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GRAND
CUT
Owing to the scarcity of
money, and desiring to
do work at a lower price
for the cash than at “big
prices” on time. I have
reduced the prices on or
dinary
HORSC SHE1NG
FROM
$1,50 TO $1.00!
All kinds agon work,
Buggy repairing, planta
tion work, tie shrinking
etc., etc., in proportion.
Call and see me.
J. O'BYRNS, Waynesboro, Ga.
jnay21.’92—tf
LOUIS COHEN,
206 and 208 Washington St., Corner of Broad
AUGUSTA, GA.,
Has juist received 100 cases of the best do
mestic Wines, consisting of
CLARET,
PORT,
CHERRY,
SCUPFERNONG,
ANGELICA,
SHERRY,
TOKAY,
CHAMPAGNE,
SWEET MIST,
ETC., ETC., ETC.
Our Claret is of the very finest, and sell the
same at rock bottom figures. PINTS at 20c.
and QUARTS at 35c. by the case.
Get your supply in time as Claret advances
in the summer when the demand is getting
great
I am also still agent for the following
£Li_-e brands of WHISKIES,
BUCKINGHAM, SARATOGA and LEWIS’
and a great many other brands. Send your
orders to me and I guarantee satisfaction to
everybody, Nobody will send you any bet
ter goeds for the money than I dol Youi
patronage is solicited.
Respectfully,
LOUIS COHEN.
oc1$,’89—tf
A live, ener
getic LOCAL
W .
agent in every county
in the state of Georgia
to canvass for Fruit Trees. None
1SUT HONEST MFN
need apply. As we are trying
to build up an honest business
and want a man in the fruit
tree line who will he strictly
truthful and reliable in his deal
ings with the people. We have
the largest and most complete
stock of trees in the state and
our prices are as low as is con
sistent with strictly first-class
trees. Write us for Catalogue
.ad terms to agents. Address
H. W. Reed& Co., Way cross, Ga.
mor2ii,’92—
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D E N T I S T,
WAYNESBORO, - - GEORGIA,
ffice at the Opera House.
my4.88by
C.D. Perkins, D.D.S.
606 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA,
Opposite Augusta Hotel.
GEORGIA
nov9.89—
Bipans Tabules: a "amily remedy,
ffipana Tabules cure biliousness.
Mr. J. C. J ones, of F ulton, Ark., says of
jj&aSJWjSI “About ten years ago I con-
KgJSKigffl tracted a severe case of blood
poison. Leading physicians prescribed
medicine after medicine, which I took
without any relief. I also tried mercu
rial and notash remedies, with unsuc-
RHEUMATISM
cessful results, but which brought ou an
attack of mercurisi rheumatism that
made my life oue of agony. After suf-
ering four years I gave up all remedies
and commenced using S- S. S. After
taking several bottles, I was entirely
cured and able to resume work.
is the greatest medicine for
blood poisoning to-day on
the market.”
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Shut Srecifio Co., Atlanta, Ga.
s.s.s.
Oldest flgrieaitni'al Paper in America,
(ESTABLISHED 1819.)
Jr f\mni<$ps pfuOTUt
1729 JV^u; York /lueque,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Tite American Farmer, which is now enter
ing upon its 74th year, is the pioneer farmer’s
paper in the country.
It is a large eight page paper, and contains 56
columns of the choicest agricultural and literary
matter, plentifully embellished with fine illustra.
tions. It is
I^ATiopf/ic ij* <?H/*WT Er l>
and deals with farming and farmer’s interests
on broad, practical lines. It
E/r\pipY5 BES T u/RI5EF(S
Iff 5J4E <?0Upl5kY,
md everything that appears in its columns is
3f the highest character. Every department of
the farmer’s business is discussed in an earnest,
practical way, looking to the greatest profit and
oeuefit to the farmer and his family.
It appears on the 1st and 15th of each month,
ind is furnished at the low price of
50 <?EJ^55 f\ YE/IR
(n advance. This makes it tfie cheapest
agricultural paper in the couvitry.
FAR/i\ e R ceoisc/isiojv.
