Newspaper Page Text
(Chronicle and jSntimil.
WEDNESDAY - JANUARY 17, 1877/
THE STATE.
THB PEOPLE AND THE PAPERS’
The people are sick of elections.
Babies in Talbotton are plentiful.
Cartersville has a female seminary.
There will be no inauguration ball.
Hswkinsville is to bare anew bank.
Conyers bays rabbits at 10c. per head.
Atlanta’s cigarette trade is enormons.
Dalton has had, tbns far, fonr snows.
Qriffln City Council has a contested
seat.
Franklin had bnt one Christmas homi
cide.
Forsyth too, contemplates a domino
party.
Conyers calls for a Knights of Honor
lodge.
Wild docks swarm in North Oeorgia
streams.
Bears in Rabon county are on the
rampage.
Hon. H. P. Bell is not a candidate for
Clerk of the House.
The Building aud Loan Association
of Griffin will soon be wound up.
Emigrant agents are again after ne
groes in Coweta county to go West.
The Athens Watchman renews the
war on “patent outside” newspapers.
MV. John Neal, falling npon a slippe
ry sidewalk in Atlanta, broke his thigh.
Quite a neat sheet is the Swainsboro
Herald. Success to Messrs. Medlock k
Cos.
Gainesville has spent what she pleases
to term a sort of “ Crsytalline Christ
mas.”
The colored troops fongbt nobly for
the Spalding county Democratic nomi
nees,
Mr. Jake A. Baker, of Cartersville,
has gone to the law school at Lebannon,
Tenn.
Mr. J. E. Craig, Jr., of Lawrenceville,
had a slight attack of meningitis re
cently.
Jim Garlrogton, a Conyers negro, was
found frozen to death last Saturday
night.
The Presiding Elder of the Griffin
Circuit made his first quarterly round
in a sleigh.
Judge A. L. Davidson, of Conyers,
has gone to the Inebriate Asylum, Co
lumbia, S. C.
Mr. Aleck Lowe, of Dooly county,
was crushed to death in a cotton screw
one day last week.
We think to have traoed in the last
Athens Georgian the magic tonch of Dr.
E. Dorsette Newton.
On an average it took threo stout men
in Thomas oonuty to take care of one
little boy at the circus.
Mr. J. W. Lindsay has decided to re
main in Newton county instead of go
ing West. Sensible man.
the Conyers Courier thinks that
school teachers are becoming aa plenti
ful as defeated candidates.
Hod. A. H. Cox, of Troupe, is said to
be the finest billiard player in the next
House of Representatives.
Socrates Pruitt, of Athens, has ar
rived in Atlanta, and the wheels of leg
islation begins to m ve on.
The oldest inhabitant not only gives
it np but takes more pine top than ever
to keep up the animal heat.
Though muoh has been injured, it
seems to be supposed that but little
wheat has been thus far killed.
Miss Julia Callaway, of Oglethorpe
county, was married to Mr. Wm. Stev
art, of Augusta, ou the 4th inst.
The present is the youngest Legislature
ever assembled in Georgia, there being
six members uuder 26 years of age.
The grounds of the Coweta Agricul
tural aud Mechanical Association have
been sold at sheriffs sale for $1,300.
The Cartersville Express is willing to
draw straws between Norwood aud Ben
Hill aud let Ben Hill hold the straws.
Malcolm .Stafford, of the Forest News,
who has enough for awhile, is real glad
that “this season of treatiug is over.”
The LaGrange Reporter: "We oan
forgive Joe Bffiwn a great deal, but we
can’t elect him Senator—no, no, not tor
Joe."
Siuee Gautt has become ensconced in
liis new quarters at Lexiugton, he re
iusps to forward us his aristocratic
Eoho.
Rev. J. M. Brittain, one f the best
eduoators in Georgia, has full charge of
the Conyers Male aud Female High
School.
Marrying m the oountry. is becoming
very frequent, and the oldest inhabitant
never knew of such a demand for his
daughters.
The Cartersville Express says that
our old frieud, Maj. W. H, Lucas, is
now luxuriating in a severe cold in Au
gusta, Ga.
The Atlanta Telegram says that
Messrs. Walsh, Black and Johnson, of
Richmond, are all Smith men for the
Benatorship.
Cherokee buzzards fly around with
bells on their necks. Cornelius Willing
ham considers it a sure sign of the re
turn of Spring.
Recognizing the snggestivenessof that
.Arctic crook in the goosebone,tbe Gaines
viiJe City Council has appointed a com
mittee on stoves.
