Newspaper Page Text
Cflromck anb jfceitbnrJ.
WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 27, 1876
THEJTATE.
THK PEOPLE AM) THIS PAPERS.
Albany baa had a jail delivery.
Wren, the photo, la id Elberton.
Conyers is surfeited with parties.
Tournament in Newton last week.
Toccoa is to hare a Masonic Lodge.
Jas. C. Nelms, of Elbert county, is
dead.
Harris county has fifteen candidates
to the square.
The cotton crop of Elbert county will
be a third short.
Wedding cake* is plentifully damped
around in Elberton.
The Elberton Gazette supports Nor
wood for the Senate.
Lawrencerille boys have been pouring
hot shot into tame pigeons.
Motto for Christmas revellers : “Jug
not that ye be not jugged.”
Mr. Thomas K. Sproull, of Carters
ville, is quite ill with pneumonia.
The tournament of the Burke County
Hussars was a very pleasant affair.
Capt. Coke l'almadge, of Athens,
while speculating in sausages, lost $42.
The lieueva Lamp continues to be
a unique, spicy, eight-paged pamphlet.
The average Methodist minister will
remain pretty well muddled for a time
yet.
C. W. Turner, Esq., of Newton coun
ty, killed two wild turkeys at one shot
last week.
A Lumpkin county cow pulls in the
lead of an lx team and gives milk to the
teamsters.
During the diptberia season, Carters
vilie girls stop kissing. This is as it
should be.
The old year is dying out, aud the
cigarette devotee thinks about turning
over anew leaf.
The Warren County Temperance Coun
cil give an entertainment at Pine drove
Christmas night.
la one Burke county district, this
year, five pairs of twins and one case of
triplets are reported.
Hez Best, Esq., of Bartow county, an
nounces for tax collector, and he’s try
ing Hez Best to get it too.
Mr. Juo. A. Shivers will not take
charge of the Valdosta High School.
He will remain in Warrenton.
Leesburg—colored child locked up
in cabin—parents go to barbecue—color
ed child barbecued on hearth.
The Toccoa Herald expects John H.
James to be a power in the “economi
cal department” of our next Legislature.
Jim Murphy, colored, living on Mr.
Craven Carpenter’s place, in Burke
county, lost his corn crib by fire Tues
day.
Two Gwinnett county youths had a
holiday tussle the other day, in which
young Yarborough was cut in several
places.
The Elbert hero who has not contri
buted to a match bird buntis not spoken
to by the girls and can’t even run for
tax collector.
Dr. T. G. Jacobs, of Gwinnett county,
depressed in spirit occasioned by loss of
money, committed suicide in Atlanta
last Tuesday.
Kev. Mr. Jarrell left Cartersville Fri
day for Augusta, with his family, to as
sume his new charge at St. James and
Jones’ Churches.
E. W. Hawes and Joseph J. Hensley,
of McDuffie county hsvo gone to seek
their fortunes in Texas. They will re
turn before many days, we trow.
We rejoice to learn that the Madison
or Greeuesboro Home Journal is pros
pering, and in beginning its fifth vol
ume, rejoices even as a strong man. •
If the worst comes, if war must pre
vail Msj. Hiawatha Ham ain’t the man
to surrender his little bow aud arrow
without a scrimmage. Not a bit of it.
The pleasure given the Warrenton
Clipper by the fact that the Kev. B. W.
Bigham has been returned as presiding
elder of the Augusta District will be
maried by the fact that he may be
forced to remove from Warrenton.
Captuiu Willingham, of Cartersville,
is determinedly vindicating his Jeffer
eonian I emocraoy. To that end, it is
but fair that hn should be empowered to
send for witnesses, administer oaths and
employ a stenographer.
can foresee the future of
our couuTrvNij* l , l * be " ell fo F farmerß
to prepare sowing small
grain. Should matt^ beco * e . *.' lch
more alarming, we wouh) unbeSltat, ‘ D 6‘
ly advise a still sprinklify? of mu9tard
The Cartersville Expres! 8001,868 Mr.
Eugpue Speer of “political I 'J* 3
This we do not believe. I ,d wu , th *? k
that Mr. Speer based his cl^JS 18 ~t ,
House Clerkship upon
fersonian Democracy,” we woulo. Wlt “"
draw onr imppurt; tW. t
The Cartersville Express puts
this light: “Often journalists ovsrroadV
all personal o: selfish consideration in
the labor of love for their pavty and
friends. Is it not right that theif claims
■should be recognized sometimes/?” Not
& bud idea, friend; glad that you meq
itioued it.
It must be stronger inspiration than
that druwu from the “ sunset of life”
which vests the editor of the McDuffie
Journal with such mystical lore.” Mark
his last prediction : “ If Hayes is inau
gurated President, Ben Hill will be one
of his most active and zealous advocates
and supporters.”
The McDuffie Journal learus that
Dr. J. S. Hamilton’s “ Kiokee” planta
tion giu house, in Columbia county,
was destroyed by fire last Friday, and
that another giu house in the same
county, belonging to the same gentle
man, barely escaped destruction the day
following the above conflagration.
Thus save the Jackson county Forest
News : We would not, iti any way, de
tract from the well-earned merits of sev
eral first-class dailies in the State of our
adoption, but desire simply to remark
tuai this able journal, the Chronicle
and Sentinel, occupies a proud position
among its cotemporsries, and we feel
that wo do but sheer justice to its
enterprising proprietors in recommend
ing it to any and all who want a reliable
and interesting commercial and political
paper from abroad.
CI.KKK OK THK UOUME.
Editors Chronicle and Sentinel :
Mauy worthy ger lemeu are mention
ed for the office of Clerk of the House
of Represents.ives, aud doubtless when
the Legislature convenes others will be
announced.
Among the number already named
we observe that Mr. Irwin aud Mr. Gar
ringtou are becojiiug quite prominent.
Mr. Ir win is a son of Hon. David Ir
win, of Marietta, and Mr. Carrington is
tue geutlemau who once held the office,
aud gave proof of eminent ability and
fitness for the poeitioD, Mr. Irwin is
eaid to be well educated and deserving.
If either should ruu and be elected, the
House wdl be fortunate, as it is under
stood the other will be chief Assistant
Clerk. Mr. CarriDgton’s fine voice, dis
tinct and accurate reading aud obliging
disposition will be remembered by all
who attended the Legislatuie when he
was Clerk of the House. Richmond.
A BLOODTHIRSTY OKUKK #
llrorrHl sbrriilmi lllrrco (ho IlardeKa
Peaceful liidiui. Tribe.
Washington, December 19. A
curious bit of the Indian policy of some
officers was laid before the Cabinet to
day in a dispatch sent byGeueral Sheri
dau to the oommandaut at Fort Sill,
Decern tier 6. It appears that a small
tribe of Apaches, numbering in all some
five hundred souls and occupying an
unexplored region in New Mexico, made
application to the officer iu command at
Fort Sill, I. TANARUS., for removal to the Mer
calero Agency. The tribe were iu want,
had been guilty of no depredation and
were desirous of getingat the same time
Government protection and support in
return for their submission. General
Sheridan telegraphed in auswer to the
commander’s request for instructions in
the premises, “Issue no rations; attaok
the tribe.” Within a few days the In
dian Commissioner obtained the dis
patch and laid it before the President,
who expresed his dissent from the order
and directed that it be laid before the
next Cabinet meeting. It is understood
that it was decided to-day to direct a
peaceful treatment of the tribe.
THE DISPUTED SUCCESSION.
Thf Orfgon Ciuf In the Senate —The New
York Election—. Maw .Merlins* in Oregon.
Washington, December 23.—As the
Committee on Privileges and Elections
already had authority nnder Mr. Ed
mond’s resolution and had commenced
the Oregon investigation, the Senate
withont a quorum and withont division
passed Mitchell’s Oregon resolution
which makes the proceedings of the
committee iu regard to Oregon special
and printed.
New York, December 22.--John I.
Davenport testified before the House
Committee that the local authorities
and Federal officers had acted har
moniously and successfully to prevent
frand in the New York city election. He
accounted for the large Democratic ma
jority by saying a large number of Re
publicans must have gone o -er.
Salem, Oregon, December 23. The
Democratic State Central Cimmittee
calls meetings on the Bth of January
thorooghont the State, f hey endorse
Grover’s action.
The Supreme CourtogStl&da has
made its writ peremptoryTnd ordered
the Board to recanvaas thef vote by the
27tb. jtm
SOUTH CAROLINA.
PALMETTO NEWS LEAVES.
Aiken will have a Christmas tree.
Chief Justice Moses is recovering.
Turkeys roost high and prices follow
them.
Mrs. Jas. W. Law, of Winnsboro, is
dead.
J. Oscar Quarles, of Edgefield county,
is dead.
The Charleston papers failed to reaoh
ns last evening.
Mrs. Anna Vernon, of Spartanburg
county, is dead.
The ladies of Ninety-Six will erect a
huge Christmas tree.
The old year and the Rump House
are fast ebbing away.
The Poet Laureate of Carolina wooes
his mnse at Rock Hill.
The fascinating trickle of the egg-nog
is beginning to appear.
The Winnsboro Democratic Clnb has
a meeting to-morrow night.
Rock Hili complains of disorderly
whisky on Saturday afternoons.
A loyal Christmas —pop skull whisky,
plenty egg-nog and fat gobblers.
Midnight marketers have been visit
ing the Newberry sausage stalls.
A mammoth swine in Newberry bit a
negro boy through the leg the other
day.
Thirty-four deaths in Charleston for
the week ending the 16th—whites, 15 ;
colored, 19.
Mr. R. 8. Maybin, of Newberry, had
bis arm badly broken by a bale of cot
ton falling on him.
The notice of Hampton’s inangnral
was given so late that many Colombia
excursions were counted out.
Ned Thompson, an employee of the
Soatb Carolina Railroad at Aiken, was
shot by Mr. Jno. George, last Tuesday.
The Newberry Herald thinks that our
Congressional Solous will best show
their wisdom by letting amendments
alone.
The Rumps this day adjourn but
Columbia will not feel the void us the
lunatic asylum threatens to disband for
the holidays.
Mr. Ranson Timmerman, an aged and
very estimable citizen of Edgefield,
died last week at his residence, near
Ridge Spring.
Eleven Newberry men felt so big at
the prospect of Hampton’s inauguration
that it took five passenger boxes to carry
them to Columbia.
Old Samuel Stone, a worthy colored
Democrut of Spartanburg, together with
his entire family, is down sick and in
straitened circumstances.
The Superintendent of. the Peniten
tiary refused to recognize a pardon is
sued by Chamberlain. Ingratitude to
the party is killing the State.
The Democratic candidates for the
Legislature from Newberry county have
withdrawn their protest, and will not
contest the seats of their opponents.
A Lexington negro who insulted a
lady passenger on the train, and made a
general attack on the passengers with a
razor, in turn received dangerous cats.