During the coming year there will be an Im
mense number of matters of the most vital
interest to formers dealt with by Congress and
the Executive Departments at Washington. It
is highly important that the farmers be kept
promptly and fully informed as to what is being
planned and done affecting them at the National
Capital. They should all, therefore, take Tub
American Farmer, which, being on the ground,
has better facilities than any other papers for
getting this information, and devotes itself to
this duty They will find in it constantly a great
amount of valuable information that they can
get in no other paper.
Address all communications to—
THE AMERICAN FARMER,
1729 New York Ave. WASHINGTON, D. C.
^ 50 New Gins m Stock.
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li g
£> pH
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S® tel
Sr S
£ ^ Fd
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62 Engiues in Stock.
Pure! Brilliant!! Perfect!!!
USER KVERV1THERE, ANII ENDORSED
WHEREVER USKD!
Tte Most Popular Glasses ia the United States.
They are dally worn and are warmly praised
by the solid Representative Hen of this country,
many of them being of Rational Fame. The list
embraces Bankers Merchants Lawyers, Govern
ors, Senators, Foreign Ministers, Mechanics,
Preachers,
J1ES IS ALL PROFESSIONS AND TRADES.
Physicians : Recommend : Them.
They cannot, be bought at your residence, as
they are not supplied to peddlers at any price.
* BUY NME BUT THE
These perfecttlasses are accurately adjusted
to$tl eyes at the store of
■* WHITEHEAD+&*C0„ 6-
Waynesboro, Ga.
A. K. HAWKES*
Manufacturing- Optician,
Main Office, 12 Whitehall Street,
Lens Grinding Plant, 19 Decatur St., Under
Kimball House,
ATLANTA, : : : : GEORGIA.
nov26.’92—by
WOOD’S I»II09I»II03>I3VE,
The Great English Remedy.
Promptly and permanent
ly cures all formsof fiervous
Weakness, Em issiohs, tiperm-
hea. Impoten ’ ”
s of Abuse 01
een prescribed
ears In thousands of cases;
_s the only Reliable and Hon
est Medicine known. Ask
’druggist for Wood’s Phos-
Eefnre and dfter phodine; if ho offers some
cejon ana Aijter. worth i es3 me dicine m place
of this, leave his dishonest store, Inclose price In
letter, and we will send by return mall. Price, one
package, it; six, $5. One toill please, six will cure.
Pamphlet In plain sealed envelope, 2 stamps.
Address TUB WOOD CHEMICAL CO.,
131 Woodward avenue; Detroit. Mich.
SOLD IN WAYNESBORO BY WHITE-
HEAD & CO. and DRUGGISTS
EVERYWHERE.
W. M. FULCHER.
F. L. SCALES
REAL-ESTATE AGENTS,
AND NEGOTIATORS OF LOANS.
Waynesboro, Ga,
[jl^TCorrespondence solicited
from persons wishing to buy, sell
rent or lease real estate.
By EDwAE ALLAN POE,
Qtii n'a plus qu’un moment a vivre
N’a plus rien a dissirauler.
—Quinault—Atys.
Of my country and of my family I
have little to say. Ill usage and length
of years have driven me from the one
and estranged me from the other. He
reditary wealth afforded me an educa
tion of no common order, and a contem
plative turn of mind enabled me to
methodize the stories which early study
diligently garnered np. Beyond all
things, the works of the German moral
ists gave me a great delight, not from
my ill advised admiration of their elo
quent madness, but from the case with
which my habits of rigid thought en
abled me to detect their falsities.
I have often been reproached with the
aridity of my genius, a deficiency of im
agination has been imputed to me as a
crime, and the Pyrrhonism of my opin
ions has at all times rendered me noto
rious. Indeed a strong relish for physical
philosophy has, I fear, tinctured my mind
with a common error of this age—I mean
the habit of referring occurrences, even
the least susceptible of such reference,-to
the principles of that science. Upon the
whole, no person could be less liable
than mj’self to be led away from the
severe precincts of truth by the ignes
fatai of superstition. I have thought
proper to premise thus much, lest the in
credible tale I have to tell should be con
sidered rather the raving of a crude im
agination than the positive experience
of a mind to which the reveries of fancy
have been a dead letter and a nullity.
%*
“Almighty God! see! sec!’’
