Newspaper Page Text
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THE STATE,
THE PKOPLB A>o Til H PAPERS.
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A Mar: it-., yrl *i 1 *!-• w.<U rather
1* M 11-Z.n. !.!• • “ *b*H .. . and -nan*.
Atlie:i * i" fumi-L If
the pry-race hu jcH.: vdong
Kdy
ALiGr.il:,- law*. ; is wu tapered,
will oo;j - rd an \ in .'a belle to the
aiiar.
JeiJTirsou Parin' / / tv. L. Gamble, Jr.,
lias retnroed from Angiitis, look.ug an
freali as a boiled g..urd.
The Western and Atlantic Railroad
have commenced relaying their track at
Big Shanty with steel railH.
There was one marriage, ten births
i:nd right death; among the white popu
lation of Greeiu-sboro, last year.
Gentlemen from Upson, Monroe and
over Pike, report the crops good and in
line condition. O.its superbly line.
The report that small pos wa in Wad
ley is ntteriy uafouutled. There are
some small people there, bat no small
pox.
We are happy to state that Elbert has
not a negro who professes to have held
at any time Gen. George Washington’s
horse.
A capture of twenty-seven frogs was
made by the Eiberton boys the other
night. Tuey pronounce the mcat “de
licious.”
The citizens of Gainesville have, by
a vote of two to one, determined not to
remove the cemetery. Aud somebody
has lost a job.
The rains of last week have done con
siderable damage to the lands in Bartow
county by washing, and the collection
of water in pond*.
A small cyclone passed over portions
of Washington county on Sunday, de
stroying fences, and in one instance
blowing over a gin house.
Big Shanty is also known as Kenne
saw, Cobb county—is seven miles from
Marietta and has a hotel, depot, several
stores aud nice dwellings.
The Bartow Iron Works Company
have leased the Rome Rolling Mill and
have taken charge of it, with Mr. T. E.
Roper as Superintendent.
Wo learn that Col. E. C. Anderson.
Mayor of Savannah, has been appointed
one of the Board of Visitors to the Naval
Academy at Annapolis, Md.
The Columbus Enquirer reports a
horrible ease of incest, in which a man
and his own daughter were the actors.
The man is in jail at Opelika.
Georgia has the honor of claiming the
first ripe peaches of the season. They
were grown at West Point, and were
sent to the Atlanta Constitution.
Mr. Frank Mann, of Spalding county,
has shown the editor of the Griffin
News the first cotton boll of the season.
The stalk is a little over a foot high.
There is a lady in Rome 102 years bid,
liale and healthy and sprightlier in body
and mind than many ootugeuaciaua.
She speaks of visiting the Centennial.
A nurse made an effort to poison the
child of Henry R. Harris, Jr., of Meri
wether conuty, last week. Such diaboli
cal conduct deserves punishment, some
hing after the old plantation style.
A negro woman living about six or
seven miles below Forsyth gave birth
last week to three children. Verily the
Centennial year is remarkablefor a rapid
increase of population, as we read aud
hear of twins and triplets quite fre
quently.
Now that Atlanta has her water works
in successful operation, it is of great
importance to the health of her citizens
that a perfect system of sewerage should
be promptly provided. If this should
be deferred, the stagnant water will soon
generate maladies of a serious character.
On he first Tuesday in June (which
is ;iext Tuesday) the City Council of
ForsJ’th will cause to be burned upon
the public square, in open view of all
who desire to sea it, upwards of ten thou
sand dollars City Council currency. As
this will leave in circulation only about
five thousand dollars, we expect it will
soon be of equal value with greenbacks.
Handersville Messenger: Our farmers
now are busy cutting their oats, which
have matured this year much earlier
t,\an usual. They are generally in ex
eeilcht condition, and tho yield will be
HDD xiialiy large. The stand of cotton
in the - jeo'nuty is better than ever before
known. Ti ,e oorn looks fine, and the
prospeot I ,r au abundant harvest is truly
eiieoumg.'ng'.
Newman Weekly Blade: Col. G. VV.
Norman, traveling agent aud correspon
dent of the Augnsia Chronicle and Hkn
tinel, made us a sln.'l't call one day last
week. He represented that the Ohisqni
olk and Sentinhli was increasing iti
circulation rapidly, which *Y O are
lied to learn, for it. is one oi t‘>o oldest
and best Democratic papers 5a the State
—reliable, sound and newsy.
Two boys, named Wilson and Burke,
who arrived on the traiu yesterday from
Savannah, were arrested on suspicion
by officer Nolan. They were taken to
the lockup and on Burke was found u
safe key, a fifty-dollar note uud about
four dollars in small bills. They are
each about twelve years old. Burke was
employed in an office in Savannah, it is
said. They will probably be held to
await, instructions from that city.—Jack
sonville Sun, of the '2lth.
The Chattanooga Times says: Mr.
Richard Peters, of Atlanta, Ga., is ar
ranging to start a sheep aud goat ranch
in New Mexico, on a large scale. Among
■other stock he has purchased for his
ranch are ten Ootswold buck lambs of
Hon. Tom Crutchfield, for §l5O. It was
from a meriuo buck bought of Mr.
Peters that Mr. Crutchfield bred his
first improved stock oil the scrub. And
these ho has improved by mixing the
fine wool and heavy frame of tho Cota
wold, until he now has as valuable a
small flock as there is in the United
States.
Deaths iu Georgia: Died, at the resi
dence of Iter father, iu Polk county, on
the 20th instant. Miss Jennie Dover,
daughter of Colonel J. F. Dover; John
Seay, a venerable and highly re
spected citizen of Jaekaon oounty, died
suddenly at his residence, on Friday
night last, while conversing with Rev.
Mr. Rutherford—the deceased was be
tween 80 and 90 years of age. and bad
been a member of the Methodist Church
upwards of fifty years; Mr. Andrew
Flatley, au old and respectable citizen
of Savannah, died at his residence Mon
day morning.
Atlauta Times: Quite a party, con
sisting of Mr. E. P. Chamberlia anil la
dy, Mr. J W. Goldsmith and lady, Mr.
J. M. Goldsmith and lady, Mr. George
Winship and daughter, Mrs. G. W. D.
(took. Mr. \V. A. Moon, lady aud daugh
ter, Mr. E. W. Marsh, ladv, son aud
daughter, Mr. A. D. Adair aud lady,
Mr. John Barry and lady, Mrs. Kirk
patrick, Mrs. F. T. Ryan, of this city,
.und Dr. Terry, of Oolnuit}us, trill leave
Atlauta Tuesday afternoon for Philadel
phia, fin Washington City. After spend
ing a few days visiting the Centennial,
the party will go North and up into
Canada.
The farmers are now in the very midst
*>l the harvest season, aud if the wet
weather continues, heavy loss will be
the result. We do hope "that they will
be able to garner every seed without a
.particle of damage. Corn is scarce and
•high, sna the incoming wheat and oat
■crops will cause iu at a time when most
neeacd. The people are getting enthu
siastic on the small grain question, and
we are glad t-o see it, as it is au omen of
better times in the future. Mi. Luck
Murray brought into our ofliee Monday
a bunch of oats containing one hun
dred and forty stalks—all of which come
from one seed. Tnere is scarcely a farm
er anywhere in this section who has fail
ed to make a good crop of oats. —Tbrt
Valley Mirror.
On Friday last, Jarnes Tompkins, the
son of Mr. Council Tompkins, deceased, j
•who with his widowed mother resided i
on the premises of Mr. John TANARUS, Smith, i
in the neighborhood of Hebron, went to •
the plum orchard and ate freely of plums.
Daring the night he was taken quite
sick, vomiting profusely. Saturday he
grew worse, and the disease assumed a
•very strange form. He commenced snap
ping and biting at and trying to spit
upon those who were waiting upon him.
and finally got oat of bed and crawled
under the same, as if trying to hide. A
physician, Dr. H. C. Hodges, was call
ed and did all that he couid to relieve
the sufferer, but his efforts were fruit
less. The poor boy continued in this
terrible state, until death relieved him
of his sufferings.
On Tuesday of last week a half Indian
named John Lynch, who was working for
Mr. D. J. Edenff eld, in Emanuel county,
was mysteriously murdered. About half
an hour before sunset Lynch went to
gather plums at an orchard near Mr.
Edenfields, and not returning that night
nor the next dey, Mr. E. went to look
for him. He followed his track about a
half mile from the house, and saw where
someone on horseback had met Lynch,
and the surrounding appearances indi
cated that a difficulty had taken place
between Lynch and his murderer. Mr.
E. then followed the tracks some dis
distance farther, to a creek, where he
found Lynch dead, with a ballet-hole
through his head. Lynch was said to
have been a bad man, and was under
bond when he vu lulled,
S®iTir CAROLINA.
| TKW4 MOTES FROM *H*V vL\l EX-1
TO STATE
Mr. Wo. Spencer died at his residence
in Picl tens county on Friday last.
Gov B. F. Perry n to de iver a lec
ture b :fvre the Ctiernw Lyj - .jin in a few j
r \ JT i T
% Frpi file arly every entfi-r e -nigs S'
;'i-.rr.. i *U'us:*eti-!i i: ef tmt **^-
cvitioj 1 I Img -sued.
Twc c ilored lvd-< in H.rrv. wltih-;
f • rti'ii ; wpljw g'i . <r—i V**” • iolp'i’Jr
I
1,9 , , t . ~f Mr. -ieorge H yman.
rift l. st*r. WN-* vßlerkd 'V irl.i Jaa V
r 0.-HC kel, <uj Tuesday inoin ug.
Jsia es ole.niti, '{’He ‘ pjloVel Ahfr
viiie a iurdeoT. has been senUaiC'id by I
Judge Carpenter to be hung on the
28th J uly.
Prei lident Davega received kn order on
Tuesd* ay for several thousand dollars of
the blends issued in aid of tjie Cheater
and L anoir Railroad.
Everybody ia tbe vieiuity of Wions
boro i| s complaining of the long continu
ance ( J dry weather. The gardens and
fields j are all suffering.
The) notorious outlaw, Moso Wilsos, I
was aiiplured at Florence last Saturday,
It is skid that his captors will get a re
ward ijiggregatiug $5,000.
Tho crops of corn, cotton, &c., around
Lexuqi.'tcm county are exceedingly prom-
ising, and, with no drawbacks, the peo
ple hojpe for better times.
Gov;. Chamberlain has issued a proc
lamation declaring the 28th day of June
a gene ral holiday, in order to do honor
to the ‘Fort Moultrie Centennial.
Mrs., Thorn well, the widow of Dr. J.
K. Thorn well, is a guest of her sister,
Mrs. Ward law, at Newberry, and visits
that to wn in the interest of the orphan
age at Clinton.
The j ecent municipal election at Fort
Mills resulted in the choice of the form
er Boajpd, viz: T. B. Withers, lutendant;
J. M. White, N. G. Bradford, B. F.
PowelL, iti. G. Gibson, Wardens.
Another law student, Mr. Magill, of
Due W.est, has lately gone to Abbeville
to studiy the law under the direction of
Messrs. McGowan & Parker. Mr. Magill
is a young man of worth and promise.
The next session of the South Caroli
na Conference of the Methodist Episco
pal Church, South, will be held at
Chester, beginning on the I.3th of De
cember next. Bishop H. H. Kavanaugh,
of Kentucky, will preside.
We learn that Rev. R. F. Bradley, of
Andersdn county, will deitverthe annual
oration before the Alumni of Erskine
College this year. Mr. Bradley is a gen
tleman <jif fine talent, and will do credit
to the piosition assigned him.
Now that the opening of the campaign
ia not far off, the pardon mania has be
gun. Trie Governor is to be entreated
for the pardon of Cannon, a notorious
thimble rigger and brawler, and Wade
Rosboro, a bold cotton thief.
The Bfiard of Directors of the Cheraw
and Cheater Railroad will meet ip Ches
ter Thursday. At this meeting arrange
ments aria to be made to procure, at an
early day', the iron necessary to lay the
track fro m Chester to Lancaster.
Last "'week Mr. Earnest M. Gary, of
Augusta, Ga., was in Abbeville, aud at
tended the anhiversary festival of the
Rifle Ciiib, contributing his full share
to the gvneral eujoymeut of the evening.
He is a llaw student in the office of Maj.