The gin house of Captain J. S. Rich
ardson, Sumter county, was accidentally
burned down one day last week, and
three colored men were burned up with
it. *
The Lexington Dispatch thinks that
under the law and the present situation,
the oldest Judge of Probate in the
State is entitled to fill the Gubernator
ial chair.
The latest dots in the Newberry Her
ald on the Columbia situation were
based on facts. They affirmed that ho
tel keepers were doing a thriving busi
ness. So !
The members of the bayonet House
have been paid $206 eacn, supposed to
have come from Corbin, who paid dearly
for his slim chances of going into the
United States Senate.
Two men, under the influence of whis
ky. engaged in a fight at Smyrna church,
in York, the other day, and one of them
stabbed Mr. Barber, a peacemaker,
dangerously with his knife.
The lunatics are starving in Colum
bia, and must be turned out, says the
Superintendent, unless provision is
made for them. The appropriations for
last year have not been paid.
Of the two inaugural addresses the
Winnsboro Herald says : The one is
false, slanderous, inflammatory aud self
landatory; the other is a calm, manly,
statesmanlike review of the condition of
affairs.
Our handsome neighbor, the York
ville Enquirer, alludes to the Chroni
cle and Sentinel as “ the leading pa
per of Georgia aud one of the most en
terprising and ably conducted dailies in
the South.”
An application to the Greenville
Railroad, made by the Rump House, to
see if passes could be obtained to re
turn home, received a reply that any
number of tickets could be obtained if
the money was planked down for the
same.
The campaign poet laureate has been
from. He furnishes us with the
folio request to publish it
on the first and return copy
to the Secretary of State :
“ Sound the loud timbrel
Hampton is Gov. aud the people are freeT"'--
Muffle your gavel, O gallant Mackey,
Aud carry the news to Daniel tl. C. ’
MOUTH CAROLINA POLITICS.
Hull Notea from Columbia and Charleston—
Clininbrrlain’s Pnrdon—No Taxes for Usurp
ers—The Now Force Pro*rumme—Wliat
Cliamberlnlu Will Attempt.
[ From the Charleston Papers of Yesterday .]
A Pardon Not Recognized.
Columbia, December 21.—Usurper
Chamberlain issued a pardon to a con
vict to-day. Parmele, the keeper of the
penitentiary, refused to recognize it,
and would not release the prisoner. A
writ of habeas corpus was served out
before Judge Carpenter, and Parmele
made to show cause why the convict
should not be set at liberty. To-morrow
was set for the hearing of the case. The
legal question arising will elicit discus
sion from th& Judge as to whom the sub
ordinate State officers are to recognize
as Governor,
CilllDfOO the Supplies.
In the House of Representatives to
day, after the usual routine of business,
the Houae went into secret session until
1:15, p. m., when the doors were again
opened. The special order, in reference
to Chamberlain usurping the govern
ment, was taken up aud the following
resolution was unanimously passed :
Unsolved by the House of Represen
tatives, that the tax payers of the State
be, and are hereby requested aud ad
monished not to pay the tax imposed by
said pretended act of legislation, and
not to yield obedience to any other leg
islative acts <>r resolutions passed by the
pretended House of Representatives, or
proclamations and orders which may be
issued by the said traitor D. H. Cham
berlain. now attempting to usurp the
office of Governor of South Carolina.
A New Force Programme Chamberlain
Claims That Grant Will Help Him Next
Week.
Chamberlain’s new programme, it is
said, is to issue a proclamation on Mon
day for Hampton and Simpson, and the
Constitutional House, to disband within
throe days. If his proclamation is not
obeyed, Chamberlain, it is claimed, has
the assurance from the majority of the
Cabinet, and from Grant himself, that
the President will follow it np with a
similar proclamation immediately, an
nouncing that if this is disobeyed he
will bring the whole land and naval
force of the United States, if necessary,
to ornsh the insnrgents. In short, my
informant says, Chamberlain and Grant
intend to carry out exactly the same pro
gramme they did with reference to the
rifle clubs. It appears that Chamber
lain has given up the idea of passing
the treason bill, as the committee made
no report upon it again to-day. His
present plan is to stake everything upon
an effort to enforce by the bayonet, with
out additional legislation, the recogni
tion of his assumed authority as Gover
nor. There has been a rumor afloat
that the troop? are to be removed from
the State House ; but it is, probably,
premature. One ef the Republican Ser
geants-at-Arms asserts positively that
they will be removed on Tnesdav next.
The Chamberlain erowd evidently anti
cipate no immediate nse for them after
the publication ol the proclamation of
the sham Governor.
Senator Butler—A Sketch ef the New Sen
ter from Sooth Careliaa.
[Charleston Journal of Commerce.]
The Legislators of South Carolina
yesterday chose General Matthew Cal
bra'tn Butler to fill the vaoancy which
will occur on the 4th of March next in
the United States Senate, from this
State. General Butler is a son of the
Hon. Wi'liam Bntler, who, as a Whig,
at one time represented the Greenville
District in Congress. He is a nephew
j of Governor Pierce M. Bntler, who, on
the bloody field of Cherubnsco, in ’47,
fell at the head of “the Palmetto Regi
ment.” He is also a nephew of Judge:
A. P. Butler, who, between ’46 and ’57/
acceptably represented South Carolina
in the Senate of the United State*.—.
And on his mother’s side, he is a grand
son or nephew of Commodore O. EU
Perry, who, in 1813, defeated the Britieh
in the famons naval engagement on
Lake Erie. General Butler was gradu
ated at the South CaroMua College, and
became a member o/B he Legislature
in 1860. He entered tl > war as a cap
tain of cavalry, in the A/mpton Legion,
distinguished himself lost
a leg, and emerged a Major-General.
After the war he was one of the first
to enter the field political and take the
bull of reconstruction by the horns,
running for the office of Lieutenant-
Governor on the coalition ticket with
Judge Carpenter. This year he was aD
early advocate of the' “straight-out”
movement, as the sole hope of arousing
the people and saving the State. Early
in July he nominated General Hampton
for Governor in the columns of the
Journal of Commerce, which earnestly
supported this polioy and the nomina
tion. In the State Convention of the
Democratic party, August 16, he was in
fluential in establishing this programme,
and afterwards labored for its success in
the State. General Butler is noted for
his oourageous manhood, fine appear
ance and address and personal magnet
ism. Id dealing with men he has tact
and skill, and in public debate his abili
ty is universally reoognized. He is a
man of a genuine and generous patriot
ism, and, we believe, will do the State
some service and make his mark in the
counsels of the country.
Nor moore sneezing or bad smells in
your nose. Catarrh is cared by Dr. J.
H. McLean’s Catarrh Snuff. It soothes
irritation aDd heals sores. Trial Boxes
60c. by mail. Dr. J. H. McLean, 314
Chestnut, St. Lonis. w
Amusements.—Theatre goers and all
such as keep late hours are very liable
to contract a severe cough or cold. A
safe and reliable cure is Dr. Bull’s
Cough Syrup. The price is only 25
cents. |
Local and Business Notices.
A PRIME REMEDY FOR A PAIN
FUL DISEASE.
The pangs endured by the rheumatic
are attributed by scientific pathologists
to the contact of a certain abnormal
acrid element in the blood with the sen
sitive covering of the mascles and joints.
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, being a su
perior blood depurent, is admirably cal
culated to expel this impurity, and by
removing the cause to allay the pain and
feverish symptoms which it produces.
Tuat it is a most successful remedy for
rheumatism, neuralgia and goat, as well
as a reliable means of counteracting
those diseases, is a fact amply evidenced
by voluntary certificates emanating from
those whom it has cared, and attested
by medical practitioners of high repute.
It is likewise a sovereign curative of
dyspepsia, constipation, liver complaint,
urinary troubles and general debility, as
well as the most popular and successful
antidote to malaria extant.
decl7-d6&wl
Ice Cream in fancy molds for parties,
at Sayre’s, 316 Broad Street.
Advice Gratis. —The Hon. Alexander
H. Stephens says : “ The Globe Flower
Congh Syrup has proven a most valu
able remedy to me. ”
Governor James M. Smith, of Geor
gia, says : “I shall always use it with
perfect confidence, and recommend it to
the public as a reoiedy which will afford
that satisfaction experienced by me and
mine. It excels everything for conghs,
colds and obstinate lung affections.”
Ex-Governor Brown, of Georgia, says:
“He finds the Globe Flower Cough
Syrup a most excellent remedy.”
Such endorsement by our great and
good men deserves the attention of the
afflicted. Those suffering from cough,
colds and lung affections shonld use the
Globe Flower Cough Syrup. It will
positively cure consumption.
For sale by Barrett & Land and all
Druggists. 0c.31-tf
Fifty pages—Boo Illustrations, with Descrip
tions of thousands of the best llowers and
Vegetables in the world, and the way to grow
them—all for a Two Cert postage stamp.—
Printed in German and English.
Vick’s Floral Guide, Quarterly, 25 cents
a year.
Vick’s Flower and Vegetable Garden,
50 cents in paper ; in elegant cloth covers, sl.
Address, JAMES VICK,
dec22-w2-16 Rochester, N. Y.
(Jin Houses Insured
AT lowest rates. Also, Fire, Life and Ma
rine. Office, No. 232 Broad street, one
door from entranoo to Central Hotel, Augusta,
Ga. GEORGE BYMMS,
0011-snweAwtf Insurance Agent.
Legal Blanks
OF
EVERY DESCRIPTION
'"FOR SALW
AT THE OFFICE OF
The Chronicle ill Mel.
——— \
To THE LEGAL PROFESSION,
Magistrates, Ordinaries, and Officers ot
Court, The Chronicle and Sentinel of
fers a full line of Legal consist
ing of—
SHERIFF’S TITLES,
LANDLORD’S LIENS,
PETITION FOR HOMESTEAD,
BILLS OF SALE,
RENT CONTRACTS,
POWER OF ATTORNEY.
AFFIDAVITS TO FORECLOSE FAC
TORS’ LIENS,
DEEDS IN FEE SIMPLE,
BONDS FOB TITLES, fll
MORTGAGES,
AFFIDAVITS AND WARRANT®
PEACE WARRANTS, ®
RECOGNIZANCE, COMMITMENT*
BONDS TJO PROSECUTE, ®
SEARCH WARRANTS, ®
INDICTMENTS, M
CORONERS’ COMMITMEajS,®
fE, BENCH WARRANTS,
MAGISTRATES’ SUMMONS, FI FA*
APPEAL BONDS,
AFFIDAVITS TO FORECLOSE ME
CHANICS’AND LABORERS’ LJEif,
DECLARATIONS ON NOTES
AND ACCOUNTS,
SUMMONS OF GARNISHMENT,
GARNISHMENT AFFIDAVIT* AND
BONDS, ,'****''
LETTERS OF DISMISSION,
LETTERS OF GUARDLfcNsHIP AND
bond/
PETITIONS FOR EXEMPTION OF
ATTACHMENTS,
ATTACHMENTfjruuDEB THE LAW
>OF 1871,
Commissions for intebboga
r TORIES,
t SUMMONS, CLAIM BONDS,
PENALIZATION BLANKS.
