9 rj nm i cor Vt
^COLLEGE.*
An oli| and firmly established Institution. Located
m ar the centre of tlm Hill Country of N.C. PosKemdiitf
un.sui passed advantages at unprecedentedly law rate*.
Pepin* its next Houston A UK. 96,1884. A Mineral Sprlujf
of Health—lilviiiK water on the College grounds. For
catalogue,uddrubs the iVim ijaWs/rhoiuaHvlIlo, N.C
Julio'HHmi
Sttstoron.
Jim'JO’slnm
P oughkeepsie female academy
ltev. li.G.Wrlgld, S. T. D., Ileetor, assist
ml by ten (10) touchers. The ISth year com
moneys September Hub, issi. Parents an
assured /tome cumjni'tn, jinri‘nlut doom,hue mat
thnnniuh work fur thrir (UiUj/hlera. Forclrcu
lars address the ltev. I>. (I. Wright, S. T. I)
Rector, Poughkeepsie, New York. |u!25'
-:Phil. P. Johnston,
A 11 o r n e y - A t - L a iv.
ARI.IHUTON UOCHK lll.oCK,
WAYNESBORO, ; : ; ; GA
Jun27’tUby
UUj. MUIIUIUUU)
Chiviots, Cashmeres. &c.,
Otto W. Marshall.
217 Seventh St., AUGUSTA, GA.
Janll’Moam
Owners ^Engines
-THE—
|TI XT/
L\
Injector.
ALSO, THE
rvm
ULi
Jet Pumps.
m
IS THE BEST
1IOI LEU FEEBER,
MADE; WORKS,
WARM OR COLD
WATER; WILL
TAKE FROM
WELL OR TANK;
OVER 1,0(10 IN USE.
The best Tank Pump
Made; will work clear or
muddy water; satisfaction
guaranteed; capacity 100
to 20,000 gallons pur hour;
price $7 to $75.
Send for circulars to
FOUNDRY, MACHINE and BOILER WORKS,
Augusta, : : Ga.
W> Keep on Hand a I,urge Stock of
-AND-
All Kinds of Engines & Mills,
And Piping and Fittings at Lowest Prices.
Special attention to Engine ami Mill Work.
With First-Class Tools and men we are pro
cured to do Gil kinds of Iron Work In the
st manner. ,|un22’84by
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A. F. TISCHER,
DEALER IN
t-AND-i —
IF^nc^ G-oods.
932 BROAD STREET.
AUGUSTA, : : GA.
ORDERS FROM^THE COUNTRY SOLICITED.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
myQ’Slhm
MONEY.
In -A.l>uiitlanee>.
T tmi now prepared to Negotiate Tamils on
Improved Farms on shorter time und more
Keasoimldo Terms than ever.
Loari3 Made For Anv Amount.
Cull and see me.
E.
EiSLTxrson.-
WAYNESBORO, GA.
jumi27,’l>l.h-m
Loans Negotiated
I have recently made arrangements to Ne
gotiate LONG and 8IIORT TERM I,DANS
at us reasonable rules us any other agency
doing business in the State.
JOHN D. MUNNERLYN.
junTtmr
Subnoriptioua are positively cash