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Sullivan Brothers. Publishers.
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THE TRUE CITIZEN.
Yolume 5.
Waynesboro, Georgia, Friday, December 3d, 1886.
Number 31,
~he rue jgitizen.
Advertising: Rates:
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Contract advs. payable quarterly.
Communications for personal beneflt will be
charged for as advs., payable in advance.
Advs. occupying special position charged 25
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Notices among reading matter 10 cents per
line, each insertion.
Notices in Local & Business column, next to
reading, 5 cents per line each insertion.
All notices will be placed among reading
matter if not specially ordered otherwise.
For terms apply at this office.
£0- A bunk with a capital of
< >-,11,1)00 is to be started in Washing
ton,
Ga.
Judge Linton Stephens.
Judge Linton Stephens was con
sidered by many of those who knew j
iW
The president has named * him wel1 to have been the "itellec-
],j H country place near Washington
Oak View.
tW V r . K. Vanderbilt has order-
e( l :l .$00,000 billiard table. The
average price for a first-class table
is about $000.
COT The nurses in New York
demand, and many ot them reeeiye,
an extra pay of $2.00 a month for
wearing a white cap.
Charleston had another
shake up on Sunday, and Summer
ville went one better. The people
of both places were more or less
frightened.
tr As a nation we are menac
ed with monopoly on the one hand
and license on the other. The great
middle class must stem the tide
and guide the ship of state.
A celebrated case at law
has just been settled in Iowa. It
involved the ownership of several
calves worth about $50. The costs
accruing in a twelve years litiga
tion foots up $20,000, and has bank
rupted the litigants.
A dry good clerk in Kansas
City on his death bed said he had no
hope of Heaven, on account of the
gigantic lying he had indulged in
for the past 20years. He estimated
he hud told 3,000,000 lies in working
off half woolen goods for all wool.
glgT Mrs. Parsons, the wife of
the condemned anarchist, is hold
ing receptions and making inflam
matory speeches in the larger
cities of the union. An immense
throng greeted her in New York,
and the sentiments of the meeting
were decidedly revolutionary.
ter Judge W. A. Hawkins, of
Americas, died on the 28th. He was
one of the best lawyers in the state
an did a very large practice. He
was considered the most success-
fid advocate before the supreme
court and was remarkably well
posted in the decisions of the court.
The Mexican Central rail
way has discharged every one of its
passenger conductors, sixty in num
ber. They are charged with gene
ral collusion in not making proper
returns of money collected. The
freight conductors have been ap
pointed to fill the places made va
cant.
SW One of the Northern papers
states the cooking of cabbage in
the White House during one of the
receptions had an unpleasant effect
upon the olfactories of the guests.
Bacon and greens is a Georgia
dish, and we are glad to hear that
the president appreciates good
things.
HHr Eubanks, a citizen of Mor
gan county, died about 30 years ago
and left an estate worth $30,000.
Daring this time the property has
been tied up in litigation. It has
been finally adjudicated and the
three remaining heirs got only $200
apiece. Lawyer’s fees, costs of
court and depreciation of property
has absorbed the estate.
Sjef Washington.,is excited over
the discovery of an attempt to
“shadow” members of congress as
to where they go and what they do
utter night sets in. Many congress
men are not anxi-ous to let their
r T r ht hand know what the left hand
dooth. hence interested parties are
having them watched so that they
can be bull dozed into voting for the
passage of certain bills. The presi
dent will have the matter investi
gated.
hav
e recently sold their charter to
tual superior of his brother, A. H.
Stephens. He was undoubtedly a
man of great ability, ranking with
the first men of the country, either
as a jurist or a statesman. His home
was in Sparta, and when he died his
remains were interred in the front
yard of his residence. There is no
tomb to mark the spot, and it is now
suggested that his remains be disin
terred and buried by the side of his
brother at Liberty Hall. During
their lives they were warmly attach
ed to each other, and their exhibi
tion of brotherly love was most
tender and touching. Now that
they are dead it would be well to
have their last resting place within
the same enclosure.
The Free Pass System.
We notice the introduction of a
bill in the legislature to prohibit
the acceptance of free passes by
public officers. This bill should pass
but we predict its defeat. The
members of the legislature are too
fond of free rides and gadding over
the state to support this bill, and
while their sense of duty would
pompt them to assist in the passage.