REPLEVY BONDS,
/ MARRIAGE LICENSES,
POBBESBOBY WARRANTS,
/ DISTRESS WARRANTS,
ASSUMPSIT (Common Law Form),
SUBPfENAS,
LETTBBB TESTAMENTARY,
TEMPORARY LETTERS OF ADMIN
SAND BOND,
ngBTBATIONDE
AND BOND,
WARRANTS OF APPRAISEMENT,
REAlinr AND PERSONALTY,
All oi/jers will receive prompt often
on. / *
/ WALSH ft WRIGHT, .
Weekly Review ef Aagnsta Market.
Augusta, Ga., Friday Afternoon, 1
December 22, 1876. f
General Remark*.
Whatever may be said of the condition of
the country, Augusta has certainly no cause for
complaint from a business point of view. Not
only during the past week but from the com
mencement of the present mouth, trade in all
branches of commerce, and especially in a re
tail way. has been brisk and merchants hive
found at the close of each day’s business a
gratifying amount of money in the cash
drawer. Such a state of affairs as a matter of
course, must conduee to make men more cheer
ful, aud we meet, therefore, with bright faces
instead of the doleful shake of the head that
one was wont to receive a few Winters ago.
True, at present the unusual activity and
bustle are due in a great measure to the ap
proach of Christmas. No matter how lean a
man’s parse may be. no matter how affairs
may have gone with him during this Centennial
year s rapidly drawing to a close, he still has
something to spend for Christmas cheer, to
gladden the hearts at home. And well it is
that we can thus, though it be for but a few
hours, throw aside care aud trouble and enter
into the general rejoicing over the birth of the
Man-God. But while it iapatent that much
of the business this week is due to this, it is
evident that a good healthy trade prevails out
side of this. ,
Since our last report both wheat and flour
have advanced, the former 15 cents per bushel
and the latter from 60 cents to tl a barrel.
The etook is light and far from sufficient to
supply the demand. Witti this fact before us
it would not be a matter of surprise if still
higher prices prevailed in a few days. City
mills are doing an excellent business and find
a ready sale for all their products.
For bacon there is only a moderate demand
and the supply is sufficient to meet the tra e.
Some grades are quoted somewhat higher
while others have declined. Clear ribbed ba
con sides are now at 10) for large lots.
Sugars are a little off with a fair demand.
Coffees are unchanged.
Cotton has Continued firm with heavy re
ceipts all the week. The receipts at this point
already foot up nearly 30,000 bales more than at
the eame date last year. Present indications
are that the receipts for the season will be
somewhat in the neighborhood of 225,000
baleß. The cotton received so far has gener
ally been ef a very good grade. The great
staple accomplishes much for Augusta and we
cannot give too much credit to this branch of
our commerce. With new aveaues, now talk
ed of, opened up, this trade will be largelv in
creased and our oity proportionately benefited.
Securities generally are dull ana but few
transactions have been made durir g the week.
State Bonds are the moet sought after.
Gold is a little up in comparison with last
week’s quotations.
jlelow we give a full resume of prices, which
may be relied upon as striotly accurate.
State and City Bonds.
Georgia 8’s t lOSallO; Georgia 7’s, 1074;
Georgia 6’b, 94a98, according to dates; Augusta
Bonds—due 1880 or sooner, 90 or above; Au
gusta long dates, 77 to 80; Atlanta B’s, 87; At
lanta 7’s, 80a82; Savannah short dates, 80a85;
Savannah long datsß. 65a70.
Railway Bond*.
Georgia Railroad, 100; Macon and Augus
ta, Ist mortgage, 93; endorsed by Georgia
Bailroad, 92; endorsed by Georgia and
South Carolina Bailroad, 92; Port Boyal Bail
road Ist mortgage gold 7’e,endorsed byGeorgia
Bailroad, 75; Atlanta aud West Point B’s, 95;
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta first mort
gage, 7’s, 75; second mortgage, 65 asked. Cen
tral, Southwestern and Macon <fc West
ern first mortgage 7’s, 95; Western Bail
road ef Alabama, endorsed by Georgia and
Central, 88a90; Montgomery and West Point
first mortgage, 99a100.
Bank Stocks, Gas Company nnd Street Rail
way.
National Bank of Augusta, 110; Bank of
Augusta, 75; National Exchange Bank, 95;
Commercial Bank, 82; Planters Loan and Sav
ings Bank,lo paid m, 5a6; Augusta Gas Company
par 25, 35; Street Bailroad 65 to 60 asked.
Augusta Factory, 100; Langley Faotory, 90;
Granitoville Factory, 110.
Railway Stacks.
Georgia Bailroad, 73a74. Central, 40@—
South Carolina, 3); Charlotte, Columbia
and Augusta, nominal; Port Boyal Bailroad,
nominal; Southwestern, 71; Augusta and
Savannah, 85; Macon and Augusta nominal;
Atlanta and West Point, 80.
_ -
Buying at 107; selling at 109. "
Cotton.
Saturday, 15.—Dull and lower—Ordinary, 9;
Good Ordinary, 10;Low Middling, 10); Middling,
10); Good Middling, 11); receipts, 1,744;
sa es, 1,302; steck in Augusta by actual
count on December 15th. 14,900 ; stock
last year, December 18, 16 929; receipts sinoe
September 1, 132,041; last year, 110 635; re
ceipts at all United States ports Saturday,
23,054; corresponding week last year, 28,282;
last week, 25,945.
Monday, 17.—Quiet; fair demand —Ordinary,
9; Good Ordinary, 10; Low Middling, 10); Mid
dling, 10J; Good Middling, 11); receipts, 1,461;
sales, 1.704; stock in Augusta by actual oount. on
December 15th, 14,900; stock last year, 16,929;
receipts since September 1, 132,041; last year,
110,635; receipts at all United States ports Mon
day, 42,762; corresponding week last year, 47,-
899; last week, 42.248.
Tuesday, 18.—Firm and steady—Ordinary, 9;
Good Ordinary, 10; Low Middling, 10); Middling,.
10i; Good Middling, 114; receipts, 1,872; sales,
1,803; Btock in Augusta by actual count on De
cember 15th. 14,900; stock last year, Decem
ber 18, 16,929; receipts since September 1,
132,041; last year, 110,635; receipts at all Uni
ted States ports Tuesdav, 30,: 32; correspond
ing week last year, 31,858: last week, 28,364. 1
Wednesday, 19—Firm- Ordinary, 9a94; Good
Ordinary, 1‘JalO); Low Middling. lOJalOf; Mid
dling, lojall; Good Middling, ll)all|; reoeipts,
1,679; sales, 1,717; B‘oek in Augusta by actual
oount December 18th, 14,900; stock hist yea-,
December 15, 16,929; receipts sinoe September
1. 132,041; last year, 110.635; receipts at all
United States ports Wednesday, 23,228; cor
responding week last year, 25,979; last week,
28,779.
Thursday, 20 —Firm—Ordinary, 9a9J; Good
Ordinary, 10|al0); Low Middling, 10|; Middling,
11; Good Middling, Ilf; reoeipts, 1,859; sales,
1,998; stock in Augusta by actual count on D e-J
oember 15th, 14.900; last year, 16,929; reoeipts
since September 1, 132,041; last year, 110,635:
reoeipts at all United States ports Thursday,
22.005; corresponding week last year, 33,985;
last week, 33,258.
Friday, 21.—Steady—Ordinary*: 94a9); iJood
Ordinary, 10$; Low Middling, 10f; Middling, 11
all); Good Middling, Ilf; receipts, 1,985/sales,
1,557: stock in Augusta by aetuai count on De
cember 21st, 16,187; stock last y4ar, December
24th, 17,688; receipts since September 1,712.641;
last year, 117,618; reoeipts at all United States
ports Friday, 26,756; corresponding wfe k last
year, 29,788; last week, 87,823; leceipt i since
September 1, 2,227,834; receipts sam > time
last year, 1 957,528; stock at all United States
ports, 947,130; stock at all United BtatA ports
last year, 668,292; stock in New York by actual
oount, 215,341; stock in New York lest year,
129,684. S ,
TOTA-L RECEIPTS AND SAJ.M TOR THE WEEK. M
Sales r. i. 6jf
Receipts lASj^m
COMPARATIVE
Rtvi'ip - fur this treelHKjff xfrjßjßßami
-a : :ilm y
Receipt^*
: ‘ '.tfelHaafiawr
Receipts W: o. ■ A/gBWMy
Showing eo
mmgm * -■
■ 2*3BBSWg 145.868
Motion. .12:i.U81
ilF'isdav 16.187
OF COTTON.
""HPre the receipts of Cotton by
and the. fur
Hpig Friday evening. ! ■...
Georgia Railroad. .bales. 5.151
* Augusta ami Savannah
'A * V 169
■ Ka Charlotte, Columbia and
.. ■Road 919
BY South Carolina Railroad 69
Foil Boyal Railroad 398
Hu by Canal’ and Wagon 3,517
the River 75
reoeipts by Railroads, River, Canal
Wagon 10,600
COTTON SHIPMENTS.
Bbie following are the shipments of Cotton by
Be different Railroads and the River for
Be week ending Friday evening, December
E, 1876 :
■gr - BT RAILROADS.
p3outh Carolina Railroad —local shipments.3,93l
South Carolina Bailroad —through ship-*
mentß 5,964
Augusta and Savannah Bailroad—local
shipments 2,405
Augusta and Savannah Bailroad—through
shipments 383
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Bailroad
—local shipments 388
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Bailroad
—through shipments 260
By Port Boyal Bailroad—local 445
Bv Port Poyal Bailroad —through 689
By River—local shipments 103
Total shipments by Bailroads and 8iver.14,568
The Produce Market.
As will be seen by a glance over the follow- j
ing quotations, there are very few changes in
the prices -it produce.
The Augusta Dry Goods Market.
Bbown Oottow. Suffolk A 4-4, 8 ; Suf
folk B 4-4, 8); Sauiisbury B 4-4, 10; Saranac
B 4-4. 9: Fruit of the Loom, 11. Laconea
E, 4-4 Fine white, 11. Portsmouth B, 3-4 Fine
Brown, 6.
Bleached Sheeting and Shirting.—Canoe
27 inch, 50.; Fruit ot the Loom, 11; Lons
dale. 36 inch, 11; Wamsutta O TX, 36 inch
12) ; Waltham 10-4, 36s Utica 10-4, 45. Pa
chang 4-4,71; Greenville A 4-4,121. King Philip
Cambric, 20. Pocahontas 4-4,121. Conewago7-8,
8). Campbell S-4, 6).
Pillow Cash Cotton.—Amoekeag, 42 inch,
12)c.; Waltham, 42 inch, 12); Androscroggin, 42
inch, 15.
Osnabttrgs.—Richmond, 10c.; Santee, No. 1,
10). Phoenix. 9)o.