After many years spent in foreign
travel, I sailed in the year 18— from the
port of Batavia, in the rich and populous
island of Java, on a voyage to the arch
ipelago of the Sunda islands. I went as
a passenger, having no other induce
ment than a kind of a nervous restless
ness which haunted me as a fiend.
Our vessel was a beautiful ship of
about 400 tons, copper fastened and
built at Bombay of Malabar teak. She
was freighted with cotton, wool and oil,
from the Lachadive islands. We had
also on board coir, jaggeree, ghee, cocoa
nuts and a few cases of opium. The
stowage was clumsily done, and the ves
sel consequently crank.
We got under way with a mere breath
of wind, and for many days stood along
the eastern coast of Java without any
other incident to beguile the monotony
of our course than the occasional meet
ing with some of the small grabs of the
archipelago to which we were hound,
One evening, leaning over the taffrail,
I observed a very singular isolated cloud
to the northwest. It w r as remarkable as
•well for its color as from its being the
first we had seen since our departure
from Batavia. I watched it attentively
until sunset, when it spread all at once
to the eastward and westward, girting
in the horizon with a narrow strip of
vapor and looking like a long line of low r
beach. My notice wag soon afterward
attracted by the dusky red appearance
of the moon and the peculiar character
of the sea. The latter was undergoing a
rapid change, and the water seemed
more than usually transparent.
Although I could distinctly see the bot
tom, yet heaving the lead I found the
ship in 15 fathoms. The air now became
intolerably hot and was loaded with
spiral exhalations similar to those arising
from heated iron. As night came on
every breath of wind died away, and a
more entire calm it is impossible to con
ceive. The flame of a candle burned
upon the poop without the least percepti
ble motion, and a long hair held be
tween tlie finger and thumb, hung with
out the possibility of detecting a vibra
tion. How-ever, as the captain said he
could perceive no indication of danger,
and as we were drifting in bodily to
shore, he ordered the sails to be furled
and the anchor let go. No watch was
set, and the crew, consisting principally
of Malays, stretched themselves deliber
ately upon the deck.
I went below—not without a full pre
sentiment of evil. Indeed every appear
ance warranted me in apprehending a
simoom. I told the captain my fears,
but he paid no attention to what I said
and left me without deigning to give a
reply. My uneasiness, however, pre
vented mo from sleeping, and about mid
night I w r ent upon deck, As I placed my
foot upon the upper step of the compan
ion ladder I was startled by a loud, hum
ming noise, like that occasioned by the
rapid revolution of a mill wheel, and be
fore I could ascertain its meaning I found
the ship quivering to its center. In the
next instant a wilderness of foam hurled
us upon our beam ends, and rushing
over us fore and aft sw r ept the entire
decks from stem to 6tei’ii,
The extreme fury of the blast proved,
in a great measure, the salvation of the
ship. Although completely waterlogged,
yet as her masts had gone by the board
she rose after a minute heavily from
the sea, and staggering awhile beneath
the immense pressure of the tempest
finally righted.
By what miracle I escaped destruction
it is impossible to eay. Stunned by the
shock of the water, I found myself upon
recovery jammed:’ in between the stern
post and rudder. With great difficulty
I gained my feet, and looking dizzily
around was as first struck with the idea
of our being among breakers, so terrific,
beyond the wildest imagination, was the
whirlpool of mountainous and foaming
ocean within which w r e were cngu’fed.
After awhile I heard the voice of an old
Swede who had shipped with us at the
moment of leaving port. I hallooed to
him with all my strength, and presently
lie came reeling aft. We soon discovered
that we were the sole survivors of the
pccident. All on deqk„ with, the excep
tion of ourselves, "hadMieen swept over
board. The captain and mates must
have perished as they slept, for the cab
ins were deluged with water. W'ithont
assistance we could expect to do little
for the security of the ship, and our ex
ertions were at first paralyzed by the mo
mentary expectation of going down.
Our cable had of course parted like
pack thread at the first breath of the
hurricane, or we should have been instan
taneously overwhelmed. We scudded
with frightful velocity before the sea.
and the water made clear breaches over
us. The framework of our stem was
shattered excessively, and in almost
every respect we had received consider
able injury, but to our extreme joy we
found the pumps unchoked, and that we
had made no great shifting of our ballast.