WbCi.' Ben Hill coases troubling and
the beautiful snow melts away, many of
our country exchanu.es will have to fall
back on “half sheetly” editions.
A correspondent in the Newnan Her
ald pnt the matter in this light: “There
ia much marryiug going on, and we may
expect squally times for tbs year 1877.”
The Gainesville Eagle has anew local
who oommeuces by telling about sleet
tearing up shade trees by the roots. We
see lots of glory in the oandle for that
man.
The Early News thinks that if Geor
gia physicians had to go before examin
ers before being admitted to the prao
tioe, a good many qnaoks and pretend
ers would retire.
10,000 California salmou eggs were re
cently placed in the Etowah river, near
Carte/sville, and Pleas Shelman, of the
Rix House, fondly dreams of the day
wben his bill-of-fare shall wiggle with
new life. *
Robert Emnictt Mitchell, Esq., Uni
versity medalist, ouutenmal class, is
imildiug up a first class seminary in
Lawrenceville. Bob E. is just the kind
of man we would pick out iu aorowd for
that sort of thing.
FROM COLUMBIA.
Snwmh of t'lmutbrrlain’a Tratimanj Before
■be Smalr ( owroitlpr —Hr la Expoaed an
Ilia Own Evidence na n Malignant Faul
tier—Judge Cooke's Determination te Brine
Him (o Justice.
t/ijwiai to the Journal of Commerce. ]
Colombia, January 12.—The Senate
Committee will leave here to-night, many
Democratic witnesses that were in wait
ing not being allowed to appear. Cham
berlain was allowed the widest latitude
in his testimony, being permitted to in
troduce ex parte affidavits, letters with
out signatures, stray slips from news
papers, etc.
He stated, among other things, that
he possessed evidence of the existence
of over three hundred rifle clnba. His
cross-examination completely demolish
ed his evidence, and he was forced to ac
knowledge many damaging facts and
driven into sundry hard corners. He
could uot, for instauee, account for the
large amouut of arms and ammunition
distributed. From his own statement
there is at present at least 60,000 stand
of arms in the hands of negroes.
• Not a half dezen oases of intimidation
on the part of Democrats iu the State
have been proved, and there has been
uo evidence ofa a single Georgian or
North Carolinian voting in this State.
The Radical witnesses from Laurens re
fused utterly to testify to any intimida
tiou or fraud, whereas Christiancy and
Cameron were woefully disappointed.
Chamberlain seemed depressed and
low spirited when asked whether he
thought bis government wonld stand if
the United States troops were withdrawn.
He said that he did uot know, that he
regarded the whole matter as being n
the hands of Congress. His oross-exam-
illation elicited from him, iu addi
tion to the fact already stated, ae
acknowledgment of his inaction in thn ’
HareL'urg and Ellenton matters, and
also tit,* fact of a conference with Grant,
(Cameron aud other lights regarding the
introduction of troops in this State. He
was also mads to acknowledge that none
of the Judge’s sustained him but Wig
gin, and his formerly expressed opinion
of Wiggin was placed upon record as
part of the evidence.
Chamberlain was also -forced to ac
knowledge that at the time he declared
<oml process could not be executed that
be hsal not applied to any peace offioer
or made any effort to have the process
and that he had never called
npon whites for aid in execution of laws.
Judge Cooke declares that if his grand
jury brings ia aa indictment against
<Chaihberlam be will issue a bench war
warot for him. Sheriff Dent will doubt
less execute the warrant, and, if so, we
may look out for sport.
PUT HIM OCT.
A Minnesota Kepablirma Elwtsr U Not a
Mtaktr at the CalteA States—Enalat.
lias* ia Order.
•Hff. Paul, January 13.— 1 u the Benate,
to-day, Mr. Wilkinson, Democrat, offer
ed the following resolution : That the
committee oa judiciary be instructed to
investigate into the eligibility of the
several Presidential electors and that
the said committee a hail have power to
send for persons and papers. The facts
which give rise to this resolution mbb
that A. K. Tinsett, one of the electors,
it is claimed, is not legally a citizen of
the United States.
SOUTH CAROLINA.
PALMETTO NEWS LEAVES.
The Saluda river has been frozen over.
A Greenville man has put up 140 tons
of ioe.
The Senatorial committee labors in
secret.
Oharleeton had a pigeon match yes
terday.
Chicken thieves in Sumter county are
plentiful.
Broad river, at last aoconnts, remain
ed frozen over.
The Carolina Jockey Club will not
postpone their races.