Cambrics.—Paper. Gamer, B)<S9c.; High
Colors,B)a9; Lonsdale, ft Manville, 7)@8; Mae
onville, 7); 8. 8. A Sons, 7); Cambrics (glazed)
Elberton, 7; Franklin, 7; Harmony, 7; High
Colors, 8.
Ginghams.—Domestic, Gloucester, 10); Lan
caster, 12); Baird, 10; Scotch, 20.
Checks and Strifes—Athena Checks, 101;
Eagle and Phtßnix, 10); Magnolia Plaids, 10;
Richmond Stripes, 10) ; American Stripes, 12;
Arasapha Stripes, 10); Lucasville Stripes, 10@
12; Eagle and Phoenix Stripes, 10: Silver
Spring, 10.
Corset Jeans.—Kearsage, 13)c.; Naumkeg,
121; Laconia, 101.
Kentucky Jeans.—Fillette, 42)c.; Keokuk,
45; Hillside, 13; Pacific Bailroad, 40; South
wark Doeskin, 45 ; N. C. Wool, 50. Arkwright,
8). Buckskin, 24). Cave Hill Casaimere, 20.
Albany, 11. Silver Lake Doeskins, 35. Lees
burg, 32). Henry Clay, S5. Satinets—mixed
Grey. 35; Heavy, 60: Mack, 45, 55@60 cents.
Prints.—Gamer’s Fancies, 7c.; Ancona
Fancy, 7 ; Gloucester, 9s>9); Amoekeag, 7;
Hartel’s Fancies. 7; Arnold's, 7 ; Mem
macs, 7; Album, 7; Pacific, 7; Bedford, 7;
Sprague. 7; Dunneß’*, 7; Wamsutta, 5. Mav
erick, 5; Hamilton Shirting, sc.
Augusta Manufactured Cotton Goods.
AphcsTA Factory—3-4 Shirting, 6); 7-8 do.,
7i,'4-4 fflieeting,B|; Drills,9.
r^GRANTTEViLLEFactoby— 3-4 Shirting,6); 7-8
do., 7}; 4-4 Sheeting, 8}; Drills, 9.
Langley Factory —A Drills, 10; B Drills, 9);
Standard 4-4 Sheeting. 9; Edgefield and A
4-4 do., 8); Langley A 7-8 Shirting, 2): Langley
3- Shirting, 6).
The Liquor Market.
At.v. and Porter.— Imported, $2 25<82 76.
Brandy. —Apple, 92 50<®8 00; American,
81 40@2 00; French, 46t@12; Schleifer’s Cali
fornia, 85 00; New, 84.
Gin.— American, 81 40@2 50; Holland, 93 00
Whisky. —Com, country, per gallon, 91 36@
2 50; Bourbon, p©r gallon, $1 50(2)5 00; Gib
son’s per gallon, 82 50<S>6 00; Bye, per gallon,
81 35@6 00; Rectified, per gallon, 81 35@1 75;
Robertson county, per gallon, $1 60(2)2 50;
High Wines, $1 25.
Wine.— Madame Clicquot Champagne, 830@
2; Napoleon’s Cabinet. 830@82; Boederer’s,
833®35; Boederer’s Schreider, S3O@S2: Impe
rial American, 820®22 per case of pints and
quarts; Madeira. 85@10; Malaga, 82 50 per
gal.; Port, 92 50<§>6 00; Sherry, #2 50®>5 00.
Syrups and Molasses. v ..
Molasses. —Muscovado, hhds., —@3B; re
boiled, hogsheads, 27 cents; barrels, 30 oents.
Cuba hhds., 45; bbls., 50 @ 53; sugar
house syrup, 65; New Orleans syrup, 70@85 per
gallon: Silver Drip, 75 oents; Sugar Drip,
81 50.
Hides.
Flint—4@B cents.
Green—2a4 oents per pound.
Miscellaneous urocery Market.
Candles. —Adamantine, lightweight, 16@17;
full weight, 19@20; sperm, 40; patent sperm,
50; tallow, 12@13 V lb.
Cheese. —Western, 14@15 ; Factory, IS@l9.
Bice.—6 to 7 cents V lb.
Salt.—Liverpool, 81 25@1 30; Virginia,
82 15@2 25 V sack.
Soap.—No. 1,6 c.; Family, 6) to 7)o.
Mackerel —We quote full weights only as
ollows : No. I—mess1 —mess in kits—B2 50 to 82 76 :
half barrels, 87 50 to 3; No. 1 in kits, 81 75:
No. 2 in barrels, 812; half barrels, 86 50:
kits, $1 40; No. 3—barrels, large, $9 to 9 50;
half barrels—large, 85 to 5 50; kits, 81 25.
Salmon.—Per doz. lb. cans, 82 76; 2 lb.,
83 50. Salmon in kits, 83 50.
French Peas.— l tb. Cans, per doz., 84 60.
Picklrs. —-Underwood’s qts., 84 76 ; ) gal.,
88 75 per doz.
Green Corn.—2 lb Cans, 83.
Gelatine. —Nelson’s. 83 per doz.
Ground Peas —Tennessee, 81 50 ; Georgia,
81 50 per bushel.
Apples—green, per bl—Western, 83 OPaS 50;
Northern, 83 75, Butter—Country, per lb.
20@25; Goshen, 35a40; Beeswax, per lb., 25;
Beans, per bushel—Western, 81 15 to 1 25;
Northern, 82 26 to 83 00; White Table
Peas, 81 00 to 1J25. Western Cabbage, per doz
en,Bl 20@150; New York Cabbages, 81 80@2;
Geese, 65c. Eggs, per doz, 25a27; Ducks, 30c;
Chickens—Spring, 15@25 ; grown, 25@30 ;
oents; Honey, strained, per tb., 20: Irish
Potatoes, per bbl. Western, 83 Co@
Northern, $3 50; Onions, dry, per bbl., 83 25@
350 : Sweet Potatoes, 80 per bushel; Dried
Peaches, peeled, 140. per lb.; Dried Apples.
80. per lb. Soda, 8. Tallow. 7@oo, Grits per
bushel, 81 25. Weßtem Pearl Grits, per bbl.
84 00 to 84 50. Pearl Hominy 84 50@4 75.
The Tobacco Market.
Common to medium, 48@65; fine bright, 74@
80; extra fine to fancy, 90@81 smoking to
bacco. 50@65; fancy smoking, 55@60 V lb.
Corn Meal and Bran.
Corn Meal.— City Bolted, 75; Western,
70.
Bran.— Wheat Bran, per ton, 816.
Butter, Lard and Eggs.
Butter.— Tennessee, 25c.
Lard.— Tierces, 18c; oans, IS).
Eoos.—Scarce and in demand at 20c per
dozen.
Bagging and Ties.
Domestic Bagging, 13); Gunny do., 11;
Patched do., II).
Arrow Ties, 6); Pieced do., 4.
Molasses.
Molasses— Beboiled Hogsheads, 30c.; Bar
rels, 33; Muscavado Hogs Heads, 44; Barrels
45: Refined Syrups, 65a700; New Orleans, 65a
700.
Cetton Goods.
5 to 10 bale lots, Augusta, 3-4
Shirtings, sc; 7-8 do., 6); 4-4 Sheetings, 7;
80z Oenaburgs, —; 6oz do., 10. Granitoville
Factory—3-4 Shirting, 6c; 7-8 Shirting, 6);
4- Sheeting, 7); Drills, 81. Langley Faotory—
Langley A 4-4, 740; Uaugloy A 7-8, 6); Langley
-3-4, 5); Langley Drills, 8) A Drills, 8); B Drills,
8. Princeton Factory—4-4 Sheetings 7 • 7-8
Shirtings, 6; Yam, (premium) bunch, 900.
The Augusta Furniture Market.
Gnm. Bracket Bail,
85; Single PaneTßilClt, Walnut, 810 00; Walnut
Zouave, 89 00; Maple' ZtSiai’e, 86 00; Imita
tion Walnut, 85 00; Cottage-gouave, 84 50;
Spindle do., 84 00; Fancy Cottage, 12 60; Blaok
Walnut French Lounge, 818030
CHAitoEB Sets.-Solid Walnut, 835ai5P
Enameled, 925a125.
,J >A ?, LOil B e ™-— Rb P 8 nd Hair Cloth, 845a
150; BrooateUe, Satin and Silk Damask, slsoa
500.
Chairs.— Split Seat, white, per dozen, 88 00;
Cane Seat, painted and gilt, per doz., 813 00;
Rattan Seat, painted and gilt, per doz., 811 00
Best Arm Dining, wood seat, 818 00 ; Walnut,
C. S. Oil, per doz., $lB OOaSO 00; Walnut Gre
peTdoz f $7° a 50 D °° ; W * dß ° r ’ W ’ S ” painted ’
Bureaus.—Walnut, with glass, 816@25; Wal
nut 4 Marble, with glass, slß@3o ; Walnut, i
Garble, with glass, $18@30; Marble Top, slßa
C ? Ar s£ —^ Rochno.—:Boston large full arm,
each, $2 50; Boston Nurse, no arm, $1 85;
Nurse, cane seat and back, $3 60.
Ceibs.—Walnut, $4 00(5)20 00.
Mattresses.— Cotton, best tick, sl4; Cotton
and Shuck, best tick *10; Cotton and .Shuck.
$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, sl2;
Wire, with drawer and cupboard, $lB 00.
Pables.— Fanny, with drawer, $1 60: round
*,“ oh . e "’ $2 00; Sound 36 inches, $2 su ;
Bound 48 inches, $6 09; Marble Tops, s6a4o.
WASH-STAND,.-Open with drawer, Walnut,
88 00; open with drawer, Poplar, $2 25; Wal
nut, with three drawers, $8 70; Marble, with
Uree drawers, sl6 50; Marble Tops, sl2as.
/ leather and Leather Goods.
Fw;.L?',i? e S& p fc Sole Leather, 29@32 ; Good
Hemlock, 33@37; White Oak Sole, 45@50:
Harness Leather, 44@50; Upper Leather,
country tanned, $2 50 to $8 50 per side* Calf
Skins, $36 to $55 per dozen; Kips, S4O te-8100.
Bridles—Per dozen, ss@2o.
Leather, per dozen, $10@50; vrool,
Horse Covers— ss@26.
Single Buggy— Harness. } Jar,;'or x. c. S. A,
Pads, 1 trace, web reins, SIZ
Carriage Hahka-*!,. -One-half x 0., S. A.
Pads, without, ureeohing, *26; Silver Plated,
lompkms Pads, with breeching, S4O ; Silver
or Gilt, fxtra trimmed, 880@100. B
sl@3 DLii PoCM:TB— 43 50 @ 6 SO; Saddle Cloths,
9i 50@25: Buena Vista,
aL; #SoO ’ Plain ’ * lo @ 2o
Plantation Wagons,
One and one-half ineh axle, $85@95; II
noh axle, $100@105; lj inch axle, $110; 3 inoh
himble skm, S9O; 3) inoh thimble skin, $96.