The main fury of the blast had already
blown over, and we apprehended little
danger from the violence of the wind,
but we looked forward to its total cessa
tion with dismay, well believing that in
our shattered condition w T e should in
evitably perish in the tremendous swell
which would ensue. But this very just
apprehension seemed by no means likely
to bo soon verified. For five entire day
and nights—during which our only sub
sistence was a small quantity of ja,
geree, procured with great difficulty
from the forecastle—the hulk flew at
rate defying computation before rapidly
succeeding flaws of wind, which, with
out equaling the first violence of the
simoom, were still more terrific than any
tempest I had before encountered. Our
course for the first four days was, with
trifling variations, southeast and by south
and we must have run down the coast of
New Holland. On the fifth day the cold
became extreme, although the wind had
hauled round a point more to the north
ward. The sun arose with a sickly yel
low luster and clambered a few degrees
above the horizon, emitting no decisive
light. There were no clouds apparent
yet the wind was upon the increase and
blew with a fitful and unsteady fury.
About noon, as nearly as we could
guess, our attention was again arrested
by the appearance of the sun. It gave
out no light, properly so called, but
dull and sullen glow without reflection,
as if all its rays were polarized. Just be
fore sinking within t-lie turgid sea its cen
tral fires suddenly went out, as if hur
riedly extinguished by some unaccounta
ble power. was a dim, silver like rim,
alone, as it rushed down the unfathoma
ble ocean.
Wo waited in vain for the arrival of
the sixth day. That day to me has not
arrived—to the Swede, never did arrive.
Thenceforward we were enshrouded in
pitchy darkness, so that wo could not
have seen an object at 20 paces from the
ship. Eternal night continued to envelop
us, all unrelieved by the phosphoric sea
brilliancy to which we had been accus
tomed in the tropics. We observed, too,
that although the tempest continued to
rage with unabated violence there w-as
no longer to be discovered the usual ap
pearance of surf or foam which had
hitherto attended us.
All around w T ere horror and thick
gloom, and a black, sweltering desert of
ebony. Superstitious terror crept by de
grees into the spirit of the old Swede,
and my own soul was wrapped np in
silent wonder. We neglected all care
of the ship as worse than useless, and
securing ourselves as well as possible to
the stump of the mizenmast looked out
bitterly into the world of ocean. We
had no means of calculating time, nor
could we form any guess of our situa
tion. We wei;e, however, well aware
of having made farther to the southward
than any previous navigators and felt
great amazement at not meeting with
the usual impediments of ice.
In the meantime every moment threat
ened to be our last—every mountainous
billow hurried to overwhelm us. The
swell-surpassed anything I had imagined
possible, and that we were not instantly
buried is a miracle. My companion
spoke of the lightness of our cargo and
reminded me of the excellent qualities of
our ship, but I could not help feeling the
utter hopelessness of hope itself and
prepared myself gloomily for that death
lyliich I thought nothing could defer be
yond an hour, as with every knot of way
the ship made the swelling of the black,
stupendous seas became more dismally
appalling. At times we gasped for
breath at an elevation beyond the alba
tross—at times became dizzy with the
velocity of our descent into some watery
hell, where the air grew stagnant and no
sound disturbed the slumbers of the
kraken.
We were at the bottom of one of these
abysses when a quick scream from my
companion broke fearfully upon the
night. “See! see!” cried he, shrieking
in my ears, “Almighty God! cee! see!”
As he spoke I became aware of a dull,
sullen glare of red light which streamed
down the sides of the vast chasm where
we lay and threw a fitful brilliancy upon
our deck. Casting my eyes upward I be
held fe spectacle which froze the current
of my blood. At a terrific height directly
fcbove upon the very verge of the
precipitous descent, hovered a gigantic
ship of perhaps 4,000 tons. Although
upreared upon the summit of a wave
more than a hundred times her own alti
tude, her apparent size still exceeded
that of any ship of the line or East India-
man in exist nee. Her huge hull was a
deep dingy black, unrelieved by any of
the customary carvings of a ship.