Yet they will manage to throw ob
stacles in its way and finally kill
it. It is a species of bribery and
backmail and honest legislators
shoulds not for a moment tolerate
it. Georgia pays out nearly $7,000
for mileage, and yet there is really
no mileages, as every member
makes it a sine qua non to secure
a pass not only to carry him to and
from his home to Atlanta, but he
demands one to transport him all
over the state ad libitum often neg
lecting the business of his constitu
ents and wandering hither and
thither. Many members favor a
summer session merely because
Atlanta is centrally located and in
reaching distance of summering
watering places where they can lo
cate their families and run up every
few days to see them free of travel
ling expenses. BeTore the war a
judge of the superior court of this
circuit returned a free pass to a
railroad expressing his disapproval
at this mild attempt at bribery.
That judge did only his duty, but
nowadays he would be called a
crank. We heard some years ago
Mr. Wadley express his contempt
for a judge who had written to him
for a pass. He complied with the
request as he felt that his road
would suffer if he declined. A
judge or a legislator who would ask
a pass would be apt to let his fur
lough get the better of his judg
ment if his request was not granted.
We hope to see this custom abol
ished and would like to see our men
careful in accepting favors from
parties whose only object in extend
ing them is to buy the good will and
official influence.
Flowers in 1 lie House.
We sympathize with our
billon friends in their disappoint-
11,ent in the matter of the contem
plated railroad from that point to
” Gsu P- It seems as if Col. Albert
\ ox and the other six incorporators
D. Plant, the president of the
Savannah, Florida & Western rail-
v ' a J’> for $300,000. The purchase was
’"ade by Col. Plant solely to kill out
,l competing road. So the purchase
’aost effectually sounds the death
n ell °f the enterprise.
the
rur
We see that the charter for
1 Atlanta, Mississippi & Atlantic
^‘Iroad has passed the senate. The
/’"■difufion says that it is a settled
j <l(; t that this road wili be built in
near future. Two railroads
^■ining through Waynesboro inter-
1 Dug each other at right angles,
^uhl work up a wonderful boom
n |‘ ° U i r little city, widening its busi-
(•1 ierritor y and giving its mer-
-A” 1<s cheap rates of freight.
1:11 this road is built we will dine
ln Atlanta
at home.
cheap
roa<
taking breakfast and tea
The ponular idea that plants are
injurious in the house, and especial
ly^ sleeping apartments, is now
flatly contradicted. A recent work
by a scientific man of Philadelphia
who has made the matter his study
states that plants and flowers when
cultivated in doors are worthy to be
placed in the foremost rank of sani
tary agencies. The quantity of oxy
gen consumed by plants is so small
and the carbon dioxide (the nox
ious element) so insignificant, as
to be in appreciable. While on the
other hand the moisture given out
by plants in a healthy condition,
kept sufficiently watered at the
roots, is an important aid in pre
serving the proper condition ot the
atmostphere in living rooms, espe
cially where warmed by dry fur
nace* heat, and is productive of com
fort and relief in all effections of
the throat and lungs, ever in pul-
minory consumption.
It has also been a popular idea
that one should eat his . hardest
ineal at breakfast or dinner, tak
ing very sparingly the simplest
food in small quantities for tea or
supper. It is now said that the di
gestive organs will be destroyed if
one attempts to work on a “full
stomach” and that the laboring
man should eat sparingly in the
morning and noon, putting off his
“good square meal” until after the
days work is ended. The digestive
organs only work successfully when
the body is quiet and at rest.
A Cotton Ship Burned.
Galveston, Tex., Nov. 26.—The
British Bark Drummond, 865 tons,
Captain Thompson, for Liverpool,
lying in the outer roads, awaiting
the balance of her cargo, was dis
covered to be on fire at an early
hour this morning. The flames
soon gained entrance to the hold
through the open hatchway and the
cargo of 1,700 bales of cotton ignit
ed. In a few min utes the vessel was
wrapped in a sheet of flames. The
crew hacl a narrow escape and lost
clothing and baggage. Tugs from
this city went to the burning ves
sel. grappled her and towed her to
Bolivar Beach, where she now lies
in fifteen feet or water. The vessel,
which will prove a total loss, was
partly insured. The cargo was
fully insured in British and other
foreign companies and much of it
can be saved in a damaged condi
tion.
An Artesian Well Harnessed.