Hay.
'. Choice Timothy—car load lots, $1.20 per
hundred; Western mixed, 91.10a1.25 per hun
dredv?a?,tern Ha y> 81-60 per hundred; North
ern, sl,lO.
Country—sl per hundred.
Hardware Market.
In the following quotations the prioe of many
Ironand Nails-* lowered ’ Particularly Swede
Picks —sl3 50@15 per dozen.
Shoes— Horse, $5 60; Mule, $6 60.
Steel—Plow, 8 per lb.; Cast, 20 per lb.;
Springs, 13 per lb. ’
Castings—6c.
Sad Irons—6 per lb,
a u H *ic I 'Sir Am j ß ' I b, sls 60 per dozen.;Ames’
and h, sls 75 per dojs.
andh P sl6 f 00 Adama ’ 1 h ’ sl ® °° pßr dOZ ’ ; Ame8 ’
Antoh— Solid Cast Steel, 160. per lb.; Peter
Wngbt a, 15 pe* lb.
Axes— Common middle size plain, sll 60 per
doz.; Samuel Collins’ middle size plain, sl2 00
per doz.; Samuel Collins’ light, sll 50 per doz.
Axles —Common, B£c.
$1 B 2s@l6' Kentuck y cow > 8 2 25@12 00; Hand,
812@14; Extra, 18@24;
M?^bV.‘i^ 45per m > w - p -> 90 P r m.-
Musket, $1 00 per m. r
H^ a_^, ott D, n ~. S * r S entß > 84 60 per doz.
5,“®88 20@10 33 per doz.
Ibqn—Swede, 7@B; Horse-shoe, 6; Bound
and Bquare, 4; Natl Bod, 10
ifSrJSd £ l od ’B3 60; Bd, $3 76; fid, $4;
sn’ ifdj 8® 75 l 10< i to 12d, finished, $4 50;
3d’ A m , B b®J- 85; 6d, finished, $5 25 ; 3d,
line $7 35; horse shoe, 20@33,
Stoves and Tinware.
Stoves vary in price according to manufac
ture and stae, from sl6 to $75.
*2OO P 0 * B ' 2 ‘J 3 pints, per doz.
loz-u: 4 ' “85 °°; Covered Buckets, 2 to 6 quarts,
wf’ I 4 *2 ® 8 ! Foot ’Pubß. *l2;
Urivto’ln, 00 iiu Loofio* per box, sl3 00:
tb He ’ lO U per box > ® lO - Solder per
Oil.
Headlight, per gallon, 38a40; Kerosine. 18a
20; Lard, $1 30al 40; Linseed, boiled 86 •
Linseed, raw, 80; Sperm, $2 26®2 60- 'Tan
ners, 65@70; Spirits Turpentine, 400.
Miscellaneous.
Concentrated Lye, per case, $6 75@7 25-
Potash, per case, $8 25 ; Blacking
Brushes, per dozen, $1 52al 55; Brooms, per
doz., $2 50a4 50; Blue Buckets, per doz.
$2 25a2 75; Matches, per gross, $3; Soda—
Boxes, 6); kegs, 6)a7c.; Soda—boxes, 7iaß);
Starch, 6); ; Feathers, 52@53.
Wood aud Coal.
Coal —Coal Creek Coal per ton, $9 00; An
thracite per ton, sll 60.
Wood—Hickory and Oak, $4 00 per oord;
sawed 50c. higher; inferior guides from $1 to
$2 per cord less.
THE AUGUSTA MARKETS.
Augubta. December 28,1876.
Cettoß
Steady—Middling, lljall); reoeipts, 2,219;
sales, 1,301.
Seed Grain.
Seed Bye, $1.35: Seed Barley, $1.35; Seed
Wheat, white, 82 25; Seed Wheat, red, $2;
Seed Wheat, rust proof, sl.lO.
Bases.
Clear Bibbed Bacon Sides, 10); Dry Salt
Clear Bib Sides, 9)a9); Dry Balt Long Clear
Sides, 9)a9); Bellies, l0)all; Smoked Shoul
ders, 84 to 8); Dry Balt Shoulders, 7); Sugar
Cored Hama, 16a16; Plain Hams, 15a16; Pig
Hama, 16; Tennessee Hams, 15).
' Grata.
Coen— 6s for Tennessee White in ear
load lots; broken lots So. higher.
Wheat—Choice White, 91 70; prune White.
9165; prime Amber, 81 56; prime Bed, 91 45.
Oats— 6oss6o. in oar load lots; broken lot,
600.
Blear.
Cm Mills—Supers, 87 00 ; Extras, 87 GO ;
Family, 88 00; Fancy, 88 50a9.
Western—Super*, 86 26; Extras, 87; Fami
ly, $8; Fancy, 88 50.
Saspars aad Ceffeea.
Sugars.— We quote O, 1C4@11; extra O, lit*
12; yellows, 10) to 10); Standard A, 12)a
Coffees.—Bios—Common, 20; fair, 22; good.
221a23; prime, 23)a24; Javas, 28@33.
The Hay and Stock Feed Market.
Hal.—Choice Timothy—oar load lota, 9120
per hundred; Western mixed, SIOO to 116 per
hundred; Eastern Hay, 91 40 to 1 50 per hun
dred.- Northern, $1 26.
Bran and Stock Mkal.—Wheat Bran, S2O
par ton; Stock Meal, 65@70.
Fodder.—76 to 91 00 per hundred.
Country Hay.—9o per hundred.
FOREIGN AMD DOMESTIC MARKETS.
COTTON MARKETS.
New Yoke, December 2s, noon.—Cotton EJx
chauge closed; quotations nominally un
changed.
New Yoke, December 23, p. m —Cotton
Exchange closed and quotations nominally un
changed— consolidated net receipts, 26,574
exports to Great Britain. 22.368; to Prance.
3.665; to the Continent, 2,081; to Channel, 28,-
800.
Galveston, December 23.—Cotton quiet—
Middling, 114; net reoeipts, 3,868; gross
receipts, 3.868; sales, 1,512.
Norfolk, December 23.— Cotton—no market:
hol’day.
Baltimore, December 23.—Cotton firm—
Middling, 12$; gross receipts, 688; sales, 275;
spirners, 140; experts ooastwise, 415.
Boston, December 23.—Cotton quiet—Mid
dling, 12$; net receipts, 713; gross receipts
1,738: sales, 400. ’
WmnNOTON, December 23.—Cotton firm and
nominal—Middling, 11$; net reoeipts. 785-
gross receipts, 875; exports ooastwise, 131. ’
Philadelphia, December 23.—Cotton quiet
—Middling. 12$ ; net receipts, 77; gross re
ceipts, 1,609.
Savannah, December 23.—Cotton quiet—Mid
dling, 11$; net receipts, 3,470; gross re
ceipts, 5,270; sales, 2,000; exports to Great
Britain. 3,855; to the Continent, 1,341- Chan
nel, 2,800.
New Orleans, Deoember 23.—Cotton steady
—Middling. Ilf; Low Middling. Ilf ; Good Or
dinary, 10J; net reoeipts, 818; gross receipts
8,807; sales, 4,000; exports to Great Britain.
4.567; to Channel, 577; to France, 8 665- Con
tinent, 840.
Mobile, December 23.—Cotton quiet—Mid
dling, 11$; net receipts. 2,587; gross receipts,
2.687; sales, 600; exports to Great Britain,
3,694; ooastwise, 132.
Memphis, December 23. p. m.—Cotton firm
—Middling, Ilf ; receipts, 3,828; shipments,
2,478; sales, 8,700.
Charles ton , December 23.—Cotton firm—
Middling, 12$; net receipts, 3,786 ; gross re
oeipts, —; sales, 1,000; exports to Great Bri
tain, 9,675; coastwise, 634.
Selma, December 23.—Cotton—weekly net
receipts. 3.122; shipments, 3.019; stook, 7,298.
Liverpool, December 22, noon. —Cotton
active and firmer—Middling Uplands, 6 9-16d.;
Midd ing Orleans, 6sd.; sales, 20,000 ; specu
lation and export, 4,000; receipts, 7,700;
American 4,300. Futures opened with hold
ers ask ng 1-IC<3. advance, but have sinoe be
come weaker—Uplands. L. M. 0.. Deoember
or January delivery, 619 32, 6s: January or
February, 6sd., 6 21-82d : February or March,
6 11-16d., 6 23-32d, 6 11-16d.; March or April,
6fd., 6 23-32d.; April or May, 613-18d.,
6 25-32d.; shipped November or Deoember, per
sail, 6sd.; December or January, 6 23-82d.;
January or February, 6Jd.; Maroh or April,
6|d.; sales of the week. 69,000: speculation,
8.0U0: export, 6,000; stock, 493,000; American,
230,000; receipts, 79,(00; American, 53,000;
actual export, 8,000; afloat, 451,' 00; Ameri
can, 400,000; gales of American, 37.000.
2, p. m—Uplands, L. M. 0., February or
March delivery, 6 21-32d.
3, p. m.—Sales of American, 11,300; Up
lands, L- M- 0., January or February delivery,
619 32d.; shipped November or December,
619-32d. '
5, p. m.—Yarns and fabrics firm and tend
ing upward; futures quiet.
Liverpool, December 22.—The circular of
the Liverpool Cotton Brokers’ Association, in
its review of the trade for the week ending
last night, says; Cotton was quiet in the ewiy
part of the week, and the tendenoy of
prices was in favor of buyers, but there was
more firmness on Wednesday acd to-day,
Thursday, with a very extensive business, and
the quotations of last Thursday are partially
resumed. American was very dull early in the
week and sd. lower, but the demand has in
creased and prices have recovered 11-16d. in
Sea Island, but the sales have been moderate
at steady prices. In futures, transactions
have been comparatively limited, with little
oh&nge in pripes,
New Yorx, Deomber 22, noon.—Cotton
dull—sales, 1,239; Uplands, 121; Orleans, 12
7J6. 4
Futures opened easier, as follows: De
cember, 12$, 12 7-16; January, 124, 12 17-82;
February, 12 25-32, 1213-16; Maroh, 18,13 1-32;
April, 13 7-32, 18$: May, 13 13-32, 13 15-82.
New York, December 22. p. m.—Cotton
—net receipts, 886; gross, 4,199.
Futures closed eaßy—sales, 33,500 bales, as
follows : Deoember, 12 11-32, 12$; January, 12
7-16; February, 12 23-32, 12$; March, 12 15-16,
12 31-32; April, 18 6-32: May. 13 6-16, 13 11-32;
June, 13 16-82, 134; July, 13$, 13 21-32; Au
gust, 13 23-32, 13$.