W. T. Gary.
Laureiisville Herald : A pall of gloom
and sadttess has been thrown over our
community by the death of Mr. .James
M, Boyd, a highly esteemed and valued
citizen of this village, which mournful
event occurred on the 22d inst., after an
illness of eleven days, t
Married, at the residence of the bride’s
father, on Tuesday morning, 30th of
May, by Rev. D. E. Frierson, Mr.
David S. Taylor and Miss Bessie W.
Rucker, all of Anderson. On Sunday,
28th nit., by Notary Public Dr. W. K.
Sharpe, at the residence of Solomon
Perry, Esq., Mr. Norris E. Edwards and
Miss Lena Pickens. All of Townville,
S. C.
Mr. Jake Thompson, brother of Trial
Justice Thompson, of Columbia, a mail
agent on the Wilmington Railroad, met
with a dangerous and singular accident
ou Friday night last, while his train was
crossing a trestle near Marion, The
train was goiDg slow at the time, and
Thompson, who may have been dozing,
thinking it had stopped at Marion, pick
ed up his mail bag uud stepped off, fall
ing through the Wateree trestle into the
swamp below, a distance of thirty feet.
When he was picked up it was found
that he was otherwise injured by his se
vere fall. He was promptly cared for.
A well known politician named C. J.
Houston, at oue time Private Secretary
for Governor Moses, was arrested Wed
nesday for forgery, on the complaint of
Henry Anderson. Mr. Anderson, in his
affidavit, states that on October 28, 1874,
he give Houston for collection a certifi
cate of a claim for $275, which had been
passed at the regular session of the Leg
islature. Houston disposed of the c airn
for his own benefit, and it is within the
knowledge of the complaint that the
prisoner did forge and endorse his name
on the back of the certificate previous to
disposing of it. Houston was arrested
in Ls?iugt° n by Caleb Christian and
brought before Trial Justice McCord,
who committfc.,4 him to jail in default of
S4OO bail.
The shipments from Charleston for
the week just closed were 124 bags of
sea island cotton, 4,499 bales upland
cotton, 700 toss of phosphate rock,
staves, ash plank, &c., to Liverpool ;
2,173 casks spirits of turpentine, 150
barrels rosin and 900 tons phosphate
rock to London; 550 tons of phosphate
rook to New Castle, 1,800 bales of up
land cotton to Havre; 3§5 bales of up
land cotton, 509 barrels of rosin, 100
tons phosphate rock, 5,311 crates and
barrels of vegetables, and 404 barrels of
new Irish potatoes to New York; 76
bales of upland cotton, 346 tierces rice,
501 casks spirits turpentine, 261 barrels
rosin and 450 packeges vegetables, &0.,
to Philadelphia, 497 tierces of rice, 885
baryels of rosin, 434 packages vegetables
and sundries to Baltimore.
On Saturday a chioken thief who had
crossed over the jriyor into St. Andrew’s
Parish, for the purpose of raiding upon
the hen roosts of that looality, de
tected in the *ut, pursued and oaptuyed.
A large number of colored people, in
cluding several women, 08e profits
from Spring chickens had been jeopar
dized, seized the thief, stripped and
tied hiiU and administered between two
aud three hundred IsHUes upon his bare
back. He might have been dangerously
in Mired had not the lynchers been per
suaded to cease at this point During
the rest, oi the day he might have been
seen fruitlessly endeavoring to find a
soft place ou the Savaunah Railroad
wharf to sit or lie down upon- Chickens
in St. Andrew’s henceforth are aafo, as
far at least as he is concerned. The
party were all colored.
Charleston Journal of Commerce :
“Information was lodged at the coron
er’s office yesterday stating that Frank
Campbell, colored, about twenty-one
years of age, who was eogaged at work
on the flat ‘January,’ Gapt. Joseph
Small, colored, at the West Point
wharf, accidentally fell overboard and
was drowned. There were two other
hands besides Small preseut at the
time of the aooident and made every at
tempt in tfceir power to save him, but
to no effect. Yesterday, while the Judge
and officers of the United States Court
were preparing to draw tits jurors of the
Jane term, they met (with an obsic.cle in
opening the jury boj:. Two of the locks
worked all right, but the third baffled
all attempt at opening. Every pne tried
his hand in turn, hot to no ay ail. The
services of a locksmith were soon pro
cured, who picked the look, end thus
relieved the Court from great enibarass
ment.”
NO ROOM FOR WUIPFEK.
RedS fomniitHiou tor Pour Veaw
Read in Ojpea Court and Recorded.
IHspiUch lQ The Newt and Courier.]
Oraxokbfrg, S. C., June 2.—Our
Court, which had taken a recess until the
3d instant, was opened this day by
Judge Reed. He stopped here in order
to finish up such business as had been
left open. The first matter of impor
tance was the reading of the : commission
of Judge Reed, recently issued by the
Governor. This was read by the clerk
in open Court. By document the
Governor of South Carolina has pro
claimed that Hon. J. P. Reed has been
elected the Jndge of the First Circuit for
a term of four years, ending December,
1878, and so it stands Recorded. The
bnsiness of the Court then proceeded,
consisting of reports on the equity side
chiefly and orders theeon, with orders
on the interminable “Bills oi the Rank
of the State” qneetion.mandamoses, Ac.,
by Messrs. W. J. DeTreville, Julius
Glover, aud Izlar & Dibble. The rest
of the orders and motions were matters
of course. The Court adjourned at. 2, p.
m., until the third Monday in October
next.
The Pennsylvania Horror.
Eastos, Pa., June 3.—This evening
the Coroner's jury returned a verdict
that Martin J, Laros, Mary Ann Laros
and Mahkin Soling died from poison ad
ministered by AUen C. Laros. The per
son so accused is a school teacher, and a
son of Martin and Mary Ann Laros,
both of whom are among the victims.
Since his arrest he has. confessed that
he gave the poison to his father and
mother and Scfaug, ami that his sole ob
ject was to obtain possession of their
money.
WITHOUT WAHXINtI.
,>.-ui Acriilcut—A Voacg Man on Thr Excnr
<dbTrain from Atlaatit to Fort Kora! Pre
cl|iitaird lata asimua null lli-u wne.l.
Thursday night tbe exenrsion train
from Atlanta to Port Royal left Augus
ta with as happy a party of excursionists
as ever participated iu mch u trq. N"
■jff iskpoeted that In-foie nt:-‘l*!-r s*‘t
■> d-lri-e fine of the party w.-uet JO t >
hot tihiirp.. IrtllU wlinfie.- tl> * etveo-i t
'l'l.lJ- !• II: v| ;r.pi r , ..1 ! tt-elfiln.
j) i■-.<■ H + y reaches! *.■* d--t
. It .*ll 1 ..•Bijg ioii brigtit die ta-t w*,|.
-.it in.Uni iv ami ir!ie eito Atao.tg
'.te t-x il-.lfiii 1-, VuiiHt i :-e- *.l“, i.
iy>"‘ f i '••■>' - 1 ; f■ •
,1 li. ?>*■!-. liter :n:u p.oplni
or oft!, i tVf/t/i.y South, of Atia'.ue At
four o’clock, ix. tu , as the traiu Whs
liaising over a trestie about seven miles
from Port Royal, young Seals was stand
ing on the piatform of one of the
coaches. Toe coach, which belonged to
the Savannah and Charleston Railroad,
happened to have lower platforms than
the Port Royal Railroad car.-, ana
as the train passed along tbe trestle the
idepa of tbe platform on which young
Seals was standing struck against a
post Thesteps were immediately broken
by the shock, aud theunfortuuate young
man was precipitated into the water be
low. In falling his head struck against
some of the timbers, inflicting an ugly
w&tnd over the eye. Every effort was
made to rescue him, but in vain. The
body was recovered about 10 o’clock and
an inquest held over it by the coroner.
It was then placed in a pine coffin, the
.only one that could be procured, and
brought to Augnsta on the up passenger
train, by Mr. Parks, of the Atlanta Con
stitution. On reaching the city Mr.
Parks had the body placed in a burial
casket and carried it to Alantalast night
by the up passenger train of the Georgia
Railroad.
mcduffie county.
The Crop Prospect—And the Political Situi
| tion.
| [Special Correspondence Chronicle and Sentinel.]
Thomson, June 3.—Another refresh
ing shower in this vicinity yesterday
evening. Crops are fine. The oat crop
the finest that was ever harvested in the
country. Wheat above the average.—
Here we may see the folly of exclusive
cotton culture aud the advantage of a
diversified agricultural industry. We
have, in the course of the past few days,
seen several farmers who say that their
present oat crop will turn out each 2,500
bushels. Remembering that it requires
much less labor and expense to make a
small grain crop than any other, what
bright anticipations of gain has been
born in these men’s hearts, within the
last few weeks, as they have watched the
graceful swell of the golden billows. -It
is also by far the surest crop that can
be made in this country—an early sow
ing of the rust proof variety of oats be
ing almost an unfailing crop. Now, if
we only had a hog crop to turn on these
wide pasture lands, there to remain until
a large pea crop came on, we might, in
deed, be independent. The agricul
tural outlook, however, is indeed cheer
ing, for the blackberry crop will soon be
ripe, and then with our own flour and
our own berries, with a moderate
amount of sweetening, we will, for a
time, be independent of “ factors.”
What a grand country we have, and
what a grand people we may be in a few
years if we will only “quit our foolish
ness and attend to our kuitting.” There
is not a portion of tbe American Union
but what can be made tributary to the
South if we will avail ourselves of the
natural facilities which on every hand
surround ns. We can here raise all the
products of the whole country, and
after producing all that we may desire
to consume, and that, too. in the great
est abundance, we have then the mo
nopoly of the money crop— “the cash
staple product of the world,” and at our
very doors rushes the water power,
which will coin the golden ore for com
merce, and attract to the rot ing wharves
of the South Atlantic and the Gulf the
sails which now whiten every sea. It
makes no material difference to us what
section furnishes tbe President; if we
carefully husband our own resources the
South will in the end, by means of her
moneyed power, no less than by her
mental superiority, once more control
the destinies of this country.
While the result of the late war
robbed us of the accumulations of a
century, yet it contributed an ele
ment, the only element needed
to perfect Southern character—the
element of personal thrift and economy,
and as soon as the present generation of
dead beats and grumblers shall have given
place to the fiery and impulsive nature
of one born ’neath Southern skies, hard
ened and roughened by a quarter of a
century’s coarse contact with cruel pov
erty, then will the earth be gladdened
by the sight of anew creature, com
bining all the elements of Castilian
chivalry with a dogged determination
alone born of a hardy experience. Our
necessities will then have given birth to
a people who can and will dig, and too
proud to beg or steal.
The Chronicle and Sentinel has for
some time past been firing so many hot
shot into the ranks of the various politi
cal rings of the State that it is not at
all curious that human ingenuity should
devise some plan to create a diversion in
favor of the rings. We are not sur
prised at such a feint, but the ring at
tacked by the Atlanta Constitution, of
June 2d, as foreshadowed in an editorial
entitled, “Whose ring is this ?” is the
most ridiculous and absurd phantom of
the imagination that a sane mind could
conceive. A ring formed for what ? To
make Hersehel V. Johnson Governor ?
Why, how could a ring manage
such a man as Johnson ? Does any one
suppose for one instant that he has eyen
consented that his name should be used
before a Convention ? No; the truth of
the matter is simply this: It is feared
that if the people are not forbidden the
use of the name of this old Roman, they
will nominate him for Governor ami the
“enthusiastic friends ” of someone of
the many long standing candidates, well
knowing Judge Johnson’s pride and ex
treme sensitiveness, are attempting to
create the impression that he is working
through his '‘enthusiastic friends ” for
the nomination. This “able and distin
guished citizen of Bartow county” well
knows that if Judge Johnson suspects
any such means were used to effect his
nomination he would forthwith forbid
the usp qf his name before the Conven
tion. TJie rjfse of the Constitution is
too patent. “Let us hear the will of
Caesar—read the will of .Caesar.” Not
withstanding “the severity of the stric
tures,” notwithstanding “the popular
mind may be inflamed” or “personal is
sues may he raised,” give qs the letter,
the whole letter. Ret ns hear more
of “the gepr.et circular emanating from
Augusta, and sard only to a few promi
nent men of each county of the State in
which these few prominent men agree
to hand over the counties to Johnson at
the State Convention.” “This contract,”
says the sble and distinguished citizen
of" Bartow, Uliag been signed for the
deliverance of Richmond, Greene, Mor
gan, Bibb, Fulton,” Ac., &c. Thank God
for it. It is to be hoped that a like con
tract wjll be signed for the deliverance
of all the counties from the swarm of
hungry candidates who are now stump
ing the State. All we want in Eastern
Georrtc js a man who will lei the office
find him We want no rings. Wo want
to break them all qp. and we therefore
call on the Constitution to give its the
full (ext of the letter, despite all the
calamitons circumstances which may
ensue from its publication, and if we
fiud from its perusal that Johnson is a
slave of the ring, we are willing to com
i bias and concentrate on Hon. John W.