Col. Nelson, Tift, of Albany, has
actually harnessed an artesian well
and made of it a hewer of wood and
drawer of water, A tank 16 feet
high, with a capacity of 6,000 gallons
of water, has been constructed of
heavy, durable timbers, into which
the full flow of the well can be turn
ed, which fills it in one hour. Un
der this tank is a substantial over
shot wheel about 10 feet in diame
ter, the steel axles of which run in
metallic boxes, firmly secured on a
very heavy wooden frame. Upon
this wheel the full lorce of the wa
ter from the tank can be thrown,
and, with a fall of 200 gallons per
minute, the speed and force is some
thing marvelous. Connecting belts
run a circular saw about 2 feet in
diameter, which cuts up tiie fire
wood. An old gin has been con
verted into a forage and oat-cutter,
by filing off the teeth of the saws
and converting the brush into a
wooden drum, against which the
sharpened steel discs cut. The oats
and long forage are fed to it as cot
ton to a gin, and is rapidly convert
ed into the desired shape for feeding.
A little brook flows over its pebbled
bed through an orclfard, comprising
many fruit trees of great variety.
At one point along the stream its
flow can be turned into a channel
by means of a gate that carries
drinking water for cattle into a
wood pasture nearby. The wander
ing stream empties its water into a
beautiful artificial fish pond, whose
curylinear banks abound in shade
and fruit trees, and upon whose
placid bosom nestle eight little is
lands, fringed with osier willows,
and upon which rose bushes, Japan
plum trees, magnolias and other or
namental trees and shrubs grow in
luxuriance.
A Xortliern Man's Views on Hie South.
Charles Dudley Warner.
I have been struck with the fact
that in nearly every Southern place
we have visited every body was at
work, no idlers holding up tne sides
of buildings. This was remarkable
in Virginia. The negro women
were all at work, and even the
white women are earning$9 and $10
a week in factories. What the col
ored people have got to learn is
thrift. This spirit of work is the
most notable thing of the South
to-day. In Virginia all the historic
names belong to men at work. The
old aristocracy is at work. Lee in
Richmond is popular with the color
ed people,and took me to see how
nicely they were living in neat, pret
ty vine-covered cottages, and gen
erally getting good wages. I made
a note of it. The colored people, as
far as I can see, seem to be paid all
their labor’s worth, and I find that
their labor is sought for above that
of the whites.
I have been coming South two
or tiiree years, and I have written
a good deal about it in the way of
impressions, and from my Repub
lican standpoint what I have writ
ten of the feeling that exists be
tween the two sections toward each
other has been more generally re
ceived by the Northern Democrats,
it so happens, than by the mug
wump element. But it is a delicate
thing to write about. The gradual
expansion of mind going on will
gradually bring the people together.
A Remarkable Centipede Story.
A company of immigrants had
camped in New Mexico, and one
night one of the party, who was
sleeping on the ground, was awak
ened by a peculiar sensation on his
toes. He looked and saw an enor
mous centipede crawling across his
foot. Only a few feet from him
was the camp-fire, and he could
see every fibre of the reptile.—
Knowing its peculiarities and
the effect of its sting, he was
in a fever of excitement. Afraid
to move a muscle, lie dared* not
attempt to shake it off. After a
second pause, he reached under his
head, got his pistol, and taking de
liberate aim fired. It was a life
saving shot for the man. The cen
tipede divided and dropped on each
side of his foot.
But here comes the most remark
able part of the story. Within an
hour after the shot was fired the
men heard a terrible groaning from
one of their mules tied only a few
yards away. They went to them
and found one of them with his left
foreleg swollen to an immense size.
The swelling increased, as did the
agouy and groan of the brute, until
it died in about thirty minutes
there after. An examination was
made and it was discovered that
the bullet that had served the cen
tipede had entered the mule’s foot
just above the hoof and inoculated
it with the poison of the reptile.
Shiloh’s Vitalizer is what you used for Con
stipation, loss of appetite, dizziness, and all
symptoms of Dyspepsia. Price lOand 75cents
per bottle. For sale by Whitehead A Co.
Chicago's Sick Cattle.
Chicago, Nov. 26.—A member of
the Live Stock Commission is au
thority for the statement that there
are nearly 2,000 head of diseased cat
tle scattered over the city, which
will have to be slaughtered by the
state, in addition to nearly 3,000
head under quarantine at the dis
tillery sheds. The appraised value
of the cattle will probably reach
$125,000, and it is doubtful whether
half that amount can be realized on
the sale of the meat of such carcas
ses as pass the inspections. The ex
pense of the inspection and main
taining the quarantine, which has
been partly met by the Federal
government, are said to have
amounted to nearly $25,000 up to the
present date, while the financial
losses that have resulted to the state
and to Chicago because of inability
to immediately suppress the disease
cannot be estimated.