New Yore, December 22, p. m. Cotton
dull—sales",' $75 at 125a12 7-16; reoeipts
for the week, gross, "32.994; net, 6,933;
exports to Great Britain, 11,667; to France,
5.000; to the Cpntipent, 860; sales, 7,284: stock,
215,000-
New York, December 22, p. m.—Comparative
cotton Statement for the Wpefc ending De
cember 22d, 1876;
Net receipts at all United States ports. 168,735
Same time last year 197,191
Total to date 2,396,702
IStjal to same date last year 2,153,920
Exporiifor the week 150,560
Same wee'k\“t ye*r 128,589
Total to this 4V e 1,192,100
Total for same date '“t year 1,140,951
Stook at all United State* ports 947,130
Last year trt
Stock at interior towns... .777 143,951
Last year 122,160
At Liverpool 493, COO
Laßt year 654,000
Amerioan afloat for Great Britain 400,000
Last year 296,00 Q
Wilmington, December 22, p. m.—Cotton
firm—Middling, 11$; stock, 13,590; sales, 517;
weekly net reoeipts. 4,629; gross receipts, —;
exports to Great Britain, 860; to Continent,
1,011; coastwise, 2,419.
Philadelphia, December 22.—Cotton firm—
Middling, 12$; weekly net receipts, 1,760;
gross receipts, 2,696.
Savannah, Dpcembpy 22. Cotton f|rm—
Middling, 11$; weekly npt receipts, 27,246;
gross receipts, 27,293; stDcJs, 94 826; sales,
L 1,550; exports to Great Britain, 9,539 ; to
France, 3,219; to the Continent, 7,600; coast
wise, 7,232,
Galveston. December 28, p. in. Cotton
firm Middling, 11$; no weekly report; stock,
113 906. ’■
Norfolk, December 22. —Cotton steady—
Middling. 11$; weekly net reoeipts., '2O 487-
gr 055,20,828; net receipts, 2,669; st-tek, 34,’106-
exports to Great Britain, 2i.£ii ; Continent!
1,787; ooastwise, 16,294;,5,V 1 e5, 3 7(50.
B&jfaiP*, Pepeui’-jer 83, p. m.-Ootton firm
Middling, 12. |; weekly net receipts, 2,998;
gross, 3,69%, Btook, 12 216 ; sales. 2,180 ; to
spinners, 9-0; exports to Great Britain, 300;
ooastwise, 1,755.
Boston, December 22, p. m. —Cotton quiet
—Middling, 12$; weekly net receipts, 2 471;
gross receipts, 9,662; stock, 5,587; sales, 250;
exports to Great Britain, 2,999.
New Orleans, Deoember 22, p. m.—Cotton
strong—Middling, 11$; Low Middling, 11$ ;
Good Ordinary, 10$; weekly net receipts, 36,164-
gross reoeipts, 44,832; stock, 280,306; sales,
51,000; experts to Great Britain, 33,926; to
France, 11,276; to the Continent, 6,606; to the
Channel, 1,646. .. ..
Mobile, p. m.—Cotton steady
—Middling. 11$; weekly net reoeipts, 19,017;
gross reoeipts, 19,018; stook, 76,391; sales,
20.200; exports to the Continent, 4,135; to the
Channel, 4,900; ooastwise. 4,877.
Columbus, December 88.—Cotton active—
Middling, 11$: weekly net receipts, 4,8o8;
shipments, 3,281; sales, 3,152; spinners. 295-
stock, 10,783. ’
Nashville, December 22.—Cotton Arm-
Middling, 11$; weekly net reoeipts, 2,662;
shipments, 2,680; sales, 3,531; " spinners, 108;
stock, 7,643.
December 22.—Cotton— week
ly net receipts, 294; stock, 5,000; sales, 2,500.
Port Boval, December 22.—Cotton—weekly
net reoeipts, 561; stock, 668.
Memphis, Deoember 22. Cotton steady—
Middling, 11$; weekly receipts, 22,908; ship
ments, 18,437; stook, 85,454; sales. 16,000.
Charleston, Deoember 22.—Cotton Arm-
Middling, 12; weekly net receipts, 24,300;
gross reoeipts, —; stock, 88,862; sales, 18,500;
exports to Great Britian, 13,675; to the Con
tinent, 5,910; ooastwise, 4,910.
Montgomery, December 22,—Cotton quiet
and firm—Middling, 11$; weekly net receipts,
3,466; shipments, 1,888; stock, 12,422.
Maoon, Deoember 22.—Cotton firm and in
good demand— Middling, 11; receipta, 4,160-
sales, 8,174; stock, 11,462; shipments, 3,086. ’
PRODUCE MARKETS.
New Yoke, December 23, noon.—Flour a
shade firmer. Wheat advancing. Corn very
firm. Pork heavy at sl7 15a17 25.- Lard heavy
—steam, $lO 80. Spirits Turpentine dull at
495. Besia quiet at $2 65a2 65 for strained.
Freights firm-
New Yoke, December 23, p. m.—Flour a
shade firmer with less doing. Wheat irregu
lar, unsettled and opening about lc. better,
but closing quiet and firm at figures ourrent
yesterday. Com without decided change with
a very moderate export and home trade de
mand. Oats dull and drooping at 51. Pork
easier with a little jobbing trade. Lard closed
firm -prime steam, $lO 70al0 80. Coffee quiet
and firm. Sugar quiet. Bice quiet and steady.
Molasses quiet. Turpentine easier at 49
Bosin easier at $2 50a2 60. Freights quiet.
Baltimore, Deoember 23, noon. Flour
strong but unchanged. Wheat scarce and firm,
but quiet and unchanged, Southern Cera
firm but quiet; Western active, strong and
higher; new Southern white, 52a56 ; yellow,
53a56. '
Baltimore, Deoember 28, p. m.—Oats dull
—Southern prime, 37a38. Bye nominally 70a
72. Provisions quiet and unchanged. Coffee
strong and unchanged. Whisky nominal at
$1 18al 14. Sugar steady.
St. Louis. Deoember 23. Flour firm and un
changed. Wheat—No. 3 red Fall, $1 874 : No.
3 do., $1 32$al 33. Com dull—No. 2 mixed
395a42, Oats inactive—No. 2, 32$ asked. Bye
quiet and unchanged. Barley dull and un
changed. Whisky quiet and unchanged. Pork
easier at sl6 37$ asked; sl6 25 bid. Lard
firmer at 16$ asked. Bulk meats nominally
unchanged with nothing done. Bacon quiet
and unchanged with only a small jobbing
trade. Hogs weak and packers generally out
of market. Cattle slow and unchanged with
“ttle doing.
Cihoisnati, Deoember 23.—Flour quiet and
um. Wheat quiet and firm—red, $l 80al 40.
Jo™ dull and lower at 42a43. Oats quiet and
*t Soa3B. Bye quiet at 80. Barley dull
and nominal. Pork inactive and held at sl6 75
cash; January; sl7 25 February. Lard
quiet—st 4m . 10|*10$; kettle, 11. Bulk Meats
steady. Ijueop gpiet and steady-shoulders,
Cle “
C f Deoember 23.—Flour firm and
“?9 h “S ; ed. wheat qaiet and firmer—No. 2
S’SfwXlij 91 2l t °“ h : 26s January;
No. 3 Chicago Spring, $1 1(U
at 44filg cashffi} Jami
°* to Btead y and firm. Bye
*7 Jarleyßte * d y *o*l unchanged.
* °“ h ; fl 645 Janu
i Lard in good demand
changed d 011
iT2Sft.vTI!S
SSf. i.V&SV! £L,S s
con firm—shouldtrs, c '^ r * “r
“all?” “
a2:3r£S3d|ws*Hs
ed. Tar quiet at $1 80. V 3 33,01
LocisviLle, December 23.%. .
demand with full prices—exfc 011 !, K™ l
family, ssas 50. Wheat ftrmer*
bly higher. Com steady and'mjh
Bye firm at 80. Oate steady. lV. ande “*“ d
demand at sl6 75a17. Bulk Meltf 0 * 011 * 8
tive -shoulders, 6sa6s; clear rib
clear sides, BsaßJ. Bacon dull
Lard steady and in fair demand— “lUtninaJ.
kegs, 11$. Whisky fair at $1 08. w e - “i
steady at 11$. jp n K
Loudon, December 23, noon.—Cons*.
15-16. \ 93
2:30, p. m. —Consols, 94.
Pams, December 23, 2, p. m.—Beat,
l°sf. 2sc. _. %
New York, December 23, noo#?-6old opm
ed at 107$. r ” %
New York, December 23, noon.—Stocks dull
but steady. Money, 4 bid. Cold, 107$. Ex
change—long, 483; short, 485. Governments
I doll bat strong. State Bonds—Tennessee*
better; Loaie£pks and South Carolina* lower;
rest steady.''
Advortlmemente.
ALLCOCK’S
POROUS PIASTERS!
Ask for ALLCOCK’B, and obtain
them, and so avoid miserable IMITA
TIONS.
B. BRANDRETH, PresH,
Office, 294 Canal St,, New York.
nov29-d<fcw3m p
t
44 IN A BOX.
Tallcot’s
MAGIC CUBE.
PRICE REDUCED by - selling 44 pills in a
box, instead of 28 as heretofore.
A mag e nd infallible cure for CHILLS.
ALL FEVERS, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Con
stipation and all malarial diseases. Contains
neither Quinine, Arsenic or Mercury nor other
poison. Price, one dollar per box, at
ALEXANDER’S DRUGSTORE.
COD LIYER OIL WITH LIME,
Prepared by jno. c. baker a co.,
Philadelphia, PharmacAts and Chemiste.
PHYSICIANS and PATIENTS are respect
fully invited to an examination and trial of
thi i preparation, which is confidently exhibited
as THE BEST and most PERFECT EMUL-
SiON of Cod Liver Oil, with Lime, on the mar
ket. Al-o,
HA lil.K'S
Pure Cod Liver Oil,
which is strictly PURE AND FRESH, and
sola in bottles of liberal size, at
ALEXANDER'S DBUQ STORE,
NURSERY APRONS.
Alight rubber-cloth apbon, for
HOUSEHOLD and NURSERY purposes.
Needed in even; family, at
ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE.
nov2s-
Homeopathic Medicines
A NEW LINE.
A COMPLETE assortment of all the lead
ing remedies. From the HOMEOPA
PATHIC PHARMACY of Messrs. Boerioke &
Tafel, New York, approved by Homeopathio
Physicians.
These preparations, embracing SEVENTY
SIX Remedies, of those most usually required
will be kept both in Pellets and in TinStures!
m convenient style fur use in families or under
the adYteo of physicians.
Manual r t directions furnished free. Do
ji tic Med ,al Works and Family oases of
Mi i-i-oefa cised to order.
Humphrey’s Speciies
Also, kept in full assortment, and books of
directions furnished
At ALEXANDER’S Drug Store.
OILS, OILS,
Linseed Oils!
RAW AND BOILED.
Castor Oil! I Lard Oil|
Neatsfoot Oil 1 Sperm Oil J
Tanner's Oil l Kerosine Oil I
Oar OH f | Spindle OH 1
Extra Machine Oils!