Wofford, ox any other man, no matter
from what section he may had, who is
, qjodest enough to let other people pf
\ good nUv-'id lungsbiow his horn 1
The people of Oeorgia, no’ matter
: bow editors may dray oiuf the word, no
matter how they may string out the let
' ters to spell p-e-o-p-le are determin
i ed to make politicians fake a back seat.
| This oue of their little machines, and
they intend to run it this time, even if
j they have to demoralize the press to do
it * Understand us, we don’t tie on to
! Johnson. He is our first choice in this
section, because we believe him to be
an honest, true and noble old man—a
man who & .above the tricks which dis
tinguish the politicians qi the present
day, and we doubt not many such can
be" found in Georgia, noiwithstanding
the political depravity of the times, and
if, after counseling together, a better
man can be found, we will vote for him,
but up to these writings, “with nearly
all the counties heard from,” that man
: is not forthoomi&g. MoDuffie.
A School Bov’s Composition on the
Blackberry. —The “black” is a beauti
ful berry if yon will let it stay on the
vine. When mixed with doe they pre
sent a very homely appearance. I do
not lifca them. no how. They will do very
well for woodpeckers, jaybirds and pigs,
but I wouldn’t let lay little “pinter
pnp” touch them. They color the teeth
and other things, but you ain’t going to
get none of their stain in me. Mamma
fed me on them when I was too.amall to
help myself, but I don’t intend to be
stuffed with them all of my life. I have
gone completely back on my “raisin”
and am a little spilt, so I guess von will
have to trot up with something fresh.
I’ll be dogged if I can stand 'em. My
teeth are full of the seed now.
“Why is it, my dear sir,” said Waffles’
landlady to him the other day, “that
you newspaper men never get rich?” “I
do not know,” was his reply, “except it
is that dollars and sense do not always
travel together.”
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New Yokk J in
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aside the will. ‘
BILL ALLEN’S ItKHAI:
Columbus letter iu the jf7*>w York
Herald : We had a long or 4 versation.
The old man sat down or wjfted around
the room, as the fancy too£ him. He
was full of life and hope, and greeted
his friends, who constantly kept calling
on him, with impressive warmth. About
his being endorsed by the State and
nominated by the National Convention
he had no doubt whatever. In any mis
cellaneous assemblage of men he would
be sure to attract notice if only by the
aggressive and ponderous character of
his nose, which is as remarkable in its
way as the Duke of Wellington’s. It is
like the nose of an anvil that points out
straight at you without turn or equivo
cation. It is a nose on whicii Napoleon
would have conferred promotion, for it
suggests a determination to conquer or
die. If you can imagine a nose of the
kind I mean, projecting! like an awning
from a straight-built forehead over a de
termined mouth and chin, rigidly
braced up by a black stock around the
neck, a stiff collar rising half way up
the cheek, the head surmounted by a
full growth of white hair, the figure
over six feet, well proportioned and
erect as a drill sergeant’s, and the whole
man dressed and patterned after the
fashiou of forty years ago, you may
have some idea of “Old Bill Alien.”
The Kerr investigating committee is
quietly continuing the investigation. In
terest in it has ceased.
Special IN otioew.
NOTICE.
OFFICE OF PLANTERS" UN-TON AGENCY, \
Augusta, Ua., May lOtli, 1878. f
FROM AND AFTER THIS DATE MR. F. V. BUR
DELL is the duly authorized Superintendent of the
Planters’ Union Agency. W. W. Rhodes resigned.
G. B. POWELL,
myll-dl2&w4 President Board of Directors.
A CTAKD.
TO ALL WHO ARE SUFFERING FROM THE
errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weak
ness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send
a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE.
This great remedy was discovered by a missionary
in South America, gopd a self-addressed envel
ope to the Rev. Joseph T. Inman, Station D, Bible
House, New York City. mh4- atuih&w6rn
JSpuiifiisfr
IODIDE OF AMMONIA
Cures Neuralgia, Face Ache, Blieuma
tism, Gout, Frosted Feet, Chilblamsi
Sore Throat, Erysipelas, Bruises or
Wounds of every kind in man or animal.
Dr. William Osgood Page, of No. 265 4th
avenue, New York, suffered for many years
with stiffness and intense pain in his knee, and
at times was unable to walk, caased by an in
jury received on the Hudson River Railroad.
Tried every remedy that skill or science could
devise, without benefit. Giles’ Limment lo
dide of Ammonia gave instant relief and ef
fected a complete euro.
J. H. ALEXANDER, Agent.
Sold by all Druggists. Depot No, 451 Sixth
Avenue, New York. Oniy 50c. and $1 per bot
tle. my,3o-d<fewlm
ALL ABOUT THE HAIR.
Aureoline, or Golden Wash>
Lyon’s Kathairon,
Burnett's C’ocoaine,
Barry’s Tricopheroua,
Hall's Hair Bestorer,
Ayer’s Hair Vigor,
Phalon’s Magic Hair Dye,
Phalon’s Hair luvigorator,
Circassian Hair Oil,
Sage’s Hair Coloring,
Kisley’s Hair Charm
Jayne’.-, Hair Tonic,
Christadora’s Hair Dye,
Tutt’s Hair Dye,
Georgia Hair Dye,
Richmond Hair Dye,
Mrs. Allen's Hair lteslorer,
Woods’ Hair .Restorative,
Briest’s Capillarinm,
Clock’s Excelsior Restorer,
Chevalier’s Life for the Hair,
Heinstreet’s Coloring and Kestora
tive.
Eureka Hair Restorative.
Nature’s Hair Restorer,
Pomades, Oils, Perfumes and Resto
ratives for the Hair in Variety,’
At ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE.
GLASS; GLASS!
FRENCH and American WINDOW GLASS
and PICTURE GLASS. Wholesale and
Retail, at ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE.
may2l-tf
Oils, Oils, Oils !
JEWETT’S LINSEED OIL, Raw and Boiled.
CASTOR OIL. NEATSFOOT OIL.
TANNERS’ OIL. CAR OIL.
LARD OIL, SPERM OIL.
KEROSINE OIL, SPINDLE OIL.
EXTRA MACHINE OILS,
At ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE.
WHITEWASHING!
B RUSHES for WHITEWASHING.
BRUSHES for WHITEWASHING.
BRUSHES for WHITEWASHING.
All sizes and qualities for inside or outside
work. From CO cents up to $3 each, at
apl6-tf ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE.
Always OnH and
AT
Alexander's Drug Store,
Drags and f hem seals,
Pharmaceutical Preparations,
All Patent Medicines*
ALSO,
Holman’s and Ague Pad,
Him rod’s Asthma Cure.'
Colgate’s Violet Toiler water,
Durang’s Rheumatic Cure,
jelegp for Dyspepsia
Liebig's Food for Infants,
Pancreatic Emulsion (.8 & M.'s),
Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda,
Cod Liver Oil and Phosphate of Lime,
Paris Thapsia Piaster,
Rigollot’s Mustard Leaves,
Ferrated Elixir of Calisaya,
Taicott’s Magic Cure for Chills,
Reynolds' Specific for Rheumatism,
Pond's Extract of Hamemelia,
Ointment of Witch Hazel (iiuwphrv’e),
Elixir of Gentian with Tiii.it Chun.
Tron; i!
Syrup Laeto Phog, of Lime,
Wyeth’s Beef Wine and iron,
Lincfe’s Egtrapt of Majt,
Knapp’s Throat Cure,
Gowland’s Lotion,
Whitcomb’s Asthma Remedy,
Raccahont, Imperial Granum,
Aureoline (Golden Hair Tint),
Sage’s Catarrh Remedy,
Nasal Douches (tor Catarrh),
Homeopathic Tinctures and Pellets.
Humphrey’s Specifics (Homeopathic),
And Four Thousand other articles of common
use and necessity at
ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE.
NOTICE.
THE business heretofore carried on under
the name and style of C. H. Phimzy &
Cos. will expire by limitation on the 31st day of
August next. Either partner will sign tlm
firm name in liqoidatior*.
1 *' C.H. PHINIZY.
F. B. PHINIZY.
A clrd.
TN retiring from the Cotton Commission buai-
JL ness, I take pleasure in returning thanks
to my friends who have patronized so liberally
the firm of C. H. Phinizy A Cos., and to ask
from them a continuance of the same to my
late partner. Mr. F. B. Phinizy. whom! hearti
ly recommend as worthy of their confidence.
His experience is ample, and his facilities for
the management of the Cotton bnsiness un
surpassed. C. H. PHINIZY.
F. B. PHINIZY,
(Successor to C. H. Phinizy A Cos.)
COTTON FACTOR
Augusta, 6a.,
~\\f H-L give his personal attention to all
Vy bu-meas entrusted to his care, and
wifi make liberal advances on consignments.
Shipments of Ootton respectfully solicited.
- may26-eo3m
weekly Review of An?asia Market.
Acorwr*. Ov„ Fkidat Aftk'inoox, I
Jane 2, 1876. )
General Remarks. •
_ Trade has bee exceedingly quiet aud cull
during the week, with oniy a few minor
changes in quotations.
Securities*.
Seen itia- qnia*.
Rail-wilt tiui„U.
• ■!*... iiabio&i. if.. :*i, ittacuii and Aligus
’ ! * bngAgi* >5 37 -etidoreod by Georgia
*.ntp r Irorgls xtrrt
■**:;■:: i at*inn*.uA..iui*,oll*92. Foil Rovai Rail
j. m' ie* oje*...v;c(.'fun r*.endorsedbviftn-rgia
i *o* *. -i Alfa:-?! and XYcet than! BV. HiU:
**::o. ' ■*,UL , *i'.E V:.i Vugllst* fire* IT:* || [
, ■ t, .*: ei-condmortgage! C 5 a ked. Con
Sonth'res.tern and Macon & Weet
• V brst mortgage 7*9. 97; Western Rail
Alabama, endorsed bv Georgia and
Central, 90.
Bank Storks, (jus Company and Street Rail
way.
National Bank of Augusta, 120; Bank of Au
gusta, 80; National Exchange Bank, 90; Com
mercial Bank,SO; Planters Loan and Savings
Bank, 10 paid m, 6); Augusta Gas Company
par 25, Ssa3B; Street Railroad, nominal.
Angusta Factory, 116; Langley Factory, 100.
Graniteville Factory, 125.
Railway Stocks.
Georgia Railroad, 75a76 ; Central, 39(241 :
South Carolina. 3); Charlotte, Columbia
and Augusta, 121; Port Royal ‘ Railroad,
nominal; Southwestern, 75@—; Augusta and
Savannah, 86; Macon and Augusta, nominal;
Atlanta and West Point, 85.
Securities dull.
Cotton.
Below will be fonnd a resume of the week’s
business:
Saturday, May 27.—Cotton dull and nomi
nal—Ordinary, 7; Good Ordinary, 81; Low
Middling, 10; Middling, 10f; Good Middling,
Uialli: receipt*. 34; salea, 43; stook in Augus
ta by actual count, on the 26th of May, 5,080;
stock last year, 6,006, receipts since September
Ist, 162.361; receipts at all United States ports
Saturday, 1,517; corresponding week last year.
2,921; last week, 1,620.
Monday. 29.—Quiet and firm; offerings light
—Ordinary. 7; Good Ordinary, 81; Low Mid
dling, 10; Middling, 10f; Good Middling m ;
receipts, 25; sales. 83.
Wednesday, 31 —Quiet and firm; offerings
light—Ordinary, 7; Good Ordinary, 84; Low
Middling, 10; Middling, lOjall; Good Middling,
ill; receipts, 19; sales, 133.