Hon. W. H. Reedish, of Orangeburg,
has been seriously ill.
There are eight applioauta for the
Camden postmaatership.
The Rural Carolinian, for want of
patronage, has suspended.
An attempt to break the Snmter jail,
the other night, was foiled.
Three men iu Chesterfield were acci
dentally shot Christmas day.
Mr. Jas. Van Tassel dangles forth in
Orangeburg as County Auditor.
An ex-trial justice iu Orangeburg has
been arrested for stealing cotton.
Daring four days last week, a Charles
ton sportsman killed 138 wookcock.
Three Germans were elected to the
City Council of Walterboro recently.
Professional colored troops tap the
street car money boxes in Charleston.
The sheriff of Richland has adver
tised over 400 lots in the city of Colum
bia.
A Columbia voter who deposited six
tickets in one box has been jailed for ten
days.
There are about 165 students in the
South Carolina Univerity one-third
white.
Columbia oitizena are taking sub
scriptions to the Palmetto Orphan
Home.
Rev. J. It. Riley has been elected to
the Presidency of the Lanrensville Male
Academy.
Rev. J. Rodgers, of Kershaw oounty,
married eighteen couples daring the
year 1876.
The Greenville theological students
whipped oat the whole town recently,in a
snow-ball fight.
The deaths of Mr. Willis Spann and
Mrs. Elizabeth Pringle, of Snmter conn
ty, are announced.
There is not a vacant dwelling honse
in Camden, and at least half a dozen
families are on the lookont for one.
The Spartanburg and Rntherford
narrow gange railroad will soon be
chartered in the North Carolina Legis
lature.
Mr. Thomas H. Blaokwell, of Colum
bia, Assistant Internal Revenue Collector
and Depnty United States Marsha', died
in that city last Monday.
Mackey now threatens Chamberlain
that unless he withdraws from the con
test, doenments which will min his Ex
cellency, will be produced.
The Colombia Register states that
quite a number of the rump statesmen
are “foolin’ ’round Clumby.” Their
purpose cannot be di lined.
As the Russian fleet will not winter at
Port Royal, the Augusta young ladies
will not have an opportunity of doing
the German on a royal corrette.
The Lanrensville Herald, full of
originality, asks : “ Will Mr. Tilden be
inaugurated ?’’ We can’t answer right
away ; we have sent a man to Washing
ton to see about it.
When a Spartanbnrg politician is
found in the ditch, discussing Hamp
ton’s letter, longitudinally, the good
people suggest that he is “pilgrimized”
and then— “they take the pilgrim
home.”
The editor of the Carolina Spartan
has just received his Christmas oake,
baked some time in December. As it
seems to be embalmed he will probably
not slioe it nntil the electoral votes are
connted.
The tax payers of Newberry, Lexing
ton, Richland, OraDgeburg, Darlington,
Abbeville, Anderson, York, Spartan
burg and Aiken have been heard from.
They will yield the tribute penny to
Hampton only.
Ex-Treasnrer Cardozo announces that
the payment of interest on bonds and
stooks has been postponed on account
of the unavoidable delay in the levying
and collection of taxes. Why, yes; we
feared as muoh.
At ;a meeting in New Prospect, last
week, an orator got up and exclaimed :
If Wade Hampton is not our Governor,
then we would as soon have Gladstone,
Bismark, Miers, the Sultan of Turkey,
Sitting Bull of the Black Hills, or the
shade of Aristotle.
The Charleston News says : When the
emancipation procession on Monday
passed the Hampton banner, suspended
across Broad street, near Church, the
oolored companies with arms, came to
a carry. This was very complimentary
to Gov. Hampton.
We heartily thank our Aiken contem
porary for tbe following.— Established
1785.—This is what greets us this morn
ing, and every morning when we look
npon the faoe and form of our venerable
and respected friend, the Augusta
Chronicle and Sentinel. Who can
realize it? Ninety-two years of age,
and yet so young, hale and hearty I It
speaks well for the newspaper business
and the enterprising town where our
friend first saw the light aud has sinoe
lived and prospered. In eight years he
will be able to celebrate his oentennial
year. May he live to see it and many
more, ia the wish of his mauy friends
in this region, and every other place
where his face aud sterling merit is
known.— Courier Journal.
DISASTERS ON THE DEEP.
Pirates and (lorgea—Fire and Ice—A Cuban
Pirate ship Burned and Deaerted—Diana*
troua Ice Gorge at Cincinnati.