AT ALEXANDER'S Drug Store.
Before You Paint
BE SUREYOU FIND THE BEST MATERIAL.
Best Linseed OH.
Best Assortment of Colors, Var
nishes, Paint Brushes and all Painters’
Goods.
Window Glass and Patty.
Best Green for Blinds.
Best Kalsomtne and Whiting at
LOWEST CASH PRICES, 8
Look to your interest 1
elsewhere of JEW
ETT’S WHSTE LEAD ard PURE LINSEED
OIL, at
ALEXANDER’S Drag Store, -
* novS-tf -
jrarpji!
"W"E have jUBt received a nice lot of Fine
CHRYSTAL AND BOHEMIAN GLASS
Toilet Sets and Vases,
DRESSING COMBS,
FINE COMBS,
HAIB BRUSHES,
INFANTS’ BRUSHES,
TOOTH BRUSHES,
NAIL BRUSHES.
CLOTHES BRUSHES,
Smokers’ Sets.
Also, a good assortment of
Lnbin’s 'Er'racts ami Fine "Colognes
TOY TEA SETS, &o„ &o„
AT
W. H. TUTT k REM,SEN’S
STORE
deol7-d<fcwtf
We will start you in a business you can
__ make SSO a week without capital easy
MONEY toT '“her sex. AGENTS
SUPPLY CO,, 261 Bowery, New York, 4w
AGENTS. ? n 7 eßti S te the merits of the lUustra
-IWU ' 1 at ted Weekly, before determining up
on jour work for the fall and winter. The combi
nation for this season surpasses anything heretofore
attempted. Terms sent free on application Ad
dres, OHAS. CLPCAS A 00., 14 Warren Bt„ N, Y.4w
CZ FANCY OABDS, all styles, with name, 10
Sector* P,tld - J - B - HPBIED ’ oo^°’
TRIFLING
WITH A COLD 18 ALWAYS DANGEROUS.
TTSBI
WELLS 1 CARBOLIC TABLETS,
asure remedy for Coughs, and all dli eases of the
Throat, Lungs, Chest and Mucous Membrane.
PUT UP ONLY IN BLUE BOXED.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
C. N. CRITTENTON, 7 6th Avenue, New York. 4w
ATTENTION ALL!
GREAT BANKRUPT SALE OF JEWELRY.
On receipt of 50 cents we will send by mail, post
paid, all of the following pieces of jewelry, viz: 1
Gold Plated Engraved Sleeve Buttons, 1 set
Gold Front Shirt Studs, 1 Collar Stud, 1 Wedding
Bing. 1 801 l Plate Watch Chain and 1 Gent’s Boee
Coral Scarf Pin. We offer this gbeat bargain mere
ly to draw attention to our business, as we have all
Kinds of watches and jewelry at low prices. Send,
for Catalogue.
Cole* & Cos., 735 Broadway, New York City. 4w
THOUSANDS of FAMILIES using them, millions
more unsupplied. Agents sell them and realize large
profits. Send for circulars to G. S. Wauum, Erie.
th dec!s-4w
sr BEADY FOB AGENTS—THE
CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION
DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED.
A graphic pen-picture of its-history, grand build
ing,,, wonderful exhibits, curiosities, great dsys, etc.
Profusely illustrated, thoroughly popular and very
cheap. Is selling immensely. 5,000 AGENTS
WANTED. Send for full particulars. This will if—
the chance of 100 years to coin menev fast. 'Get tsfi
oiily reliable history. wl
CAUTION 88 not decelTed hJ premature books/!
assuming to be “official”,and >.ih"o
what will happen in August and September. 4W
AGENTS WANTED for the STORY ef
CHARLEY ROSS
Written by his father. A complete account of this
moat mysterious abduction and exciting search.—
With Fao-Himile Letters and Illustrations. Outsells
all other books. One agent took 50 orders In one
day. Terms liberal. Address,
Jqhm E. Po-TTKB, A Cos., Pub’s,, PhfladslpM. , w
MASON & HAMLIN
Cabinet Organs
Have Been Unanimously Assigned the
u First Rank
the SEVERAL REQUISITES”
Of such Instruments, at the
U. N. Centennial, 1876.
And are the only organs assigned this rank. Their
superiority la thus declared, not in one or two re
spects only, but in all the important qualities of an
organ. A Medal and Diploma have also been sward
ed them, but medals of equal value were awarded
all articles deemed worthy of recognition, so
many makers can advertise “first medals” or “high
est awards.”
Comparative rank in excellence has betffi deter
mined by the Judges’s Reports alone, in which the
MASON t HAMLIN ORGANS are ninnimwAf,,
signed “thd FIRST RANK in the several requisites"
of cuch instruments, and are the only ones tg-—<
this rank. See Judges’ Reports. This result was
not unexpected, for these organs have uniformly
taken highest awards in inch competitions, there
being lees than six exceptions in hundreds of com
parisons. They were awarded first medals and high
est honors in Paris 1887, Vienna 1878, Santiago lifts.
Philsdelphi, 1876; having thus been awarded high
est honors at every Wor d’s Exhibition at which they
have competed, and being the only American organs
which ever obtained any award in Europe.
NEW STYLES, with improvements exhibited at
the CENTENNIAL; elegant new cases in greet va
riety. Prices very lowest consistent with the best
material and workmanship. Organa sold for cash
or installments, or rented until rent pays. Eveiy
organ warranted to give entire satisfaction to every
reasonable purchaser or the m°oey returned. Illus
trated Catalogues sent free. Bils._ _ '
MASON A HAMLIN ORGARmttr 1 * 4 Tremont
Street, Boston; So and
Adame
9
IN ew Advertisomente,
Elegant Holiday Presents.
AinsiateHn.
•* o. BoanwoN. hidden A bates.
ft 0. ROBINSON & GO.
Low Prices, Quick Sales.
of A, T . new andSmlng
O®QAN, the mostßeauti
xui Combination of Musical Tones” oan be
used separately or in connection with either or
all, the stops of the Organ. Manufactured by
the celebrated Mason A Hamlin Organ Cos.,
patented in Europe and Amerioa.
PIANOS AND ORGANS.
THE most oomplete a„d attractive assort
ment south of Baltimore THE BFsir
ERS ’J HE^ LOWEH “P ic E™SOto
pamons'oMh* * Verd,ot #t the numeroua
AUGUSTA MUSIC HOUSE.
New York wholesale prices to oash buyers.
Small cash payments monthly will Becure an
Wees' 1 Plan ° ° r ° rg4n lowest Factory
Latest Publications Orders Promptly Filled
at Publishers' Pnoes. Best Italian Strings
Musio*House' 118 pertainin ß to a First Class
Pianos and Organs for Rent.
Tuning mid Repairing by a First Class Work
man of 26 years praotioal experience. Orders
from the country will receive prompt attention.
6. 0. ROBINSON A CO,,
, 86SBiHad Bt.
deol7dtw<few6g>
DRUGS HE MEDICINES
-A-BE being regularly received, fresh and
pure. Particular attention given to the pre
scription department. By
Dr. FRANK J. MOSES,
_ 280 Broad street.
Brushes, etc.
B SHES of all kinds, a great variety for
Toilet and Kitohen, at
Dr. FRANK J. MOSES’,
Patent Medicines.
-A.LL of the Proprietary Medicines of the
present day, always on hand, at
Dr. FRANK J. MOSES’,
SOAPS AND PERFUMERY,
SoAPS, Cologne and Extraots, both Foreign
and Domestic, a large assortment always to be
found, at Dr. FRANK J. MOSES’,
For Christmas.
select assortment of Toilet
iote, Vases, Violet and " Bouquet Stands, in
Glass and Bohemian Ware; small Toilet Sets
for &bristmaa for childrens’ presents,
sold low, by " ■+'
Dr. jPMI^jrffIOSES,
a^nj'” B **'* o Broad Street,
IV lr*" u 1
fiinwllMfJßrY I f Jr lu Hll “^|i
cants on re
one of ttfe I
■ contains
W descript i chh s fp rfees
# ant * directions for planting
i||l Flower flint 16
irm&r* Gardener & Florist* I 'Address"
Cr D.U. FEBB7 Is CO,, Detroit, Rich.
Four Abridged Priw4 Catalogae FREE to >ll Applicants,
deo24AJan4
Notice! Notice! Take Notice!
Valuable Plantation fob Sale on a Obboit
of Ten (10) Yeabs, with Intebest at Seven
Peb Cent. Peb Annum, at Eight
($8) Dollabs Peb Acre.
THE Subscriber offers for sale on a credit
of ten (10) years, with interest at seven per
oent. per annum, for eight (98) dollars per acie,
his ohoioe and valuable plantation of (1.100)
eleven hundred aorea, lying in Taliaferro
county, six (6) miles south of Crawfordville.
The place contains an extensive variety of
soils—rioh, gray, red and mulatto—red pre
dominating, a large portion of which is in cul
tivation, well watered, admirably timbered, is
exceedingly healthy, and desirabte either for a
cotton or stock farm. Titles perfeot and oom
plete. I will sell the whole to one person, or
cut it up to suit purchasers. For fuller infor
mation apply to Mr. Seaborn J. Jones, who re
sides within ons mile of it, and will show it to
purchasers; or to the Hon. Jas. F. Beid, Craw
fordville, Ga.; or to the Subscriber, at Cedar
Town, Polk county, Ga.
WILLIAM PEEK. Sen.
November 29, 1876. decl-wßt
and STATIONARY
LiZ • iSAW. HOUR AND GRIST MILLS
Jv, ./Without Path-nTT:
SiSS?
aps-wly
Platt Brothers,
OMETAMGJEPAETMEIIT !!
A FULL assortment of METALIC CASK
ETS and CASES at all prioes.
Koeewood Caskets and Cases.
Children and Infants Enameled Casket*.
Broadcloth and Velvet Covered Caekets.
COFFINS of every description always on
hand.
We have a Competent Undektakeb to take
oharge of Funerals and attend calls at all
hours, day and night.
Orders during the week and Sunday morn
ings until eleven o’olock will be left at the
Store.
Sunday evenings and night the orders left
with the Undertaker at his house on Ellis
street directly in rear of the store, opposite
[*• notary: or at either of our dwelling
nonej Greene street, will meet with prompt
AUwders by telegraph will be attended to
with dispatch, Qyl6tAw
88. MUSLIM PILLS.
IF your bead aohes, take two or three pills
on going to bed.
If your liver is not toting properly, and you
feel dull and drowsy, three pills at night will
clear the system of vitiated bile, and make yon
feel like anew person.
If yon have a pain in the side or back, it
probably arises from a torpid liver. Stir it to
action by taking a dose of these Liver Pills.
If your bowels are oonstipated, two pills at
bed time will set yon all right.
If your food does not digest, take two or
three pills twioe a week at bed time, until
three or four doses have been taken, and yon
will find yourself entirely relieved of these
disagroeable symptoms.