Thursday, June I.—Quiet Ordinary, 7;
Good Ordinary, 8J; Low Middling, lOJalOi ;
Middling, 11 ; Good Middling, 114; receipts, 40;
sales, 192.
Friday, 2.—Quiet and easier—Ordinary, 7;
Good Ordinary, 8): Low Middling, lOalOf;
Middling, 11; Good Middling, Ilf; receipts, 24;
sales, 657; total receipts, 173; total sales, 647;
stook in August!, by actual count, on
the 2d June, 4,716: stock last year,; 5,925;
receipts since September Ist. 167.580; ship
ments since September Ist, 162,864; receipts
at all United States ports Friday, 2,548; corres
ponding week last year. 2,120; last week, 2,194;
total for six days, 13,532; 12.834; 16,823.
RECEIPTS OF COTTON.
The following are the receipts of Cotton by
the different Railroads and the River for
the week ending Friday evening, June
2, 1876;
Receipts by tho Georgia Railroad.. bales.. 110.
Receipts by the Augusta and Savannah
Railroad 347
Receipts by the Charlotte, Columbia and
Angusta Railroad 6
Receipts by South Carolina Railroad 20
Receipts by Port Royal Railroad
Receipts by Canal and Wagon.
Receipts by the River
Total receipts by Railroads, River, Canal
and Wagon 483
OOTTON SHIPMENTS.
The following are the shipments of Ootton by
the different Railroads and the River for
the .week ending Friday evening, June 2.-
1876 : *
BY RAILROADS.
South Carolina Railroad—local shipments.. 132
South Carolina Railroad—through ship
ments 171
Augusta and Savannah Railroad —looal
shipments 125
Augusta and Savannah Railroad—through
shipments 32
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad
—local shipments
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad
—through shipments. 218
By Port Royal Railroad—local
By Port Poyal Railroad—through 185
By Rivor—local shipments 8
Total shipment by Railroads and River. 866
TOTAL RECEIPTS AND SALES FOR THE WEEK.
Sales 847
Receipts 173
COMPARATIVE OOTTON STATEMENT.
Receipts for this week of 1875 964
Showing a decrease this week of 791
Sales for this week of 1875 were 1,361
(15fal5f for Middling.)
Showing a decrease this week of 714
Receipts list sp&japn (j.B7f-7§) to
June 4 175.259
Receipts the present season, to date 166,868
Showing a decrease present season so
far of 8,391
Receipts of 1873-74 exceeded 1874-75 to
this date...., 22,022
Shipments during the week 306
Same week last year 861
Stock on hand at this 4 ate 9* 1874 5,968
AUGUSTA COTTON STATEMENT, HWE 2, 1876.
Stock on hand Deo. 10,1876.. 908
Received since to date 166,868
Ex’ptsand home consumption. 163.060
Actual stock on hand this day. 4,716
Stoves and Tinware.
Stoves vary in price according to manufac
ture and size, from $lB to S|QQ.
TiNWARE -Coffee pots, 2 tp 8 pints, per doz.
$2 40 to $5 30; Covered Buokets. 2 to 6 quarts,
s2@s 25 ; Coffee Mills, $8 00 ; Foot Tubs, sl2;
Sifters, $4 00; I. C. Roofing per box, sl3 00;
Bright Tin, 10x14 per box, sl4 50; Solder per
lb, 20c.
Plantation Wagons.
One and one-half inch axle, 485@95; 15
inch axle, 4100@105; 1J inch axle. 4110; 3 inch
thimble Bkin, 490; 3i inch thimble skin, 495.
The Hay and Stock Feed Market.
Hav.—Choipe Timothy—car load lqts, 4120
per hundred; Western mixed, 41 00 to 115 per
hundred; Fiaßtem Hay, 41 40 to 1 50 par hun
dred: Northern, 41 25.
Bean and Stock Meal.— Wheat Bran, 420
per ton ; Stock Meal, 60@65.
Peas.— Mixed, $1; Clay. 41 10.
Foddkb.—4l 00 to 41 25 per hundred.
Codntbv Hav.—4l 00 per hundred.
Syrups and Molasses.
Molasses.— Muscovado, hhds., —@4B; re
boiled, hogsheads, 80@32; barrels, 35 cents.
Cuba hhds., 48; bhls., 50 @ 53; sugar
house syrup, 65; New Oripaqs svrqp, 70@86 per
|allon; Silver Drip, 75 cents; Sugar Drip,
Hides.
Flint—6@B cents.
Gbeen —2a4 cents per pound.
Lumber and Building Material.
Shingles, 45 00 ; Laths, 42 50 ; Pure White
Lead, per lb, 9@14: Cherokee Lime, per bush
el, 40c.; Cbewakla Lime, perbbl. 41 60 ; Plas
ter of Paris, per barrel, 43 50 ; Cement, $2 50;
Plastering Hair,.Bo; Flooring, 425 00; Weather
Boarding, 420.
Miscellaneous Grocery Market.
Candles.—Adamantine, lightweight, 16@17;
full weight, 19@20; sperm, 40; patent sperm.
50; tallow, 12@131ft tb.
Cheese.— Western, 14@15 ; Factory, 18@19.
Bice. — 7l to 8J cents ¥ tb.
Salt.— Liverpool, 41 30@1 40 ; Virginia.
42 15@2 25 * sack. s ’
Soap.— No. 1,6 c.; Family, 6| to 7|e.
Mackebel— We quote full weights only as
follows: No. I— mess in kits—f 2SO to 42 75 ;
half barrels, $7 60 to 8; No. 1 * in kits, 41 75-
No. 2 in barrels, sl2; half barrels, 46 50;
kits, 41 40; No. 3— barrels, large, 49 to 9 60-
half barrels—large, 45 to 5 'SO; kits. 41 25.
Salmon*— Per doz. tb. cans, 42 76; 2 lb..
43 50. Salmon in kits, 43 50.
Fbench Peas.—l tb, Cana, pe? doz., 44 50.
Pickles.— Underwood’s qts., 44 76;* trai
ls 75 per doz. 1
Gbeen Cokn —2 lb Cans, 43.
Gelatine —Nelson’s, 43 per doz.
Gbound Peas—Tennessee, 4150 ; Georgia
41 50 per bushel. 8 '
Apples—green, per barrel—Western, 44 00;
Northern, 45 00, Butter—Country, per lb.
25@30; Goshen, 40; Beeswax, per lb., 25- ■
Beans, par bushel—Western, 41 15 to 1 25;
Northern, §2 26 to 43 00; White Table
Peas, 41 00 to 1 25. Western Cabbage, per doz
en, |1 20@150; New York Cabbages, 41 80@2;
Geese, 65c. Eggs, per doz, 15*17 ; Ducks. 30c;
Chickens—Spring, 15@25 ; grown, 2@30 ;
oents; Hongy, s|ramd,_par lb-, 20; Irish
Potatoes, per bbj. Western. ‘42 no®
Northern, 42 St); Onions, dry, per bb1..’4300@
3 25; Sweet Potatoes, 41 50 per bushel; Dried
Peaches, peeled, 14p. per li>.; Pried Apples,
10c. per lb. Soda, 8. Tallow, fed no. Grits per
bushel. 41 40 to 41 50. Western Pearl Grits,
per bbl., 45 00 to 45 50. Pearl Hominy, 45 50
@5 75.
The Augusta Hardware Market.
In the following quotations the price of many
ledxaig articles are lowered, particularly Swede
Iron aud Nails:
?ICZ9~-*l2 50i515 per dozen.
Shoes—Horse. |7 25; Mule, $8 28,
sritEi.—Plow, * per Ir.; C4at,‘2t) per lb.;
Springs, 13 per l ib.
Castisgs—6o.'
Sad Ibons—fl per lb.
Shovels —Ames’ lh, 415 50 per dozen. ;Ames’
and h, 415 75 per doz.
Spades—Adams’ 1 h, 416 00 per doz.; Ames’
and h, 416 00.
Anvils— Solid Cast Steel, 190. per lb.; Peter
Wright’s, 18 per lb.
Axes —Common middle size plain, 411 50 per
doz.; Samnel Collins’ middle size plain, 413 50
per doz.; Samnel Collins’ light, 13 00 per doz.
Axles—Common, 84c. <-
Bells—Kentucky cow, $$ 2a@l9 00; Hand,
41 25@16. ■*
Bellows —Common, 412@14; Extra, 18@24;
Caps —G. D., 45 per m.; W. P., 90 per m,.
Musket, $1 00 per m.
Cabds —Cotton— Sargents, 4* 50 per doz.
Hoes —Hd. Planters. $8 20@10 33 per doz.
Ibon—Swede, 7*@B4: Horse-shoe, 6; ftound
and Square, 41; Nail Rod, 10.
Nails. —fOd to 00d, 44 50; Bd, 44 75; 6d, 45;
4d, 45 25: 3d, 45 75; lOd to 12d,'finished, 45 50;
Bd, finished, 45 75; 6d, finished, 46; 3d,
fine 47 25; horse shoe, 20@33,
Miscellaneous,
Concentrated. Lye, per case, 46 75@7 25;
Potash, per case, 48 25 ; Blacking
Brashes, per dozen, 41 56a4; Brooms, per
doz., 42 50a4 50; Bine Buckets, do*.
|2a2 75; Matches, per griias, 93; Sod
—kegs, 6}07c.; Spda—boxes, 7{0% Stare
al2c; Feathers, 52@53. *'
Leather and Leather Goods.
G. D. Hemlock, Sole Leather, Good
Hemlock. 33@8T; White Oak Sble, 45@50;
Harness Leather, 45@50; ‘Upper Leather,
country tanned, 42 50 to 43. 50 per sid£; Calf
Skins, 436 to 475 per dozen; Bipe, 9*o (4 HOd
Bbipt.es—Per dozen, f 3@2C,.
—p s**, #l*t@so; wool,
Huai* Coreas—43@2s.
Smout Bueor— Harness. 1 Jap, or x. c. 8. A,
Pads, 1 trace, web reins, 112.
Cabblaoe Habness.—One-half x c., 4. A.
Pads, without breeching. 425 ; Silver Plated,
Tompkin’e Pads, with breeching, fift; bftftar
or Gilt, extra trimmed, 480&K* ’ ™ ‘ •
Saddle *4-
41#8.
The Tobacco Market.
Common to medium, 48@65; fine bright, 7£@
80; extra fine to fancy, 41<* 25: smoking to
bacco. 50@65; fancy smoking, 75@fl 60 P Ib.
Saddles—Morgan, * 4 5G®25; Buena Viata,
its ; English Shatter, *35 ; Plain. *lo®2o •
Side, *7®35.
The Augusta Dry Bloods Market.
Baowtt Cotton. Suffolk A 4-4, 8 ; Suf
folk a 4-1, 8$; SauhsOury R 4-4, 10; Saranac
R 4-4, 9: Fruit of the Boom 4 4.13. Laconea
E. 4-4 tine Brown, 10$. Portsmouth B. 3-4 Fine
Brown. 6.
Bleached Sheeting and SirmnNu.— Canoe
-7 inch. He.; Fruit of the Boom. 12$<S)13; Eons
dale. 36 inch, 13; Wammttta O XX, 36 inch
16f®'17 ; Waltham 10-4.375,; Utica lu-4, 45. Pa
f Chaug 4-4.74; Greenville A 4-4. Of. King Chihli
. Cambric. 20. Pocahontas 4-4.124. Oonewago 7-6
I Bs. Ca:ui'teU3-4.65. " *
Pn low Case ObrroN.—Amoekeag. 42 inch.
! 15c.: Waltham 1 1 inch, 15, Ands-dscroggin 42
tuch, 13.
o-AABi'hus -104 c., Santee, No. 1.
tls. Pdokiua. lue. * . "
Cajibkics. Pap.-r. Garner, ss®9c.; High
Colors,Bsa9, Lousdale, 9; Manviile, 7s>§)B; jjres
onville, 7s; S. S. & Sons, 7s; cambrics {glazed)
Ettoerton. 7; Franklin. 7; Harmonv. f; High
Colors, 8. °
Gisohams.— Domestic. Gloucester, 10$; Lan
caster, 12$; Baird, 10; Scotch, 20.