Catarrh cured, health and sweet breath se
cured, by Shiloh’s Catarrh Remedy. Price 50
cents. Nasal injector free. For sale by
Whitehead & Co.
About as Dangerous as New Cider.
New York Sun.
A Rome, N. Y., gftl filled three
stone beer jug3 with wet sand, cork
ed them tightly, and set them in the
oven to heat, so that she could
warm her bed with them. The
heat generated steam which filled
the room with flying sand and frag
ments of beer jugs. The girl and
the rest of the family were badly
scared, but unhurt.
Searched in Vain.
AugustA, Ga., November 29.
Both the canal and the river have
been searched for the body of the
man supposed to have committed
suicide in the canal Saturday night,
but nothing of the body has been
seen. It is still thought by the
policemen that the clothes belong
ed to Howell Lawson, and that he
has ended his life by jumping into
the swift current of the canal, as
no one can be found who knows
anything of his whereabouts. The
clothes are still at the police bar
racks, awaiting identification.
For lame back, side or chest, use Shiloh’s
Porous Piaster. Price 25 cents. For sale by
Whitehead & Co.
A Horrible Tragedy.
Reading Nov. 29.—An investiga
tion to-day of the house of Frank
Kerner, who choked his wife to
death, and then set the building on
lire to destroy the evidence of his
crime, shows that he had also made
preparations to blow it up by run
ning a fuse from the upper floor into
a keg of powder below. His inten
tion was evidently to blow himself
and the entire family up because
as he says, God had commanded
him to do it. Kerner has made a
full confession detailing how he
strangled his wife, then dragged her
up stairs to the bed, poured coal oil
over it and set it on fire. He is an
anarchist in his ideas.
Will you suffer with dyspepsia and liver
complaint? Shiloh’s Vitalizer is guaranteed
to cure you. For sale by Whitehead & Co.
Fating a Human Heart:
Leavenworth, Kans., Nov, 26.—
A dispatch from Havensville, Jack-
son county, cighty-fiye miles west
ot here, tells of a revolting crime
committed near that place last
Wednesday night. A young farmer
named Rhodes Clements while
going home from prayer meeting
with another farmer named Sam
uel Gordon suddenly became insane
and killed (he latter with a club.
Not returning from the meeting,
a search was commenced for Cle
ments, and he was found some dis
tance from the road sitting besides
the body of the man he* had mur
dered eating his heart. He had
cut off the head from Gordon’s body
and had torn out the heart, lungs
and liver and was devouring them.
Clements was secured and is now
in jail a raving maniac.
Sleepless nights made miserable by that ter
rible cough. Sliiloh’e Cure is the remedy for
you. For sale by Whitehead & Co.
A Shower of quail.
Augusta News.
The papers have been publishing
the latest in the shape of showers of
rain from a clear sky, showers of
shot, etc., and the Eveniny Neivs
now follows the shot with a shower
of birds. For the benefit of the dis
appointed Thanskgiving Day hunt
ers and to show the plentitude of
birds hereabout, we relate the facts
as given us by a reliable gentleman
this morning. On Thanksgiving day
the road hands on the Georgia rail
road were at work a few miles out
of town, when they ran upon and
flushed a covey of partridges. The
birds were so numerous that in the
rise a number of them struck the
telegraph wires along the track and
fell dead at the feet of the-workmen.
One partridge’s head was cut entire
ly off by the electric wire, ana the
road hands enjoyed the shower of
quail at their Thanksgiving dinner.
That hacking cough cun be so quickly cur
ed by Shiloh's Cure. Wo guarantee it. For
sale by Whitehead & Co.
The Snow Flower.
The great botanist, Authoskoff,
in 1870, found in Siberia the ravish
ing snow flower, the seeds of which
he took to St. Petersburg, and
which flowered in December in the
presence of the imperial family.
This beautiful and impressive mem
ber of the floral kingdom is perfect
ly white—leaves, stock and flower—
and it springs up to the height of
3 feet in three days. The plant
possesses only three snow-white
leaves and its flower; buds,blossoms
and fades in 24 hours. It is in the
shape of a star, about 4 inches In
diameter, and possesses petals of
great length. It exhales a slight
and delicate odor, but if touched by
a warm hand both it and the leaves,
and the stock on which they rest
dissolve instantly into a substance
that seems almost wholly pure snow.
It would appear, indeed, that it
was a kind of snow fungus, but it
produces seeds which can be trans
planted, and which when sown
in the snow readily produce flowers.