Washington, January 13.—A tele
gram from Havana, dated 12th, and re
ceived in this city, says that the former
Spanish merchant steamer Montezuma,
captured by Cuban insurgents near
Porto Rico and converted into a pirate
vessel called Cespedes, has been burned
by the Cuhan pirates, at the near ap
proach of the Spanish war steamer Jorge
Juan, that was giving her ohase. Before
the Jorge Juan reaohed the burning ves
sel the pirates had fled in boats to the
nearest coast, which is believed to be
that of Venezuela. The Jorge Joan
pioked up and took on board twenty
fojir of the former orew of the Montezu
ma, oappjred and kept as prisoners by
the Cubans.
Cincinnati, January 12.— The ice in
the river started again about midnight,
but was soon gorged again. The steam
er Andes was sunk, bnt no other boats
were injured. The weather has turned
colder, and if it continues no further
movement of the ioe is expeoted. The
Andes is valued at $24,000.
Cincinnati, January 13. Cold and
cloudy; uo further indications of the
breakiug gorge here. It is thought that
the steamer Andes, sunk last night, can
l>e raised if there is no further move
ment in the ice. She has only a quarter
cargo aboard, which oan be saved. The
damaged stern-wheel steamer, Mary
Miller, was forced aground, but the po
sition of the Andes protects her from
the ice. The Golden pity bad a narrow
escape, the ioe forcing her hard against
the steamer Telegraph, crushing the
fautail of the Gold oitr and pushing
her hard aground. The Ludlow, ferry
boat, was carried away from moorings
and swept down to a bend south of the
city. Moving ice at midnight. It is
estimated that the damage to shipping
is over SIOO,OOO.
Boston, January 13.- In the United
States District Court, libel, plead by
counsel for John Maguire, of New York,
owner of the stenmer Montgomery,
against the steamer Seminole; damages
were laid at from $58,000 to 360,000.
The libel is to the receiver for loss of a
vessel by collision with the Seminole
off Cape May. Tbe ebarge is that the
accident was caused by negligence on
the part of tbe commander of the Semi
nple. An attachment was placed on the
Semiaele, which is at this port.
THE iUJYAL CORVETTE,
The Shetland With limed D#ke Ajrxii Ar
rive* at Nerielk—Salate* and Anchor*.
Norfolk, January 13.— Tbe Russian
frigate Snetland arrived here this morn
ing and anchored near Fort Norfolk.
Upon her arrival she sainted, which was
returned by the United States steamer
Powhattan. The Snetland ia command,
ed by the Grand Duke Alexis, and ia
the flag ship of the Russian squadron.
Admiral Boutakoff, commanding daring
the afternoon, the Grand Duke came
ashore and paid a visit to Baron Shish
kin, the Baaoau Minister. It is under
stood that he will apt tajk£ up quarters
on shore, but will remain on Lo*#d the
ship most of the time. The Grand
Duke Constantins 4 also oh th,e Suet
land. Ha ia about eighteen years old,
and is the second son of the Rmpeyor’s
brother Constantine, and brother-in-law
of the King of Greeoe. The other ves
sels belonging to the fleet heve not yet
arrived.
Tm*w* E* Ksite.
Company C, general seryioe, United
States army, Brevet {jientenant-Colonel
H. C. Corbin, commanding, from Aiken,
S. C., for Colnmbns, Ohio, passed
through Augusta yesterday afternoon.
Nobody ahonld go to church, or pub
i Uc meeting, hacking away and disturb
ing the preacher or orator with their
| cough. Use Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup at
once ; it only ooeta 25 cents a bottle.
I The Mississippi election ia now under
investigation.
Local and Business Notices.
DISEASE GROWS APACE,
Like an ill wind, and cannot be mas
tered too early. What ia a trifling attack
of sikneee to-day may, if unattended to,
become a serious case in a week. Small
ailments should be nipped in the bud
before they blossom into full blown
maladies. If this advioe were attended
to, many a heavy bill for medical attend
ance might be avoided. When the liver
is disordered, the stomach foul, the
bowels obstructed, or the nerves dis
turbed, resort should at once be had to
that supreme remedy, Hostetter’s Sto
mach Bitters, a few doses of which will
restore healthy action and put the sys
tem in perfect order. It is a wise pre
caution to keep this incomparable pre
ventive in the honse, since it checks,
with unrivalled promptitude, disorders
which breed others far more dangerous,
and in their latest developments are
themselves often fatal. jan7-d6Awl
J, H. Alexander has just received a
large supply of the Globe Flower Gough
Syrup, so long and favorably known in
this community. A remedy endorsed
by our great and good men deserves
the attention of those suffering from
Gough, Gold and Lung affections. Pre
vent Consumption, oure from Congb
and Golds by taking tbe Globe Flower
Cough Syrup. Recommended by the
Hod. Alexander H. Stephens, Hon.