Checks and Stripes— Athena Checks, 12;
Eagle and Phoenix, 12 ; Magnolia Plaids, 10;
Richmond Stripes, 11 ; American Stripes 12;
Araeapha Stripes, 10$; Lucaeville Stripes, 10®
12; Eagle and Phoenix Stripes, 12$; Silver
Spring, 12.
Corset Jeans. —Kearsage, 13$c.; Naumkeg,
13$; Laconia, 11$.
Kentucky Jeans.—Fillette, 4250. ; Keokuk,,
45; Hillside, 13; Pacific Railroad, 40; South
wark Doeskin, 45 ; N. C. Wool, 50. Arkwright,
Bs. Buckskin, 245. Cave Hill Oassimere. 20.
Albany, 11. Silver Lake Doeskins. 35. Lees
burg. 395. Henry Clay, 35. Satinets—mixed
Grey, 35; Heavy. 60: Black. 45, 55®H6 cents.
Prints.—Garner's Fancies. 7sc.; Ancona
Fancy, 8$; Gloucester. 9<®9l; Amoskeag 74;
Hartel’s Fancies, 8; Arnold’s, 84: Mem
macs, 8; Albion, 8; Pacific, 8$; Bedford, 7s:
Sprague, 9s; Donnell’s, 9s; Wamsutta, 64. Mav
erick, 8$; Hamilton Shirting, Bc,
Spool Cotton.— Coates, 70c.; Stafford, 40
John Clark, Jr., 70; Clark Barrow’s, 20.
Needles—*l4o@l 60.
Ticking.— Lawrence, 9c; Conestoga A A, 14;
Arlington 3-4, 12$; Arlington 7-8, 15 ; Summer
sett, 11; Biddeford A A A, 24 ; Monumental
City, 25.
Athens Goods— Yarns. *1 35 ; Cheoka, 18 ;
Stripes, 11c.
Jewell's |, Bsc.; 4-4, 9so. ; Jewell's Osna
burgs, 13$e.
Randleman Light Stripes. 610 yards, 9s;
Randleman Fancy Stripes, dark. 510 yards,
9s; Randleman Checks or Plaids, 510
yards, 11 ; Eagle and Phoenix Checks, 500
yards, 12 ; Montour 7-8 Shirtings, 500 and
1,000 yards, 7s; 4-4 Sheetings, 500 and 1,000
yards, 9; Yarns assorted, No. 6-12, 50 bundles;
125; 5-16 inch rope, 40 pounds, 25c. per pound,
Milledgeville Osuaburgs A 8-ounces, 650 yards,
11$, Milledgeville Osuaburgs B 6-ounce, 800
yards, 9s; Milledgeville Osnaburgs 44-ounoe;
1,000 yards, 10; Milledgeville Plains, 525 yards,
15 ; Milledgeville Yarns, 8 and 10, #1 10;
Troup Factory 8-ounce Osnaburgs, 14; Troup
Factory 6-ounce Osnaburgs, 29 inches, 11$,
Troup Factory 6-ounce Osnaburgs, 27 inches,
11 ; Troup Factory 7-ounce OBnaburgs Checks
14; Trotfp Factory 7-ounce Osnaburgs Stripes
1$; Richmond Stripes, 850 yards, 11 ; Southern
Cross Yarns, 115.
The Augusta Furniture Market.
Bedsteads.—Circle-end Gum, Bracket Bail,
$5; Single Panel Black Walnut, *lO 00; Walnut
Zouave, *9 00; Maple Zouave, *6 00; Imita
tion Walnut, *5 00; Cottage Zouave, $4 50;
Spmdle do., *4 00; Fancy Cottage, *3 50; Black
Walnut French Lounge, *lßo3o.
Chamber Sets.- Solid Walnut, *SSa4SO
Enameled, *25a125.
Parlor Sets.—Beps and Hair Cloth, *4sa
150; Brocatelle, Satin and Silk Damask, i|lsoa
Chairs.—Split Seat, white, per dozen, *8 00;
Cane Seat, painted and gilt, per doz., *l3 00;
Battan Seat, painted and gilt, per doz., *ll 00;
Best Arm Dining, wood seat, §lB 00; Walnut,
0. S. Oil, per doz.. *lB 00a30 00; Walnut Gre
oian, *l6 0030 00; Windsor, W. S., painted,
per do*., *7 60.
Bureaus.— Walnut, with glass, *10@26; Wal
nut 4 Marble, with glass, *18<§)80 ; Walnut, $
Marble, with glass, *18@30; Marble Top, *lßa
Chairs—Rooking.—Boston large full arm,
each, *2 60; Boston Nurse, no arm, *1 76'
Nurse, cane seat and back, *3 50.
Cribs.— Walnut, *4 00@20 00.
Mattresses.— Cotton, beßt tick, *l4; Cotton
and Shuck, best tick, *10; Cotton and Shuak,
*7; Straw and Excelsior, *5 00; Hair, best tick,
per lb., *1 00.
Safes.— Wire, with drawer, *9 00 ; Tin, with
drawer, *8 00; with cupboard and drawer, *l2;
Wire, with drawer and cupboard, *l3 00.
Tables.— Fancy, with drawer, *1 50; round
39 inches, *2 00; Bound 36 inches, *2 50;
Round 48 inches, *6 00; Marble Tops, *6a4o.
Wash-stands.— Open with drawer, Walnut,
*3 00; open with drawer, Poplar, *2 25; Wal
nut, with three drapers, *8 70: with
three drawers, f Ifi gQ; Garble Tops, §l3as.
The Cigar Market.
Imported Havana. —Regalia Brittanica,
*180@200; Media Regalia, *150@160; Reina
Victoria, *ISO@2GO; Regalia de la Reina,
*130@150; Londres, *l2o<®l4o: Conchas de
Regalo, *100(a)120; Operas, *80@100; Princesas,
*Bo<S>9o —according to brands.
Clear Havana.— Regalias, *120@150; Reina
Victoria, *90@125 ; Conchas, *BO ; Conchitas,
*65@70. ’
Seed and Havana Copohitas, *45@50; Con
chas, *50@55; Conchas Regalia, *60@65; Re
galias, ®70,ai75; Londres, *70@75; Regalia
Brittanica, *7s@0 —according to quality.
Clear Seed— From *20@45; Common, from
*lß@2o.
Cheroots.— Common, *l2 50; Best, *l4.
The Liquor Market.
Ale ANb Porter.— Imported, *2 2502 75.
Brandy.—Applp, *2 6i)®S 00; American,
*1 40@2 Ofl; French, |6@i2; Cali
fornia, *5 00; New, *4.
Gin.—Aipefiew, *1 40@2 60; Holland, *3 00
(8 6 00.
Whisky.—Com, country, per gallon, *1 35@
2 50; Bourbon, per gallon, *1 50@5 00; Gib
son’s per gallon, *2 50@6 00; Bye, per gallon,
*1 35@6 00; Rectified, per gallon, *1 85(8)1 75;
Robertson county, per gallon, *1 6Q®2 50;
High Wines, *1 25. ’ ■
WiNE.-Madame Cljpqppt Champagpe, *3o@
2; Napoleoq’s Cabinet' *30(832; ltoedefer’s,
*3S(§)35; Roederer’a Spin-eider, '530(5)02; Impe
rial
quarts; Madeira. *6@lo; Malaga, *2 50 per
gal.; Port, *2 50@6 00; Sherry, §2 50®)5 00.
Wood and Coal.
Coal—Coal Creek Coal per ton, *ll 00; An
thraeite per ton, *lB 00.
Wood—Hickory and Oak, *5 50 per cord;
sawed 600. higher; inferior gradas from *1 to
*2 per cord less than ' *
Mauufaetpred ppttpn Goods.
Augusta Factory— B-4 Shirting. 64; 7-8 dp-,
8; 4-4 Sheetjng, 9; Drills, 9s. ’' ' “ " *
GBANiTRviw-E Factory—3.4 Shirtii*, 6s; 7-8
do., 8; 4-4 Sheeting, 9; Drills, 9s.
Langley Faotoby—A Drills, 10; B Drills, 94;
Standard 4-4 Sheeting, 9; Edgefield and A
44 do., 8$; Langley A 7-8 Shirting, “$; Langley
84 Shirting, 64.
Oil.
Headlight, per gallon, SBa4o; Kerosina, 18a
20; Lard, *1 30al 40; Linseed, bpiled, *1 10;
Linseed, raw, *1 06; oprm, *2 25<®2 6Q; Tan
ners, 65@70; Spirits Turpentine, 450.
THE AUGUSTA iWARKETS
Arpusta, June 3, 1876.
Cotton.
Quiet—Ordinary, 7; Good Ordinary, 8$; Low
Middling, 10; Middling, 11; Good Middling,
11$; receipts, 20; sales, 191; stock in Augusta
by aotural coupt on 2d dune, 4,716; stock last
year, 5,925; receipts since September 1, 167,-
580; shipments since September 1, 162,864; re
ceipts at all United States ports Saturday,
1,595; corresponding week last year, 1,462; last
week, 1,517,
Grain,
Corn —80 for Tennessee White in car load
lots; broken lots 3c. higher.
Wheat—Choice White, *1 55; prime White,
*160; prime Amber, *145; prime Red,
*1 35.
Oats—6oc. in ear load lots; broken lof, 6ios
Snarers and CoQpaa.
Sugars.—We quote C, 10® 104; extra O, 11a’
Ilf; yellows, 9s@lof. Standard A, llf@lls.
Coffees.—Rios, 23<®26; Javas, 33@36.
Bacon.
Clear Bibbed Baoon Sides, 12; Dry Slt Clear
Bibbed Sides, 11; Dry Salt Long Clear Sides,
10f; Bellies, 11: Smoked Shoulders, 9; Dry Salt
Shoulders, % Sugar Cured Bams, 15; Plain
Hams, 14; Pig Hams, —; Tennessee Hams, 14.
Flour.
City Mills Super*, ft Ip, Extras, *7 00;
Family, *7 50; Fancy, *8 00.
Wester! —Sppei*, *6 50; Extras, *600; Fam
ily, 16. 6C-, Fanov, *7 00.
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC MARKETS,
COTTON
LIYEBPOpI, June 2, noon.—Cotton quiet and.
unchanged—Middling Uplands. 6d; Middling
Orleans, 6 3-16d; sales, 8,000; speculation
and etport, l.Qj#; receipts, 22.Q00; Ameri
can, 2,900; futures quiet, buyers at decline of
i-16d; Middling Uplands, L. M. C., fcr June
or jdly delivery, 6 13-18d; August or Septem
ber delivery, 6d; September or October deliv
ery. 6 3-82d; sales of the week, 48,000; spec
ulation, 4,000; exports, 5,000; stock, 1,051,000;
American, 620,000; receipts, 61,000; American,
28,000; actual export, 4,000; afloat, 345,000;
Amarieau. 116,000.
1:30 p. m.—Middling Uplands, L. M. C., %xdy
or August delivery, 5 29-32d; Middling Orleans,
L. M. C., Jane or July delivery, a 27-32d.
3, p. m. —Sales, 6,100 hales American.
3:30, p. ffl.—Yarns and' fabrics steady; fu
tures 4,oie* add very steady—Middling Upr
lands, £. M. C., June delivery, 5Jd., July og
August delivery, 5 31-32d.
Livebpool, June 2—The ciraaiar of the
Liverpool Cotton Brokers' Association for the
week ending yesterday says cotton has been
in improved demand and the market has as
sumed a firmer tone, with more regularity ip
prices. American was depressed in the earl;
part of the week, and declined. hat sub
sequently the demand increased and the de
cline was recovered. For Sea' Island the de
mand has been extremely small, but prices are
unchanged. In ‘‘futures” there |has been (a
fair amount of business—American declined L
but recovered, and is now about l-16d. above
last week’s prices.
New Yobs, June 2, noon-—Cotton steady—
sales, 175; Uplands, Orleans, 12 3-16.
Futures opened steady, as follows: June,
111, 1113-16; July, II 13-16. Ill; August, 11*.