It thrives in the sempiterdal snows
of Siberia, and has all the appearance
of being composed of snow and ice.
It is frequently mentioned in Rus
sian, Tartar and Norse poetry, but
up to its actual discovery by a
botanist of high standing less than
20 years ago, its existence had gen
erally been considered fabulous.
Croup, whooping cough and bronchitis im
mediately relieved by Shiloh’s Cure. For sale
by Whitehead & Co.
Omaha, Neb., November 29.—
Sam Jones closed his three weeks’
campaign in Omaha to-day. At his
last meeting he raised $100 for a Y.
M. C. A. building. He left to-night
for his home in Georgia to take a
rest.
Shiloh’s Consumption Cure is sold by us on
a guarantee. It cures consumption. For sale
by Whitehead & Co.
FALL TERM FALL TERM
FALL TERM FALL TERM
WAYNESBORO ACADEMY,
WAYNESBORO ACADEMY,
WAYNESBORO ACADEMY,
OPENS SEPT. 20th, OPENS SEPT. 20th
OPENS SEPT. 20th, OPENS SEPT. 20th
1886.
1886.
W. D. CARSWELL, W. H. DAVIS,
Principals.
TERMS.—$2.50, $3.00, and $3.50 per month.
Board in excellent families at reason
able rates.
Jggy“ The Academy rooms are large, well
ventilated, and furnished with elegant desks,
recitation settees, blackboards, maps, charts,
globes, etc.
The support of the patronizing pub
lic is respectfully solicited.
aug.20,’80-tf
W. H. HARLEY
WAYNESBORO, GA.
MACHINIST AN1
Respectfully offers his services to the citi
zens of Burke and adjoining counties. Put
ting up and repairing Engines and Boilers, all
kinds of mill work.
Specifications, plans and drawings
Furnished on Application.
Babbit Metal, Gum Packing kept constant
ly on hand.
Thankful for past favors I solicit a continu
ance of the same.
All orders left at the store of M. E.
Hall will receive prompt attention.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
m ay21,’86-tf
W. H. HARLEY.
After Forty years’
experience in the
preparation of more
than One Hundred
ications for patents in
.tes and Foreign conn-
* tries, the publishers of the Scientific
American continue to act as solicitors
for patents, caveats, trade-marks, copy
rights, etc., for the United States, and
lo obtain patents in Canada, England, France,
Germany, and all other countries. Their experi
ence is unequaled and their facilities are unsur
passed.
Drawings and specifications prepared and filed
In the Patent Office on short notice. Terms very
reasonable. No charge for examination of models
or drawings. Advice by mail free.
Patents obtained through Munn&Co.aranotieed
lntho SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, which has
the largest circulation and is the most influential
newspaper of its kind published in the world.
The advantages of such a notice every patentee
understands.
This large and splendidly illustrated newspaper
is published WEEKLY at $3.00 a year, and is
admitted to be tne beat paper devoted to science,
mechanics, inventions, engineering works, and
other departments of industrial progress, pub
lished in any country. It contains the names of
all patentees and title of every invention patented
each week. Try it four months for one dollar.
Sold by all newsdealers.
If you have an invention to patent write to
Munn <fc Co., publishers of Scientific American,
B61 Broadway, New York.
Handbook about patents mailed free.
JN0. D. HALL
Sign of the Elephant and Large Red. Boot,
562 Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia,
IS THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR
Boots a n d Shoes!
The largest, best, and cheapest stock of Boots and Shoes to
be found in this city. Desiring to place upon the market a stock
that would be hard to match for elegance, durability and cheap
ness in any market in the South. You cannot do better than by
buying what you need here. I will not be
UNDERSOLD!
No shoddy goods sold. Goods always as represented. Ev
erything new and first-class.
-:MANY IMITATE:-
While only a few equal the great bargains offered. Remember
JOHN D. HALL,
oct.l,’86-by
Augusta, Georgia.
JOSEPH H. DAY.
SAMUEL TANNAHILL
DAY & TANNAHILL,
-HEADQUARTERS FOR-
Harness, Leather, Shoe Findings,
O O O 0 o o
BELTING,
o o o
CENTRAL and SOUTHWESTERN RAILROADS
Savannah, Ga., Nov. 15th, 1883.
On and after Sunday Nov. 15th, 1883, Pas
senger Trains on the Central and Southwes
tern Railroads will run as follows:
FROM AUGUSTA.
Night.
Day.