James M. Smith and ex-Gov. Brown, of
Georgia. Their testimonials in book
“ Pearls for the People” at Alexander’s
Drug Store. Book Free.
A splendid assortment of French
Candy and fine Oake, at Sayers’, 316
Broad street, opposite the Planters’ Ho
tel,
44 ll\ A BOX.
Tallcot’s
MAGIC CURE.
PRICE REDUCED by selling 44 pills in i
box, instead of 28 ss heretofore.
▲ magic and infallible cure for -CHILLS,
ALL FEVERB, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Con
stipation and all malarial diseases. Contains
neither Qainine, Arsenic or Mercury nor other
poison. Prioe, one dollar per box, at
ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE.
COD LIVER OIL WITH LIME,
Prepared by jno. o. baker a co.,
Philadelphia, Pharmacists and Chemists.
PHYSICIANS and PATIENTS are respect
fully invited to an examination and trial of
this preparation, which is confidently exhibited
as THE BEST and most PERFECT EMUL
SION of Cod Liver Oil, with Lime, on the mar
ket. Abo, .
BAKER’S
Pure God Liver Oilj
which is STEion.r PURE AND FRESH, and
sold in bottles of liberal size, at
ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE,
OILS, OILS,
Jewett’s Linseed Oils!
RAW AND BOILED.
a
Castor Oil I Lard OUt
Neatsfoot Oil! Sperm Oil t
Tanner’s OU I Kerosine Oil I
Car Oil ! Spindle Oil !
Extra Machine Oils l
AT ALEXANDER'S Drug Store.
NURSERY APRONS.
ALIGHT BUBBER-CLOTH APRON, tor
HOUSEHOLD and NURSERY purposes.
Needed in every family, at
ALEXANDER’S DRUG STORE,
nov2s-
Homeopathic Medicine*
A NEW LINE.
A COMPLETE assortment of all the lead
ing remedies. From the HOMEOPA
PAI'HIC PHARMACY of Messrs. Boerioke k
T&fel, 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 Tinctures,
in convenient style for use In families or under
the advice of phyeiciaus.
Manual r f directions furnished free. Do
ji tic Med ial Works and Family cases of
>li l' i 'os fu nised to order.
Humphrey’s Specifies
Also, kept In full assortment, and books of
directions furnished
At ALEXANDER'S Drug Store.
Before You Paint
BE SURE YOU FIND THE BEST MATERIAL.
_A_T Alexander's Drug Store are the
Best White Lead.
Best Linseed OU.
Best Assortment of Colors, Yar
nishes, Paint Brushes and all Painters’
GoodSi
Window Glass and Putty. *
Best Green for Blinds.
Best Kalsomine and Whiting at
LOWEST CASH PRICES.
Look to your interest!
Read the advertisement elsewhere of JEW
ETT’S WHITE LEAD and PURE LINSEED
OIL, at
ALEXANDER’S Drug Store#
novs-tf
Plows! Plows! Plows!
FOR SALE BY
HENRY MOORE,
At Moore k Co.’s Old Stand,
249 Broad Street, Augusta, 6a*
ADJUSTABLE Don Foot Plows, Scooter
Stocks; Avery’s Flows, Sweeps. Ames’
Plows. Soootfrs and Shovels, Brinly Plows,
Turn Shovels, Dixie Plows. Lap Rings, Far
mers' Friend Plows Grsss Bods, Granger's
Friend and Heel Pins, Watts’ Plows, Trace
Links. Plow Gear, Trace Chains, Cotton Plant
ers, Plow Bridles. Cotton Harrows, Back
Bands. Wagon Box Bods and Bark Collars and
Wagon Standard Bods, Hoes. jan!4-lwd2w
IJayiag Purchased the Stock
9¥
MEDICINES AND THB FIXTURES
OF
F. D. KENRICK,
W f propose conducting a first-class Retail
and Prescription Drug Store, at his old stand,
opposite the Planters' Hotel, where we shall
keep a supply of Pure Drugs, Medicines and
Ohpmipgls.
SpapiXi attpntfQft yill be given to the pre
paring of Prescn.'tiGUi, %s ye shall always
use the purest of Drugs. Use only prepara
tions of full strength, and be prepared to fill
prescriptions at all hours, day and night, asd
ou Sunday. We solicit a liberal patronage.