1115-16; September, 11.13-16, Ilf
New Yoke, June 2, p. m. —Cotton ana—sales,
1,275 bales at 12512|; receipts for tire week :
—net, 1,820 bales ; gross, 11,544; exports to >
Great Biitua, 6,200; to France, 200; to the ,
Continent, 80; sales, 7,640; stock. 181,671.,
Cotton —netjfeceipts, 368; gross,
Futures closed steady—sales, 38.8 w bales, :
ss follows; June, 12; July, 13 3-32: August, i
12 3-16, 12 7-32; September-, 12f 12 5-32; Octo
ber. 11 15-Ti 11 31-82; November, 11 27-32*
Ilf December. 11 27-85, Ilf Jsnuary, U I&Od,,
U 81-32; February. 12 1-16, 12}; March, 12
3-18,12}; April, 12f. 12 7-16; May, }, 129-16.
New Yoke, June 4,—Comparative cot-
statement the week ending June %
Nat beceipts\t all United, Stateemyfe 48.532
Same time last year „„ 12,831
Total to date?.....,4,018.927
Same date last ye%p. 8,395,798
Export* icg the week. 20,566
Gttme week last year 45,133
Total to date .2,968,551
Same date last year 2,478,871
Stock at all United States ports 405,290
Last year M&Aftl
Stock at interior t0wn5...,,.””.!. "NTtra
Last year 35,691
At Liverpool 1,051,000
. American a%>at for Great Britain 116 000
tout year. TrT... 185.000
Selma, June 2.—Cottoo—weekly estimated
receipts, 600; stock, 1,886.
Columbus. Jute 2.—Cotton aalb-Mjddlipg,
PEovifitorcE, Jane 2.—Cotton—weekly net
redsfpts, 169; sales, 1,000: stock, 22,000.
Indianola. June 2. —Weekly net receipts,
39; exports coastwise, 89.
Pori Royal, June 2.—Weekly net reoiptn,
185; export* coastwise, 186.
Montgomery, June 2—Cotton quiet and
steady—Middling, 10$; weekly receipts, 107;
shipments, 696: stock, 3.297.
f-AVANNAK. Jane 2 —Cotton dull—Middling,
11: stock. 7,776; weekly net receipts, 1.826;
gross, 1,476; exports to Great Britain, 1.706;
tu the Continent, 1.090; coastwise, 1,367; sales,
470.
New Orleans. June 2, p. m Cotton qnlet
and steady—M Adbui'. 11$; Low Mid-Ling.
!0f; Good urdinary, 1| stock, 120 579, weekly
nw. receipts. 4.ini, gross. 6 382: exports to
Great Bm Ain. 1.994; t<> France. 2.0)7, to the
Continent, 8.671; leastwise. 3 478, sales 15 609.
Memphis. 7aii 2, p. ui —-u.>itn„ q Ist
sock. 31,190; weekJv n.-t receipts. 996, ship
ments. 2.881; sales. 3.600,
ItALTIM.iiiF. Jure 2. p, ra.—v tot ton dull—
Middling. 11$; stock. 4.355; weekly u.u receipts.
143; gross, 391; exports 10 ..Great Britain, —;
Coastwise. 196; sales, 1.085 spinuers, 531.
Wilmington. June 2, p. m. —Cotton un
changed—Middling. 11; stock, 1,000; weekly
net receipts. 134; exports to Great Britain, 128;
coastwise. 265: sales, 1.
Galteston. June 2, p. m.—Cotton weak and
irregular—Middling, lljj stock, 16,498; weekly
net receipts, 1.002: gross, 1,011; exports coast
wise, 8,004; sales, 2,276.
Maoon, June 2.—Cotton dull and nominal—
Middling, 10$; weekly net reoeipts, 88; ship
ments, 83; sales, 81; stock, 2,239.
Nashville. June 2.—Cotton dull—Middling,
104; weekly receipts, 94; shipments, 73; Bales,
219 spinners, 12; stock. 2,8.8.
Mobile, June 2—Cotton quiet—Middling,
11; actual stock, 19,276; weekly net receipts,
943; gross, 950; exports to the Continent,
1,110; coastwise, 1,178; sales. 4,100.
Charleston, June 2. Cotton quiet—Mid
dling. 11$; stock, 7,111; weekly net reoeipts,
918; exports to France, 2,426; to the Continent,
165; coastwise, 1,108; sales, 1.200.
’Philadelphia. June 2.—Cotton dull—Mid
dling, 12; weekly net receipts, 641; gross,
1,182; exports to Great Britain, 856.
Norfolk, June 2.—Cotton quiet—Middling,
11; stock, 6,687; weekly net reoeipts, 1,382; ex
ports coastwiee, 2,248; sales, 453.
Boston. June 2.—Cotton quiet—Middling,
12$; stock, 19,981; weekly net receipts, 334;
gross, 2,917; sales, 160.
Liverpool. June 3, noon.—Gorton steady—
Middling Uplands, 6d. ; Middling Orleans,
6 3-16d. ; sales, 7,000; speculation and export,
1,000; receipts, 9,900, American, 350; Futures
firm and 1-82 higher; Middling Uplands, L.
M. C-, June delivery, 5 29-82d.a5 15-16d.
2, p. m.—Middling Uplands, regular con
tract, June or July, 5 11-16d.; sales of Ameri
can, 5,600.
2:30, p. m.—Cotton—Middling Uplands, L.
M. C., July or August delivery, 6d.; Septem
ber of October, 6 5-82d.
8, p. m.—Future buyers offering 1-18 to
1-15 higher on the day—Middling Uplands, L.
M. 0., September or October delivery, 6 8-16d.
New Yobk, June 8. noon.—Ootton strong—
sales, 8,108; Uplands, 121-16; Orleans, 124.
Futures opened steady—June. 12 1-16; July
s fo 2 s i uguat ’ m - 33 > 12$; September,’
14 o-oi, 12 7-32.
New York, June 8, p. m.—Cotton—net re
ceipts, 8; gross, 483.
Futures closed steady—sales of 22 000
bales, as follows: June, 11 31-82. 12: July
12 1-32. 12 1-16; August, 12 5-82, 12 3-16; Sep
tember, 11 29-32, 1115-16; November, 11 27-82
11$; Deoember, 1127-32, 11$; January, 11 31-32’
12; February, 12 3-82, 12$; March, 12 7-32,124;
April, 124, 12 13-32.
New York, June 3.—Cotton strong; sales,
3,108 at 12 1-I6al21; consolidated net receipts,
1,595; exports to Great Britain, 7,595.
Savannah, June 3, p. m.—Cotton dull—
Middling, 11; net receipts, 190; sales, 200;
Bales, 132.
Memphis, June 3.—Cotton steady—Middling,
11; net reoeipts, 183; shipments, 167; sales,
350.
Galveston, June 3, p. m.—Cotton quiet—
Middling, Ilf; net reoeipts, 130; gross, 136;
exports coastwise, 1,068; saleß, 99.
Baltimore, June 3, p. m,—.Cotton quiet—
Middling, ll$allf; gross reoeipts, 8; exports
coastwise, 25; sales, 225 ; spinners, 60,
NkwOrleanb, June 8, p. m.—Cotton quiet
—Middling, 11 j; Low Middling, 10f ; Good Or
dinary, 9f; net reoeipts, 140; gross, 815; ex
ports to Great Britain, 7,491; sales. 1,000.
Charleston, June 8, p. m.—Cotton quiet—
Middling, 11$; net reoeipts, 75; exports coast
wise, 118; sales, 50.
Boston, June 8, p. m.—Cotton quiet—Mid
dling, 12$; net receipts, 145; gross, 890; exports
to Great Britain, 100. p
Wilmington, June 3, p. m.—Cotton un
changed—Middling, 11.
Norfolk, June B.—Cotton Steady-Middling.
114; net receipts, 243; exports coastwise, 497;
sales, 140; Btook, 5 788.
Philadelphia, June B.—Ootton dull—Mid
dling, 12; net reoeipts, 97; gross, 97.
Mobile, June 3.—Cotton quiet—Middling,
11; net receipts, lift giqe; 13;
PRODUCE .11A BRETS.
New York, June 3, noon.—Flour steady.—
Wheat a shade firmer. Corn—sound firm; un
sound dull and declining. Pork heavy at
*lB 80. Lard. *ll 15&11 20. Spirits Turpen
tine dull at 30$. Boain heavy at *1 70al 75 for
strained. Freights firm. ■ - 13,1
New York. June 3, p. m.-—jiiuin- m buyers'
favor; limited export ttiiii hoine trade demand;
sales, 5,015; pauuiion to fair extra Southern,
*6 20, Wheat about lc better; good export
inquiry; ealee, *1 20; Nos. 2 and 3 winter red
Western. *1 45; *1 54 for white Western, latter
crop 1874. Corn—sound, steady, dull and de
clining, at 59a59$ for graded mixed, 59 lur un
graded yellow, Western and Southern nominal
60a63 for yellow; 63a6gfwth[tlo.: %s eieady.
Pork dull an J now moss, *lB 90. Lard
firmer;
molasses quiet. Turpentine h?avy at 30. Bps|n
unchanged. Freights firmef; 5 16;
steam, o-lp.
Baltimore, Jqaa 8, neon.—Flour quiet
and unchanged. Wheat dull—Pennsylvania
red. *1 95; Maryland red, *1 lOal 35; other
grades unchanged. Southern Corn dull; West
ern steady and film; Southern white. s(jairi
yellow, 565. '
Baltimore, June 3, p, m.—o*ts dull and
lower—Southern,, ye nominal and
firm. V'-ofOmi; quiet, easier, bul not ouot
atty Coffee Thnphanged. Whisky dull at
*llls. Sngsjr steady Rt 9faiq,
Cincinnati. Jupe —Flour dull and un
changed- WUeat quiet a *1 05al 26. Corn,
43a45. Oats weak at 82a38. Rye quiet and
unchanged. Pork firmer at *lB 15, held
higher at close. Lard firmer—steam, lOfalOi;
kettle, 12J. Balk Meats firmer—shoulders, fii:
clear rib sides, 9; clear sides, 91. Bacpu
steady—shoulders, 7faß; clear rib and. Sear
sides, lOJalOf, and, IMalor HoW
demand scarce—prices nominally, un
changed; leceiptA 274; 'shipments, 28i0ft.—
Whisky steady out drip. W-nerbutnot
lower
•i tel o 3 —Flour dull fam
ify. Wheat quiut—red,*l 01; am
ber, y 1 IQ. Corn active—white and mixed, 60.
Oats dull-mixed, 85; white, 38. Provisions
steadier. Pork, *2O. Bulk Meats-Bhoulders,
6f; dear rib sides, 9s; clear sides, 9s. Baoon
—shoulders, 7s; clear lib sides, 104; clear
sides, 10$. Lard-tierce, 18f; keg, Is. Whisky
firm but unchanged. Bagging, 12a13. -
Chi ago, June 3.—Fluni quiet and unchang
ed. Wheat actiTO but; firm—No. 2 Bpriw t.
*1 QJIal 03$; No. o ditto, 91$. Ooiii aaateP—
No- 3. 43$- 'Oats firmer kt stoiSy at
68$. Barley active at 68. Pork
unsettled ar£ B*neralfy lower at *l7 80al8.
Lard OWtieip at loj. Bulk Meats firmer—shoul
to! olear rib and clear sides, 9s3s. —
Whisky, *1 09.
New Orleans, June 3, p. m- —Market un
changed.
Bio Janeiro, June 3$ P- m.—Coffee very
quiet, nearly nominal.
Santos, June 3, p. Coffee very quiet,
nearly nominal.
St. Louis, June 3,—Flour dull and very little
doing. Wheat dull and lower—No. 2 red Fall,
*1 39 bid; No. 3 red Fall, *ll7. Corn dull and
lower—No, 2 mixed, 42a424. Oats dull and
drooping—No, 2, 325a89. Bye dull nd lower
to sell, 63 bid. Barley—nothing doing. Whis
ky higher at *llO. Pork steady at #l9 50.
Dr, Salted Meats some inquiry—shoulders,
6s; clear rib sides, 9; clear Bides, %, but held
higher. Baeon quiet—shoulder*, 75a74; clear
rib sides, Xosalof; clsor sides, lOtalOf. Lard
dull-and lowey-.current make, IOj; refined,
Ilf. Hogs none on the market; wanted,
would bring full prices. Cattle—none here;
wanted at full prices.
ATLANTA IRkC*fi CURRENT.
WHOLESALE PRICES,
Atlanta, Ga., May 20,1876.
Atlanta HAenex Market.
Gold—Buying at 110, selling at 112. Silver-
Par- Exchange—Buying at par, selling at }
premium.