A single row of brass cannon protrud
ed from her open ports and dashed from
their polished surfaces the fires of innu
merable battle lanterns winch swung to
and fro about her rigging. But what
mainly inspired us with horror and as
tonishment was that she bore up under
a press cf sail in the very teeth of that
supernatural sea and of that ungovern
able hurricane. When we first discov
ered her, her bows were alone to be seen
as she rose slowly from the dim and hor
rible gulf beyond her. For a moment
of Intense terror she paused upon the
giddy pinnacle, as if in contemplation
of her owti sublimity, then trembled and
tottered and—came down.
At this instant I know not what sud
den self possession came over my spirit.
Staggering as far aft as I could, I await
ed fearlessly the ruin that was to over
whelm. Our own vessel -was at length
ceasing from her struggles and sinking
■with her head to the sea. The shock of
the descending mass struck her conse
quently in that portion of her frame
which was nearly under water, and the
inevitable result was to hurl me with ir
resistible violence upon the rigging of
the strajiffer..
[to be continued.]
The Weeky Constitution,
We call attention to the announce- i
MHS. AT. I >. HILL,
ment of the Weekly Constitution ‘ f/ ne Millinery, Hats, Ribbons, Velvets, Flowers Corsni. , ,,,
published at Atlanta, Ga. The Con- * Notions
stitution has the largest number of all the latest no\ elties of the season,
CONSULT YOUR INT0RFST BY CALLING,
: : * AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
934
Broad Street,
feb25,’93—am
Variety : Iron : Works,
SANDERSVILLE, GA.
S. G. LANG, - Proprietor.
A first-class Machine Shop with all modern tools and skilled
machinists. Steam Engines, Boilers, Cotton Gins and all ma-
Brick, Lime and Cement tor
sale by VV. J. Rutherford & Co.,
Augusta, Ga.
Ripaos Tabules pare jaundice.
stitution has the largest
subscribers of any weekly newspa
per published in the world, now hav
ing more than 150,000 regular sub
scribers. It wants 200,000 and we
commend it to our readers. No pa
per has done more for the upbuild
ing of the agricultural interests of
the south than the Constitution. It
has worked for years for the agri
cultural development of this section
and for the betterment of the farm
ers’ condition.
With recent improvements and
additional facilities the Constitution
is now a better newspaper than
ever, and is in a position to push j chinery repaired in a first-class manner,
with increased vigor its magnificent
work for the agricultural develop
ment of the south. Being essenti
ally a newspaper, and at the same
time devoting much of its space to
the very best of current literature
and to such special features as are
of peculiar interest to the farmers,
it commends itself to every farming
household.
It will be glad to furnish sample
copies on application, and we have
made arrangements to send it to all
yearly paid uu subscribers to The
Citizen for 75 cents. If you are a
subscriber to this paper and want
the Constitution, seventy-five cents
gets it at any time.
All clubbing subscriptions should
be sent to us. All requests for
sample copies should be addressed
to the Constitution, Atlanta, Ga.
—Plantations for rent, sale
lease by E. C. Lanier. nvl4.
—Subscriptions are alwaysoarh,
W. Y. TYLER,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
G3Q3GIA.
$£$?*• Will practice In all the Courts. Col
lections a specialty. febll,’93—
Young
Men
Youmi' Women
« CIS
BY OBTAINING SUBSCRIBERS FOR
THE SOUTHERN STATES.
Isa beautifully illustrated monthly magazine
devoted to the South. It is full ofinterest for
every resident of the South and ought to be
in every southern household.
Everybody Can A fiord It
as it costs only $1 50 per year or 15 cents for a
single copy.
We want an agent in every Southern city
and town. Write for sample copies and par
ticulars to the—
MANUFACTURER’S RECORD PUB. CO.
Baltimore, Md.
II ENGLAND mui
AT THE FRONT.
The line literary illustrated magazine ol
Boston.
Able critics say it is one of the most inter
esting magazines published in America.
Docal only in name.
It is t lie people’s favorite.
To see this magazine is to want it.
Its circulation has doubled the past year.
It is unique, containing American Legends,
Traditions, History, Story and Pnet-iy.
A conspicuous feature of the magazine—the
treatment of the great American cities—will
be continued.
? 7 $ ? $
Some of fiie Attractions for 1893.
Harvard College Fifty Years Ago; New
England Towns Forty Years Ago, by Rev.