Mr. F. D. Kenrick, whom we have placed in
charge of this store, is well known as a
thorough and competent pharmacist and the
public may rely upon having their orders
promptly executed. BARRETT k LAND.
soT|l|E.
Augusta, Ga., January 2,1877.
I have this day disposed of my entire stock
of Drugs, Medicines an i Store Fixtures to
Messrs. Barrett k Land, to whom I cheer
fully recommend my friends and former par
trens. F. D. KENRICK.
jan9-tf
MANHOOD
Hfl RESTORED.
■■■ Victim* of yoWtfnl imprudence, wbo
I ■ I tmt vy A- HPZI
HE STILL LIVES.
THE OLD CUBT H]
Has resumed making hi* Oeiebratsd Ou
dies, so much sought for, at Mrs. Miry A. P.
White's Crockery sod Variety Store, 334 Broad
Street. jan6-2w
HAT.
KCid BALES COUNTRY HAY. For sale
OUU at PLANrEBB’ UNION AGENCY.
deoßi-eodl
Weekly Review of iifisu Market.
Augusta. Ga., Fudat Aitkrnoon, i
January 12, 1877. I
General Remarks.
Notwithstanding the unsettled weather dur
ing the present commercial week, trade has
been brisk and nearly every branch of buai
nese has been well patronized. The fact is
none of our merchants have had any reason to
complain since the commencement of the
present season. The streets have generally
been crowded with ooumry wagons and a larg
er cash business has been done than for years
past; of course this is sn encouraging indica
tion of still better times in tbe future. Plant
ers have more generally ado; ted the cash sys
tem and an increased prosperity is the result.
It works better both for planter and mer
chant.
The receipts of cotton while less daily thin
they were a month ago, s'ill make a good av
erage showing. The total receipts sinoe Sep
tember 1, 1876,amount to 164,933 bales against
134,052 bales at the same date last year. The
market is quoted ae quiet and irregular.
Wheat aud flour are firm and in demand at
unchanged quotations.
Bacon is stiff and has advanced a half cent
per pound, as oompared with our last weekly
review.
Coffees show s alight advance with a good
There has bean s good demand for securi
ties during the week, with email offerings.
Below we give a full and correct ust of
prices:
Cotton.
Below will be found a resume of the week:
Satcbdat, January 6. Cotton exoited
and irregular—Ordinary, 11; Good Ordi
nary, mall}; Low Middling, 12a12}; Mid
dling, l2}*l2}; Good Middling, 13J; receipts,
263; sales, 1,027; stock in Augusta by actual
count on January sth, 12,624; stock last year,
January Bth, 17,894; reoeipts since September
1. 152,047; last year, 128,835; receipts at all
United States ports Saturday, 12,960; corre
sponding week last year, 21,732 ; last week,
20,804.
Mohbat, January B.—Cotton irregular and
nominal, buyers and sellers apart Or
dinary, 11; Good Ordinary, 11}: Low Mid
dlmg, 12}; Middling, 12}: Good Middling,
13} ; reoeipts, 599; sales, 738; stock in Au
gusta by actual count on January sth, 12,6:4;
stock last year, January Bth, 17,894; reoeipts
sinoe September, 1.152,047; last year, 128,885;
receipts at. all United States ports Monday,
27,337; corresponding week last year, 36,707;
last week. 36 844.
Tuesday, January 9. Cotton dull and
nominal—Ordinary, 10} ; Good Ordinary,
<ll} ; Low Middling, 12}; Middling, 12};
Good Middling, 13; receipts, 402; sales.
569; s’oek in Augusta by actual count
January sth, 12,624; stock last year,
January Bth, 17,894; receipts sinoe Sep
tember 1, 152,047; last year, 128,885; receipts
at all United States ports Tuesday, 14,550;
corresponding week last year, 32,228; last
week, 15,937. i
Wednesday, January 10. Cotton quiet
—Ordinary, 101; Good Ordinary, Ilf ; Low
Middling, 12; Middling, 12}; Good Mid
dling^l2}; receipts, 538; sales, 538; stock
in Augusta by actual count on January sth,
12,624; last year, January Bth, 17,894; receipts
since September 1, 152,047; last year. 128.885;
receipts at all United States ports Wednes
day, 13,896 : corresponding week last year,
21,559; last week, 15,195.