Lv. Augusta 9:30 a m
Lv. Waynesboro. 10:58 a in
Ar. Milieu 11:15 p m
Ar. Savannah 3:15 pm
Ar. Macon 6:25 p m
Ar. Atlanta 11:20p m
Ar. Crlumbus
Ar. Eufaula
Ar. Albany
Ar. Milledgeville*
Ar. Eatonton
♦Daily except Monday
FOR AUGUSTA,
Lv. Savannah.. . 9:00 am
Lv. Macon 8:15 a m
Lv Atlanta 1:20 a in
L- . Columbus
L /. Eufaula
Lv. Albany
Lv. Milledgeville*
Lv. Eatonton*
Lv. Mi lien 1:30 p m
Ar. Waynesboro . 2:17 p m
Ar. Augusta 3:15 p m
♦Daily except Sunday.
Connections at Savannah with Savannah
Florida and Western Railway: at, Augusta to
North and East; at Atlanta with Air Line
and Kennesaw Routes to North and East and
West.
Berths in Sleeping Cars can be secured from
W. A. Gibbs.Ticket Agent, Union Depot.
G. A. WHITEHEAD, WM. ROGERS,
General Pass. Agent. Gen. Suo’t Savannah.
9:30 p m
11:39 p m
l:(IOam
7:00 a m
8:00 a m
7:00 a m
1:50 p in
4:13 p m
4:05 p m
10:29 a m
12:30 p m
7:30 p m
7:30 p m
2:10 p m
11:37 p in
12:0i p m
12:00 noon
3:58 p m
2:15 p in
2:30 a m
3:12 a m
5:50 a m
yY GtoocL Cliance
TO PURCHASE FIRST-CLASS
CHEAP!!
Having determined to close out my stock of
Cooking and Heating STOVES,
at greatly REDUCED
PRICES!!
until ALL ARE SOLD.
I will still -continue to Manu
facture TIN and SHEET IRON WARE at
-rPRICES:-
TO SUIT THE PRESENT HARD TIMES.
Guttering and Roofing,
and all other JOB WORK, promptly execu
ted. A complete stock of
Crockery,* Lamps
AND GLASSWARE.
G- K OCEEIES
A SPECIALTY,
all of which will be sold at low prices.
J. M. HARP,
LIBERTY STREET,
WAYNESBORO, : GEORGIA.
For Sale at a Bargain.
One Farquhar 25 HORSE POWER BOIL
ER, in good condition.
JOHN D. MUNNERLYN,
may7,’86-tf Waynesboro, Ga.
OPIUM
junl2’85by
ana WHISKY HABITS nnl
at home wi thout pain. BOOK
of particulars sent FREE.
B. U. WOOLLEY, K. V., Atlanta,On.
The finest and most varied assort
ment of Children’s
CARRIAGES
EVER BROUGHT TO THE CITY.
O
Tidings of Comfort and Joy,
To those who have been wrenched and jerked about by so-called road carts. We now offer
you the most delightful vehicle, with finest wheels and axles for
$35.00
Try one and save your health. Every man who
OYSnNTS A- HORSE,
or wishes to train a colt should have one, as the price is within the
REACH OF ALL.
DAY & TANNAHILL, Augusta, Ga.
march 13,’85-tf
W. I. DELPH,
831 Broad Street,
^.■cLgriastsi. O-eorg'Ia,
Whotesale and Retail Dealer in Best Patterns
1 “ J
TINW ARE, TIN PLATE, SHEET IRON, SOLDER and
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS.
In stock Five CAR LOADS Cook and Heating Stoves.
500 Plain and enameled GRATES.
250 Boxes Tinplate Bright Roofing.
100 Bundles of Sheet Iron,
Two CAR LOADS FIRE BRICK,
TINWARE in great variety, at wholesale.
Buy the EXCELSIOR Cook Stove,
Seventeen different sizes and kinds In stock. This stock has been sold by us for the
past twelvejyears, giving satisfaction.
Heating Stoves for Coal and Wood
for churches, school houses, stores, offices and dwellings. Send for Circulars and
prices.
\\ . I. DELPH.
oct.8,’86-cm
T_ C_ BLIGH
-Importer and Jobber of-
GLASS,CHINA,
EARTHENWARE, LAMPS,
Brackets, Chandeliers,
-AND-
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS,
-ALSO A FULL LINE OF-
Eancy Goods for the Holidays.
840 Broad Street,
- - - - GEORGIA.
AUGUSTA,
r.ov,lSt’8tf-aw 7