If your complexion is sallow and your eyes
discolored, a fall dose of these pills will impart
a roseate bne to your cheeks, and give your
eye the brilliancy of perfect health.
"if you have Cumin aim Fever, take three of
the Liver Pills at bed time, after the ohill has
passed off.lf they should not operate thorough
ly before breakfast, take one more pill. Dur
ing the day, take about 16 grains of qninine,
in doses of 6 grains eaoh, at intervals of two
hours. Repeat the qninine for two or three
days. About the sixth night, take another
dose of the pills, and on the seventh day take
16 grains of quinine js before.
By following this treatment oarefnlly, ne
one need suffer from this distressing com
plaint.
In any and all diseases where a cathartic
medicine is required, these Pills will be fefend
the safest and best remedy before the pub
* BARRETT A LAND are the General
Agents for tho United States. 008-tf
JAMES HUNTER,
BROKER,
AND DEALER IN
fcJjloHthern Securities,
Street, Savannah, Geo.
■D 32 PINE STREET,
YORK.
Legal Notions
TALIAFERRO COUNTY.
Petition for Exemption or Personalty ant
Realty.
TALIAFERRO COUNTY—
Marv F December 2, 1878.
Mry E. Evans, of said county. baa, nlind to m.
®* erDp^on Pecsonalty, and settin apart and
valuation of Homestead, and I will i &ss
m o^®r’a°m S “ tUrdtty ’ A
—dec6-w2 ’ CHARLEB A. BEASLEY,
LINCOLN COUNTY.
Lincoln County Sheriff’s Sale.
Will be sold before the Court House
• . m Lincoln ton, Linooln oounty,
ueorgia. within th© legal hours of sal© on + l --*-
FIRST TUESDAY IN* FEBRUARY
following property, to-wit: jmk
Seventeen acres of land,
said county, adjoining the town n^Ecolnton
P r °P ert y orthapley B.
Strother, to satisfy a mortgage fi. fa. in favor
str^h m6B Fl,z P atrick ▼- Chapley B.
Strother. Said property pointed out in said fl.
fa. Notice served on defendant according to
n i Z P - WILLINGHAM,
a,gaSSa w
Liaealn Cenaty Sheriff's Sale,
WILL be sold before the Court House
door, in Lincolnton, Lincoln county,
Georgia,on ttie first Tuesday in JANUARY
next, within the legal hours of Bale, the fol
lowing property, to-wit:
Two Mules, two Bay Mares, five hundred
bushels Cotton Seed, more or less ;■ one hun
dred and flf tv bushels Com, more or less : eight
honored pounds of Fodder, more or less; ten
head Cattle, one Bedstead and Feath r Bed
one lot Bed Furniture, six Chairs, one Cooking
Stove and Cooking Utensils, nineteen head
Hogs, six hundred pounds Seed Cotton, one
Buggy and Harness. Levied on as the proper
ty of Peyton W. Sale, Jr., by virtue of a fi. fa.
issued from the Superior Court of said countv.
in favor of James W. Barksdale, administrator,
vs. Peyton W. Sale, Jr.
Property pointed out by plaintiff.
. , __ Z- S. WILLINGHAM,
deol-wtd Sheriff L. O.
Petition for Exemption or Personalty.
LINOOLN COUNTY—
Court of Ordinary )
At Chambers, December 7 1876 f
me tot? Exemption of a®
deol4-w2 B ' F - TATOM,
_deeH-wa_ Ordinary L, C.
. SORIYEN COUNTY.
Petition fop Exemption of Personalty.
Q_EORGIi, SORIVEN COUNTY—
William H, Jobnaon, of said county, has aunlied to
me for Exemption of Personalty, and setting apart
and valuation of Hojnestead, and I will pass upon
the aame. at my office, inSylvania, at 10 o’clock a
“• 011 tbs Bth day of JANUARY, 1877 ’
dec2A-w2t OUHTIS HUMPHREYS, 8r„
_qecAA-w2t Ordinary S. O.
Q_EORGIA, SCRIVEN COUNTY—
Ordinart’s Office, December 22d, IT6.
William R. Froeman has applied to me for Ex-
Personalty and setting apart and valua
*Y > :?. °t Homestead, andwl will pass upon the same
Jj, l - 0 °, clock , a. in., on the Bth day of JANUARY,
1877, at my office, in Sylvaniai*
o OUKTIB HUMPHREYS, Sr.,
-aem-wa Ordinary,
aEORGIA, SORIVEN OOUNTY-Whereas, J. W.
Bryan applies for Letters of Admiuistratlon
u “ estate of Mary A. Bryan, deceased:
These are, therefore, to cite all concerned to be
f®'tamSa’Sw 4^ o ? o ! oll or before the 2d Monday
In JANUARY, 1877, to show cause, if any they can.
®Md letters should not bo granted.
vember 27th, y iß76. and aU<l ° ffl ° ial si ® nature > this N °-
. . .. ’ CURTIS HUMPHREYS, Sr.,
. deefrr-td Ordinary.
COLUMBIA COUNTY.
COLUMBIA SHERIFF’S SALE.
WILL be sold before the Court House
door, in the town of Appling, Columbia
county, on the FIRST TUESDAY in JANUARY
next, within the legal hours of sale, the fol
lowing property, to-wit:
One thousand acres of land, the property of
Marion MoDaniel, adjoining lands of 8. A.
Blanohard, E. J. Dunn, Mrs. Merriwether,
Mrs. Mary Bolder and others. Levied on as
the property of Marion McDaniel to satisfy the
following fi. fas. issued from March term,
1876, Columbia Superior Court; one in favor
°f Wm. M. and M. P. Reese, vs. T. A. Blanch
ard and Manon McDaniel; one in favor of Z.
MoCord vs. Mancu.
Pollard & Cos. vs.
favor of Pollard & Marion McDaniel; one fl
and W. C. Wo §Mr Cos. vs. Marion
; one in favor of William Wifl
Manon McDaniel and Thomas fl
ir ; and one m favor of James Aj ill fl
1 j krion MoDaniel. Property pointed otfl
by defendant, Marion McDaniel, and uulifl
given acoording to law.
I J. M. TANKERSLEY, Sheriff. 1
December 7, 1876. der9-w4
EXECUTOR’S SALE.
UNDER an order of the Court of Ordinary
of Columbia county, will be sold, before
the Court House door in Lincolnton, Lincoln
county, ,pu the First Tuesday in JANUARY.
next. Wfween the legal hours of sale, thsfli
valuable trac' of land, lying on the waters cfl
Soap Creek, containing nine hundred and onfl
acres, more or less, adjoining lands of Mrfl
Guilat, Simms, Airs. Oybert and other* jfl
which is a valuable Gold and Copper mJH
Sold as a part of tho real ottate dEI.hJH
George M. Magruder, deceesed, of fkilffifl
county, for tho bonoiil of tho heirs atidflßl
tors of said decoas.-d. 'Joints
September 29, 1876.
JOSIAH RTOvJH
Petltleu for Kiemptlon of IVraonnll
Realty.
Ordinary’h Office fob Said
Columbia Cos., October 6,
COLUMBIA OOUNTY.
R. A. Palmer applies to me for
Personalty anil setting apart and valuat ou ot |H
Bt€aa, ana I will pass upon the Hantvt at
a. m., on the 30lh day of DECEMBER,
w2 U ' DrdH
STATE OF GEORGIA, COLUMBIA
LETTERS OF
Emma A. Bailey applies to mo for
ters of Administration on tho estate of
Bailey, late of said county, deceaaed— VB
These are, therefore, to cite and admonlßh, all adfl
singular, the kindred and creditors of said
to be and appear at my office on or before the flrstl
Monday in JANUARY, 1877, to show cause, if
any they can, why aaid Letters should not bo grant
ed.
Witness my hand and official signature this Gth
day of November, 1876. D. O. MOObE,
novl4-lawtilljan Ordinary.
"PETITION FOR LETTERS OF DISMISSION,
JT —STATE OF GEORGIA, COLUMBIA OOUN
TY.- Whereas, 8. O. and John T. Lam bin, Admin
istrators on the estate of John Lamkiu, deceased
applies to me for Letters of Dismission—
This is, therefore, to cite all persons concern ed*
kindred and creditors, to be and: appear at my
office, within the time prescribed by law, to show
cause, if any they can, why said Letters should
not be granted.
Given under my hand and official signature, at
office in Columbia, this 6th day of December, 1876.
dec9ww3m D. C. MOORE, Ordinary.
ANTOINE POULLAIN,
Cotton Factor,
AUGUSTA GEORGIA,
WILL continue the business at his Fire-
Proof Warehouse, corner of Jackson
and Reynold streets, and will give his striot
personal attention to the sale of cotton con
signed to him.
Consignments respectfully solicited.
sep6-Bmw
Georgia, Newton iouuly—Superior
I'onrt, September Term, 1876.
Present—His Honor JOHN I. HALL, Judge.
Rosa Wadsworth 1 Libel for
vs. V Rule to perfect ser-
Wm. L. Wadsworth. ) vice.
IT appearing to the Court that the defendant
does not reside in this county nor in this
State; it is, on motion of p'aintiff’a counsel,
ordered that sa'd defendant appear and answer
at the next term of this Court, else that caid
ease be considered in default, and the plaintia
be allowed to proceed. And it is fu ther or
dered, that this ru'e be published in the Au
gusta Chronicle and Sentinel, a public ga
zette published in this State, once a month for
four months. CLARK A PACE,
Plaintiff’s Attorney.
A true extract from the minutes of Newton
Superior Court, September adjourned term,
1876. AARON K. RICHARDSON,
, declO-lam4m Clerk.
W. H. Gregg, Prest. F. W. Rockwell, Beo v
Mm Wliti Lead ■ Go.
STRICTLY
§LEAD§
W -Wa'chFd *?/
N^fp/
Every package of this Company’s brand of
Strictly Pure White Lead bears the following
guarantee:
“ The Whits Lead contained in this
package Is guaranteed by the Manu
facturers, the SOUTHERN WHITE
LEAD CO., Ht. Louis, Mo., to contaiD
no adulteration whatever. It Is com
posed entirely of perfectly Pure Car
bonate of Lead and Linseed Oil, and
Is sold subject to Chemical Analysis
and the Blow Pipe Test.”
The name of this Company is placed only
upon Strictly Pue Lead. It is not placed
upon a second or inferior quality. So parties
purchasing White Lesd branded “SOUTHERN
COMPANY ” are absolutely sure of obtaining a
Perfectly Pure Article.
For sale by Dealers in Paints and Oils
thronghont the West and South,
And exclusively in Augusta by
E. BARRY & Co>,
0015 610 Druggists, 261 Broad St.
MOUNT VERNON HOUSE,
FOB the accommodation of Transient
Boarders, 150 WALKER STREET, near
Union Depot, Augusta, Ga. Meals can be bad
at all hours. ’The best accommodation to
travelers and those desiring to stop in our
city for a few days.
deoS-eodlm MRS. E. J. ELLISON,