Thursday, Januaiy 11. Cotton quiet
end nominal—Ordinary, 10}; Good Ordi
nary, llall}; Low Middling, llfall}; Mid
dling, 12a12}; Good Middling, 12}; receipts,
483; sales, 513; stock in Augusta by aotual count,
on Januaiy 5, 12,642; stock last year, January
Bth, 17,894; reoeipts since September 1,152,047;
last year, 128,885; receipts at all United States
ports Thursday, 15,422; corresponding week
last year, 22.959; last week, 12,463.
Fbiday, January 12.—Cotton quiet and ir
regular--Ordinary, 10}al0} ; Good Ordinary,
11}; Low Middling, ll}all} ; Middling, 12a
12}; Good Middling. 12}; receipts, 821; sales,
330; stock in Augusta by actual count on
January 12, 12,030; stcok last year, January
Bth, 17,894; receipts since September 1,
154.953 ; last year, 134,052 ; receipts at ali
United States ports Friday, 20,328; correspon
ding week last year, 24,998; last week. 13,751;
reoeipts sinoe September 1, 2,677,331; reoeipts
same time last year, 2 478.860; stock at all
United States ports, 924,238: stock at all
United States ports last year, 795,820; stock in
New York by actual count, 236,687; stook in
New York last year, 145,209.
TOTAL RECEIPTS AND SALES FOR THE WEEK.
Sales 3,715
Receipts 2,906
COMPARATIVE COTTON STATEMENT.
Reoeipts for this week of 1875 5,839
Showing a deoreaae this week of 2,433
Sales for this week of 1875 were 4,413
(12} down to 12} for Middling.)
Showing a decrease this week of 698
Receipts the present season, to date 151,545
Reoeipts last season (1875-76) to
January 14 132,383
Showing an increase present season so
far of 25,212
Reoeipts of 1874-75 exoeeded 1875-76 to
this date 3,427
Shipments during the week 3,023
Same week last year 1.360
Stook on hand at this date of 1875 19,788
AUGUSTA COTTON STATEMENT, JANUARY 12, 1877.
Stock on hand Sap. 1,1876 636
Reeeived sinoe to date 157,545
Ex’pts and home consumption 146,160
Aotual stock on hand this day 12 030
RECEIPTS OP COTTON.
The f oDowmg are the reoeipts of Cotton by
tbe different Railroads and the River for
the week ending Friday evening, January
12, 1877:
Reoeipts by tne Georgia Railroad.. bales.. 1,460
Reoeipts by tbs Augusta and Savannah
Railroad 35
Reoeipts by the Charlotte, Columbia and
Augusta Railroad 224
Reoeipts by South Carolina Railroad 45
Receipts by Fort Royal Railroad 225
Receipts by Canal and Wagon. 846
Receipts by the River 21
Total receipts by Railroads, River, Csnal
and Wagon., 2,906
COTTON SHIPMENTS,
The following are the shipments of Cotton by
the different Railroads and the River for
the week ending Friday evening, January
12,1877 :
BY RAILROADS.
South Carolina Railroad—local shipments. 361
South Carolina Railroad— througli ship
ments 2,531
Augusta and Savannah Railroad—local
shipments 1,295
Augusta and Savannah Railroad —through
shipments 143
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad
—local shipments.
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad
—through shipments 288
By Port Royal Railroad—local 384
By Port Poyal Railroad—through 231
By River—local shipments 983
Total shipments by Railroads and River. 6,216
State and City Bonds.
Georgia B’s, 105all0; Georgia 7’s, 105 ex-coup
on; Georgia 6’s, 94a98, according to dates; Au
gusta Bonds—due 1880 or sooner, 90 or above;
Augusts long dates, 80; Atlanta B’s, 87};
Atlanta 7’s, 80; Savannah short dates, 80*85;
Savannah long datrs. 69*70.
Kailway Bonds.
Georgia Railroad, 100; Macon and Angus
ta, Ist mortgage, 93; endorsed by Georgia
Railroad, 92; endorsed by Georgia and
South Carolina Railroad, 92; Port Royal Rail
road Ist mortgage gold 7’s,endorsed byGeorgia
Railroad, 76a70; Atlanta and West Point B’s,
105; Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Ist mort
gage, 7’s, 75; second mortgage, 65 asked. Cen
tral, Southwestern and Macon k West
ern first mortgage 7’s, 92}; Western Rail
road ef Alabama, endorsed by Georgia and
Central, 88a90; Montgomery and West Point
first mortgage, 99a100.
Bunk Stacks, Gas Company and 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 in,sa6; Augusta Gas Company
par 25, 36; Street Railroad 65 to 60 asked.