Edward Everett Hale.
Vassar College,
Society Life in Amlierst College.
Manual Training in America.
Rhode Island in the Revolution.
Brother Jonathan and His Home
Whaling and Fisheries of the United
States.
Each number contains several interesting
Stories and Poems.
$ 8 $ ? $
HUTm? $3.00 a year. I Agents
x IlIvL 25 cents a copy. I Wanted.
Sample copies sent to any address free.
Address
New England Magazine,
BOSTON, MASS.
F-v tfLs Afro Afb
50tli
THE
“STZE^IEe.
SOUTHFBN
and DIXIE FARMER
The Great Farm,
Industrial and Stock
Journal of the South!
0NE YE/IR for 0jNE DOLLAR.
Sample copies will be mailed
free ou application to
The Cultivator Publishing Co.,
Box 415, Atlanta, Ga.
Special premium of free ticket
to the WORLD’S h’AIR !
The True Citizen
we will furnish this excellent magazine for
seventy-flvecents per year!
A large stock of Engiues, Boilers, Pratt Cotton Gins, Presses,
Saw Mills and Saws, Shafting and Pulleys, a full line of Oils,
Beltings, Pipings, Valves, Pipe Fittings, in fact, a lull stock of
supplies for Engines and Machinery. Also the celebrated
Walter A. Wood MowingMachines,
Reapers and Horse Rakes, always on hand. Remember that I
will overhaul Cotton Gius and guarantee them to do as good work
as any new Gin on the market.
All gins sent to me before June 1st, I will pay the
freight one way. 1 refer by permission to Allen W. Jones, Mid-
ville; W. McCathern and V. L. McElmurray, Waynesboro. Call
on or address, S. G. LANG, Sandersville, Ga.
Mr. R. Walter Chandler will receive orders for above
machinery. His P. 0. Address is Waynesboro.
may26,’92—by
DAZZLING
BEAUTIFUL GOODS
Beautiful presents that meet all demands, and satisfy all w:
ment and a variety to suit all tastes in
its. An unequalled assort
DIAMONDS, WATCHES,
JEWELRY, SIIA ERAV ARE,
NOVELTIES, ETC.
I solicit a comparisou of goods and prices. Come !
A. J. RENKL, 928 BKOAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA.
WATCHES,
CLOCKS,
DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY,
ETC., ETC.
YOUR-:-TIME
is well spent and you will be well
pleased by looking through my large
stock of Jewelry, Fancy Goods, Etc.,
when you need anything in mv liL~.
As the store in which I do business
belongs to me—no high rents to pay—
I can sell you Watches, Diamonds,
Jewelry, Silverware, Etc., cheaper than
any one else. Competition is distanced.
W atches, Clocks and Jewelry Repair
ed in first-class stvle and guaranteed.
J. II. RRONTAUT,
G2G Broad St., AUGUSTA. GA.
H. O. PERKINS, President. ■! EUCOEPOEATED. > J. A. HAUSER, Manager.
The Georgia Iron Works,
FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS,
Kollock Street, - • - Augusta, Ga.
(Between FENNWICK AND D’ANTIGNAC STREETS,)
Iron and Brass Castings,
Engines and Boilers,
And Mill Supplies.
Locomotiye Repairs a Specialty.
sepo,’91—by
Spring Clothing.
The latest and most fashion-
Custom Made
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ionable styles of
• Spring Clothing are being daily
^.'received. We guarantee to fit
&!’ any shape and size man and to
please the most fastidious.
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The Patterns
this Season
are Beautiful.
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Dark Green.
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Boys’ and Children’s Suits at
popular prices and everything ^
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Tailor-Fit Clothiers, f
Augusta, Ga. 0
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COACHMEN’S COATS.
kept in a first-class Clothing,
Hat and Furnishino; Store.
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A. (L SHKRMAX.
6E0. M. BKISSOS.
SHERMAN & BRINSON,
-Maaofsctarerg of and Dealers In-
YELLOW PINE LUMBER,
-AND-
Builder’s Hardware,
Corner McKinne and Walker Sts.,
AUGUSTA, -
mr Estimates cheerfully given. Give us a trial.
GEORGIA.
may-’l’^-by