Bonds—Georgia 6’s, 96&98; Georgia 7’s, 103
al06; Georgia 7’s, gold, 105al07; Georgia B’s,
102al09; Atlanta Water, 82**6; Atlanta City
7s. 80a83; Atlanta City B’s, 80a9U; Atlanta 10’s,
105al07; A. and W. P. B, f., 97*106; Savannah
City, 83a85.
Stocks—A- and W. p. B. a., 76a81.
Atlanta Produce .viarket.
Beef Cattle—2as; Eggs, ll|al2. Butter—
Country, 26*30. Poultry—Grown Chickens,
22*26; Spring Ohiekens, 14a16; Geese, 30a40;
Ducks, 20; Turkeys, 75a11. Dressed Poultry
and Game— I Turkeys. 16al8; Chickens, 121al5;
Geese, 10; Dncks, 10}: Squirrels, 10; Babbits,
8; Possum, 11. Feathers, 50a60: Beeswax,
25a27; Bags, 2}a3. Vegetables—Cabbages, 08a
10 P 100: Beets, *2 50 P 100; New Irish Po
tatoes, 82 50 P bushel.
Atlanta Grocery llorket.
Com, 75; Meal, —*7s; Grits, 85 50; Wheat,
tl 25al 60; Whoat Bran, 90; Barley, none; Bye,
#l*l 10; Qats, 55a60.
Bay—Timothy, #1 lOal 25; Clover, tl; Ten
nessee. tl; Peas, tl lOal 35; Onion*, #3 60 P
bbi.
Molasses—Barrels, 2St Tierces, 27; Hhds. 25,
Mackerel—Na. 1 half bbjs., t 7 50; kite, tl 75
a2; No. 2 baß bbls., t 6 50; kits, tl 25*1 40; No.
3 few*, #9 50; half, #6; kits, tl 15,
Oo#ee—Bio, 21a23; Java, 374.
Sugar—A, lOf White, Faria O, 10}; Yellow,
104; Yellows, SjalGA; New Orleans, 84*104.
Flour—Fancy, #825*8 50; Ex Family, #7 25
fin 75 ’ *‘ xtra ’ * 6 ’ au P er '
Eason—Clear Sides, 13}*14s Clear Sib. Sides,
none; Shoulders, 11.
Bulk Meats—Clear 864 m, 134; Clear Bib
Sides, 13; Long Cl#*t Sides, 12f Shoulders,
Hams—Sugar Cured, 151&16; Bulk, 12}.
Laxo—Tierces, 15*151; Kegs and Cans, 16a
Vfji Buckets, 16,
MUceMeaMna.
Lime—3s*4o; hydraulic, tl 50.
Nails—Lid, lOd, #3 35.
Leatbea—Hemlock sole, good damaged,
264*88; good, 29a30; white oak, 40a50; black
upper, 40a60.
Salt—Liverpool; tl 68.
Powder—Rifle. t* 50; Blasting, #4 50.
Shot—Bunk, #3 00; drop, #2 25.
Begging—Domestic, 14; Borne*, 14; Gunny,
BOOtt.
I WO Ties, 6f po ties, 4}.
Jftry feaait.
Tickle*, 7*20; Stripes, 8}al0; Osnaborgs,
9s*ll}; Cambrics, 6; Prints, 5a7; Brown Sheet
ings, 7f Shirtings, 61; Bleached Sheetings
and Shirtings, sal2}- Domestics—4-4, 8*8}; f
7a7f f, Yams, Ilk
Fun tts writ Ceafeetloneries.
Apples, Northern, #5 50*6; Pears, #s*6;
Oranges, Messini, #5 60*6; Lemons, Palermo,
#5 50*8; Raising—layers, whole, per pox, #3*
3 50; layer, half box, #1 75*2; Currants, in bar
rels, 10; Citron, Leghorn, per lb.; 35; figs, se
lected Eleme, drums, per lb., IT}; Dates, in
frails, 8}; Prunes, In bbls,, per ibo U*ls, Nnls
and Almonds—Lanqpedoc, 25; Taragona, 25;
Peoan Nuts, SP; Brazil Nuts,’ 124*15; English
Walnuts. ISa2O; Filberts, 134*15. Pea Nuts—
Aennessee choice, per bushel, tl 96*2; Wil
mington, fancy, per lb,; 9*lo, Teas, i* t lb.
caddies—Oolong, #l*l 25; Imperial, #l*l 25.
ftoOrndkem-aq,!; qx.tr*, $ PW**ges, P r
; box, $3 50,
Comippn, sound, ld-inab new per
Sn, riUAh. -ound, 11-inch old per ip!,
oh ohk 55*60; Good 11-
bright
12-lneh, tl; Log flabin,
VA-mcii, l iu.
Dietv AtivorilMeriientlN
New Goods!
Fresh Arrivals l
COLGATE’S INDF-PENDKNGg SOAP,
Loigate’a CIiNPUBY SO A P
Colgate’s GASHMKRi-’, li.:QULI’ SOAP,
Colgate’s ECU.IPSE SOa .
Golgat. s PROBGNO I’UI’LICO SOAP.
Oolgalc s H’M.I.vN SlAl
Oolgaio’s GLY L CINE ami HONEY SOAP.
AT BARIiE’T A ’
’.flu Bieail -Ireet.
jI\.LL the Popular P vTENT MEDICINES
kept in stock, and sold low by
BARRETT 4 LAND,
Prepare for the Summer*
T
J.N this climate every one should have his
system thoroughly cleaned at the beginning
of Bummer, that he may be euabled to go
through the heated term in good health. All
that is necessary to do this is to take two or
three good doses of
DR. GIEDER’S CELEBBATED LIVER PILLS
in the month of May. For sale by
BARRETT A LAND,
SPECIE OF 1876.
J3aRRETT A LAND. 270 Broad stAot, will
sell their goods at the very lowest figure, and
give you your change in BPECIE if you de
Bire - may7-tf
FLATS, SUNDOWNS, fOODLAWN~
AND DRESS HATS, for Ladies and Misses,
on consignment and for sale THIS
WEEK, at very LOW PRICES, at
V. J. T. BALK’S,
No. 136 BROAD STREET, Near Centre Street,
Ribbons, Flowers, eto., lower than ever. The
above Goods are direct from the manufacturer,
and are to be olosed ont within 15 days. They
are all new and fresh looking Goods, and will
undoubtedly go very fast. Come early and take
first choice. Will also open another case of
those splendid Black Iron Grenadines at 250.,
and a ease of those popular Silk Pongees at
50c., which, together with the usual great at
tractions, such as the largest assortment of
6so. Calicoes, Fine Bleached Homespun at 64c
Corded Organdies at 12$e., yard wide White
Victoria Lawn at 15c., all wool Spring Cassi
meros at 40, 50, and 60c., Parasols from 26c.
up, Eoru Lace at 25c., Lonsdale Cambric
at 15c., etc., etc., will make it interesting for
all in want of anything in the wav of DRY
GOODS, to pay an early visit at
NO. 136 BROAD STREET.
Samples given. Orders for Samples by mail
must he accompanied by a postage stamp.
C. 4. T. BALK.
may2l-tf
$5 Wan *f d foi* new business in
i „ „ in which any active Man or Woman can
| (A easily make *!S to $lO > day. One who had
V . , n v Ver canvasssed before made $7 50 in
I hour; an experienced agent made $72 75
iu hours. Particulars free O A
DAI ow E< i Q ’ Dusne st "> N - y!
cirrnr. VJ® k n°w C. A Cl< gg obe responsible
SURE al i and rell ? ble > and tliiuk he offers Agents. x
, „ traoidmary inducements.”—N. Y. Week
ly Sun, April 19, 1876.
“-pSYUHOMANCY, or SOUL t tl VKMIM;
. -L Mow either sex may frui£lua*e and cain tiip
stantiv SSh they ohoost iu-
Wuple mental acquirement all enn
P°9 flee ßi fWi W mall, for 26c., together with a Mar
mP-EHSt’ Ib'acle, liwams, Hints to La
dies wedging Sight Shirt, Ae. A queer book. Ad,
dras ® , T. WILLIAM St QO., “
Publishers, Philadelphia.
Ell*, wilMo all they claim. l -AT.F. irMl! g g Mnt j an> ] 5,1 SK
3 J
6no°fthe il |1 D| I
aver offered. M
A Cup of Good Tea.
A ”°s°d English Traveler says much &ner Tea is
?? tsis . tha “ hi England; bie difference is
SutiWihJ y oWln . gto i. h ® Q Y*Rnd transportation,
THE RUSSIAN TEA CO.
<luantilyoftLi9 TEA ’
*1 sr**5 r *** a ‘s’ ,Ib - ministers, *2 50; %lb.,
| *4 % To introduce this TEA a liberal sam’ le aont
Wf?, ECSSI N TEA CO.,
mayl4-tw 190 Pearl Brreet, New York.
lIiRNTS For beat nbunce In the wnshi to coin
POCKET CO , B,N Ad r 6 S -ap S rtfr Y
FDUER, WARiiEN & CO.,
manufaoturgrs of
Sraivub largest assort
kuktJaue iu the market
OUB NEW WOOD AND COAL COOKING STOVES.
HOLM CROWN.
REPORTER.
SPIRIT OF ’76.
OUTHERN GEM.
AND THE FAMOUS
TEWART* IMPROVED’
MEET THE WANTS OF EVERY DEALER
Correspondence invited, .price List and Cut upon
application to FULLER, WARREN St 00.
mhll-4w 238 Water Street, New York.
For
COMBS, COLBS, HOARSENESS,
AND ALL THROAT DISEASES,
WELLS* CARBOLIC TABLETS,
PUT UF ONLY IN BLUE BOXES,
A TRIED AND SURE REMEDY.
For sale by Druggists generally, and
JOHNSON HOLLOWAY St QO., Philadelphia Pa
oct22-4w
established in 1847.
MELVIN HARD & SON,
WHOLESALE PAPEfi WAREHOUSE,
26 BffiEKMAN STREET,
NEAR NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
AGENTS for Owens, Jessup A Lafiiu, L.
L. Brown A Cos., Byron Weston’s, Ben
nington, American, Mt. Hope, Mammouth
Bivgr and Salmon River Mills, and Crane’s
Bond Papers. Sole Agents for Carson’s old
Berkshire Mills, established iu 1801.
je22-d+<fewlT
W. D. TCTT,
attorney at Law,
THOMSON, A.
WILL practice in the counties of Hancook,
Glascock, Warren, Taliaferro, Wilkes
and Lincoln of the Northern Circuit, and
McDuffie, Columbia and Richmond of the Au
gusta Circuit. Special attention given to the
ocdleotion of claims. oc3l-d<twtf
W. Ms & M. P. REESE,
.A.tto rm ys at Law,
WASHINGTON. GA.
PRACTICE m the counties of Wilkes, Lin
coln, Elbert, Taliaferro, Oglethorpe,
Warren, of the Northern Circuit, and Columbia
ami McDuffie, of the Augusta Circuit, and in the
Supreme Court of Georgia. The collection of
Claims will reoeive special attention. nov6-tf
WILBUR F. KELSEY,
A.ttorney at Law,
HARLEM, COLUMBIA <!o., GA.
WILL practice in Columbia, Richmond,
McDnffie and adjoining counties.
SPECIAL attention given to the collection of
olaims. my2s—thsa&tufim
REDUCED TO A CERTAINTY.
Chance to Cain
$50,000
UNTO RISK.
Send lor circular at once. No time to lose.
Real. * Cos., Bankers, 74 Maiden Lane
NEW YORK.
CASH AND CLOTH FOR WOOL.
THE Athens Manufacturing Company will
pay in CASH or CLOTH the highest mar
ket price for WOOL.
Enquire of POBTEB FLEMING, at Augus
ta, or Agent at Athens for particulars.
b. l. Bloomfield,
my2B-w6m Agent.
ap6-wly ' ~ *
vV* Pest Poison is not only
* Bafe, Sure and Cheap Destroy-
VTv'/ffiß" er 'be Colorado Beetle or Pota
mum V •so 800. bat of au. jssects which
prey on Vegetation, Cm and Ammx
Wowl Gants rii, An- Unlike Paris Green
and other Poisons, it can be entirely dissolved
in water and applied by epriaaliaag. Not Is
rtfKSflus w> Fnatess Not Dasoraous to Us*.
Never Bads to KUA— Costs about 25 Ousts ah
; Aqjut —Put tap is half lb. boxed, enough for
kwn aoree.—Price 60 Conte.—tend for Circular.
Made only by tbe
Kearney Chemical Works, 66. Court
land St, New York, P, O, Bos $lB9.
my2B-wi ' h
HSgaf Notices
COLUMBIA COUNTY.
Columbia SfterllPs Sale.
bo t° re the Gomt H ° m ° “>
Y ” Appmg. Columbia county. Ga, on the
grs Tuesday in JULY next, between ho legal
hours of sale one Tract of Land, containing
one huudrod acres, more or less, adjoining
lauds of George T. Y' u’tn ,■ Mrs. Mevriwcther
Mrs. Bohler and others, known as the Bai ov &
U^T U . ri C haid land levied on as the prop
erty of Marion McDaniel, to satisfy a fi fa is
sued from the County Court of ' Columbia
county, favor 0 f K.J. Blount, transferee, vs
Marion HaDaiiieltnd J. A! Waltrep Leu tt { *
tico given to tenant m posuoasioo. S •
JAMES KELLY, Deputy Sheriff,
t , , Columbia codiitv. Ga.
. Juue me. je'4-wtd
Columbia MberifPs Nale.
W lT Tnrv° 8 the first Tuesday of
next, within the legal hours of
sale, before the Court House door in Appling
Columbia county, Georgia, a two-thir .‘nnfi
tnded interest tu a tract of land lying near the
Georgia Rail road, in said county of Columbia
known as he Wilds’ Place, adjoining hSdsof
John Burnsides, Nat Bennett, W. T. Martm and
®‘ l {® r “’ abd containing one hundred acres m .re
or less. Levied on a< the property of Augustus
Cooper, by virtue of and to satisfy an execu
tion issued frou: the County Court of Rioh
mond county, Goort favor of Charles B.
Baßton vs. Augustus L. Cooper, maker, and
Lollm Battle, endorse . Property pointed out
by plaintiff, and due and legal notice served on
teu&Uv in possession, this June 2J. 1876
je4-w4 JAMES KKLLi ! Deputy Sheriff.
COLUMBIA SHERIFF’S SaLE.
puiilicoulory, before the
Coort House door, iu tho town of *u-
P lm g Columbia county, on the First Tna,w
J"™, 1876, within the legal homs of
the followmg property, to-wit: *
All that traot or parcel of laud known
Cedar Tree Place, lying and being in the coun
ty of Columbia State of Georgia, containing
° n ®* h °“? ud tbree “ed and tweutyS
(1,329) acres, more °r loss, adjoining lauds o'
R. J. Blount, Wm. Chett, Dr. MoiaSe. aud
Lcy, l6l ! ou as the property of Gec.rge
A. Hill, to satisfy a fi. fa. issued from "the Sn
dd urt Baid uoun ‘y- in favor it jMkl
son Maddox. Property pointed out by nlaiu
tiff. Levy made May 6th, 1876 ° y plam
JAB. M. TANKERSLEY
my9-wtd Sheriff Columbia County..
TY.-^ T ere™,KixaSrYoi,v
JKafflasaaaSsttrtairs
be and appear at my office, on or before ' .f’ ,
Monday in MAY, 1876, to show oaui
can, why aaid Letters should pot be gran” rj * tb y
Signature, at
GraTON I FOKL o iri’TCtt , o A /,u. OOTINTY ~APPLir'v
-Wbereai Tbomas °F ADMINISTRATION.
Lotterw nf a#?, ll aj. ® oz^(?r applies to me for
estlte of A. Do,ie B r, r d^ea^_ bolliS “° n ° n th *
ssmss jSLrsss “ nc ®™ a
prescribed by law, sild ‘leUeire^o^nofbe
May V lrt”iii7fi r m Y baud a” 11 °niclal signature this
mvl -ei ’ D - c - MOORE,
-ntyC-gw Ordinary.
TALIAFERRO COUNTY.
Taliaferro Sheriff’s Sale.
WILL be sold, before the Court House
door, iu the town of Crawfordyille, Talia
ferro oounty, Georgia, on the first Tuesday in
JUNE next, between the legal hours of sale-
One-half interest in’a tract of land in said coun
ty, adjoining the lauds of Titus Richards and
Ihomas Rhodes, containing tliirty-five (35)
aores, more or leas. Levied on as thepropi-rtv
of Aim C. Brisooe, by John O. Hackney, Con
stable for the 601st District G. M. Taliaferro
oounty, and returned to me by said constable,
to satisfy one fi. fa., issued from the County
Court of Wilkes county, April Term, 1876, iu
favor of Titus Riohard vs. Ann O, Briscoe.
This May 4th, 1876. M. D. L. GQOGEB
may6-wtd Sheriff T. C.
Taliaferro sheriff’s Sale.
WILL be sold before the Court House
door, in the town of Crawfordville,
Taliaferro county, on the FI l ST TUESDAY in
JULY next, between the lawful hours of sale,
a tract of land in said county, containing one
hundred and forty (140) acre- more or less,
adjoining lands of A. H. Stephens, Mrs.
Sarah Ray, Mrs. Mary Edwards aud Wylie
Jackson. Levied on as the propertv of Os
borne R. Peck, by virtuo of a fi. fa. in favor of
John P. Moore, Administrator of Mrs! E.
Moore vs. Wm. Jones, principal, and W. J.
Bees and O. It. Peck as securities, which fi. fa
is now controlled by W. J. Reea to compel biß
co-security, O. R. Teck, to contribute his share
of the amount paid on said fl. fa. by said Rees.
Written notion Berved on W. T. Ray, the ten
ant in qiossessicui. Property pointed out by-
Rees. Albo, at the same time and place, will ba
sold, two tracts of land in said county, contain
ing in tho aggregate two-hundred sores, more
or less, one adjoining the lands of E. A. Mea
dows, Mrs. Fluker and J. A. Garter, the other
tract adjoining lands of G. B. Meadows, E. A.
Meadows and J. A. Carter. Leyied on by Con
stable J. O. Huckoy, on Justice’s Court fi. fa.,
in favor of Griffin Marthis vs. Silas M. Meadows
and D. H. Meadows, as the property of S. M,
Meadows, and returned to me. Notice served
on tenant in possession.
M. D. L. GOOGEIt,
je4-wtd Sheriff T. C.
TALIAFERRO COUNTY.
Court of Ordinary, >
At Chambers, May 25ih, 1876. >
S. J. Farmer, of Paid county,applies to me for Ex
emption of Personalty and setting apart aud valua
tion of Homestead, and I will pass upon the same
at my office, in Crawfordville, on Friday, 16th day
of JUNE, at o’clock, a. m.
CHARLES A. BEAZLEY,
my3o—w3 Ordinary, T. C.
EORGIA, TALIAFERRO COUNTY—COURT
VJT OF ORDINARY, APRIL TERM, 1876.-Where
as, Amos Ellington, Administrator of Esau Elling
ton, late of said county, deceased, has applied to
me for Letters of Dismission from said estate :
These are, therefore, to cite all persons concern
ed, to show cause, if any they can, within the time
prescribed by law, why said letters Should not be
granted.
Given under my hand and official signature this
April 3d, 1876. CHARLES A. BEAZLEY,
apfl-wtd Ordinary T. C.
SCRIVEtf COUNTY.
Ordinary’s Sale.
WILL be sold, before the- Court . House
door in the town of SylvaDia, Scriven
county, Ga., on the First TUESDAY in JUNE
next, between the legal hours of sale, a certain
tract of land lying in said county, and said to
be vacant, containing thirty-five acres, more
or leas, and adjoining lands of Hardy Hodges,
estate M. LuffbOrro, John Stevenson and oth
ers. Said land sold by petition of J. W. Ha
gan and in accordance with section 2381 of the
Code of Georgia.
CURTIS HUMPHREYS, Sr.,
May 3d, 1876. Ordinary.
my6-td
Petition for Exemption of Personalty and
Realty.
QJEORGIA, SCRIVEN COUNTY.'
Henry Brlgden has applied for Exemption of Per
sonalty, and setting apart and valuation of Home
stead, aud I will pass upon the same at 10 o’clock,
a. m., on the 12th day of JUNE, 1876, at toy
office. CURTIS HUMPHREYS, 8r„
my27-w3 Ordinary 8. C.
Petition for Exemption of Personally.
SCRIVEN OOUNTY.
John W. Barnes has applied to me far F.xetnpfftm
of Personalty, and setting apart and valuation of
homestead, aud I will pass upon the same, at It
o’clock, a, at,, on the 12th day of JUNE, 1876, at my
office. CURTIS HUMPHREYS, Sr.,
my2o-w3 t Ordinary.
SCRIVEN COUNTY—
Elbert W. Roundtree, Of said county, applies to
me for Exemption of Personalty, and I will pass
upon the same at my office, iu Sylvauia, at 12
o’clock, m., on the 12th dayof JUNB, 1876.
CURTIS HUMPHREYS, Sr.,
my2o-w8 Ordinary S, O.
LINCOLN COUNTY,
Administrator’s Sale.
BY virtue of an order from the Court of Or
dinary of Lincoln county, Georgia, will
be sold before the Coart House door, in Lin
colnton, in said county, on tbe first Tuesday in
JULY next, between the lawful hours of sale,
the reversion in three hundred and thirty
three and one-third acres of land, more or less,
in said county, on the waters of Savannah
river, adjoining lands of Mrs. Elizabeth Nor
man, G. H. David, James B. Remson and
others, it being the same place on which a
homestead has recently been set apart to the
widow and minor children of John 8. Norman,
late of said county, deceased, by the Ordinary
of Columbia county, Georgia, the purchaser to
take the reversion to the estate of sid John
8. Norman on the majority or marriage of said
minors. Sold for the benefit of the heirs and
creditors of said John 8. Norman’s estate.—
Terms cash. N. W. STEVENSON,
my2t-wtd Adm’r of John S. Norman.
STATE OP GEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY.—
Whereas, Moseley Hawes and James H. McMllf
lan, Executors of the estate of Peyton w. Norman,
re [resents :o the Court lu their petition, duly hied
and entered on record, that they have iully admin
istered Peyton W. Norman’s estate : Tills is, there
fore, to cite all perrons concerned, kindred and
creditors, to show cause, if any they can, why said
Executors should not bo discharged from their ex
ecutorship, and receive letters of dismission on the
First MONDAY in September, 1876.
Given und-r my baud and official signature this
May 3d, 1876. B. F. TATOM,
my6-td Ordinary L. O.
APPLICATION will be made to the Court of Or
dinary of Lincoln county, Georgia, at th
first regular term after the expiration of four weeks
from this notice for leave to sell the real estate be
longing to the estate of Frederick H. Edmunds,
late of said county, decessed, for the benefit of belra
and creditors of said deceased.
8. G. N. FERGUSON,
Administrator on the eatate of F. H. Edmunds.
May 24 1876, may27-w4
STATE OF GEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY.—
James 11. McMullau, guardian for John H.
Norman, having applied to the Court of Ordinary
of eaid connty for a discharge from his guardian
ship or John H. Norman, this is, therefore, to eite
alt persons concerned to show cause, by filing objec
tions in my office, why said James H. McMullan
should not be dismissed from bia guardianship of
John H. Norman, and receive tbe usual letters of
dismission.
Given under my official signature Mav 3d, 1876.
B. F. TATOM,
my6-td Ordinary L. C..
Petition for Exemption of Personalty.
QEORGIA, LINCOLN COUNTY.
Edward C. Martin has applied to me for Exemp
tion of Personalty and netting apart and valnatiou
of homestead, and 1 will pass upon the same at
at 11 o’clock, a. m., on the 4th day of MAY, 1876, at
my office. April 10, 1876.
B. F. TATOM,
NO MORE COMPLAINING ABOUT
SCARCITY OF LABOR.
THE BELL dOBN AND COTTON CULTI
VATOR dees the work of two mules and
two hands. Siding Corn or Cotton and split
ting middles all done to perfection with one
ronwl. No other such plow in use, and is
Regarded by all who have Seen it, not only a
labor saving; bat practical success. Farm
rightsfovsale, by EDWABD A. CARTER,
Lester’s District, Burke County, Ga,
my!9-w8