Augusta Factory, 98 tq 100 Langley Faotory, 90;
Granite ville Faotory. 110.
Railway Stocks*
Georgia Railroad, 72*73- Central, !}s<©37;
South Carolina, 3}; Charlotte, Columbia
and Augusta, 10 to 13; Port Royal Railroad,
nominal; Southwestern, 71; Augusta and
Savannah, 85; Macon and Augusta nominal;
Atlanta and West Point, 80.
Gold.
Bnying at 106al08; selling at 109.
A good demand for Securities with smell of
ferings.
Miscellaneous Grocery Market.
Candles.—Adamantine, light weight, 16(3)17;
full weight, 19(3)20; sperm, 40; patent sperm,
50; tallow, 12<&)13 ¥ lb.
Cheese.—Western, 14@15 ; Factory, 18(3)19.
Rios.—6 to 7 cents V) lb.
Salt.—Liverpool, 9 1 35<®1 40 ; Virginia,
92 15(6)2 25 'd seek.
Soap.—JJq. 1,6 c.; Family, 6} to 7}e.
Mackebel—We quote full weights only as
ollow* : No. I—mesß in kits—s 2 50 to 32 75 ;
half barrels, $7 60 to 8; No. 1 in kits, 91 75;
No. 2 in barrels, sl2; half barrels, 96 50:
kite, 91 40; No. 3—barrels, large, 99 to 9 60;
half barrels—large, 95 to 5 50; kits, 91 25.
French Peas. —1 lb. Cans, per doz., 94 50.
Piokles.—Underwood’s qts., 94 76 ; } gal.,
98 75 per doz.
Gbeen Corn.—2 lb Cans, 93.
Gelatine.—Nelson’s, 93 per doz.
Ground Peas—Tennessee, 91 50 ; Georgia,
91 50 per bnshel.
Apples—green, per bl—Western, 93 00*8 50;
Northern, 93 75, Batter—Country, per lb.
20@25; Goshen, 35a40; Beeswax, per lb., 25;
Beans, per bushel—Western, 9115 to 1 25;
Northern, 92 26 to Q 8; 'White Table
Peas, 91 00 to 1 25. Western Cabbage, per doz
en,9l 20® 150; New York Cabbages, 91 80(6)2;
Geese, 65c. Eggs, per doz. 25a27; Ducks, 30o;
Chickens—Spring, 15(6'25 ; grown, 25@S0 ;
oents; Honey, attained; per lb., 20; Irish
Potatoes, per bbl. Western. 93 Co@
Northern, 93 50; Onions, dry, per bbl-, 9325(3
350 ; Sweet Potatoes, 80 per bushel; Dried
Peaahes, peeled, 14c. per lb.; Dried Apples.
Bc. per lb. Sods, 8. T*Uow, 7@90. Grits per
bushel, 91 26. Western Pta* 1 Grits, per bbl.
94 00 to 94 50. Pearl Hominy 94 50@4 76.
The Tobacco Market.
Common to medium, 48(665: fine bright, 74@
80: extra flpe tq fancy, 90(391 smoking to
baooo. 5Q®65; fang? sqjqkipg, 55@>fi0 ¥ ft.
Cam# Meal and Bros.
Corn Meal.—City Bolted, 75; Western,
70.
Bean.—Wheat Bran, per ton, 916.
Batter, Lard and Bass.
Butter.—Tennessee, 25c.
Lard.—-Tierces. 13c: cans. 131.
Eggs.—Scarce sod in demand at 20c per
dozen.
Boaxine and Ties.
Domestic Bagging, 13}; Gunny do., 11;
Patched'do., if}/' -
Arrow Ties, 6}; Pieced do., 4.
Utltms.
Molasses—Retailed Hogsheads, 30c.: Bar
rels, 38; Mnscavado Hogsheads. 44; Barrels,
45; Refined Syrupe, 65*70c; New Orleans, 65a
70s.
Cettea Goods.
6 to 10 bole lots, Augusta, 3-4
Shirtings, 6c: 7-B'do.. 6}; 4-4 Sheetings. 7;
80z Osnaburgs, —; 60s do., 10. Gramteville
Factory—3-4 Shirting 1 sc; 7-3 Shirlidfi.' 6};
4-4 Sheeting, 74; Drills, B}. Langley Factory—
Langley A 4-4, 74c; Langley A 7-8, 64: L*“td® J
3-4, s}; Langley Drills, 84 A Drills, 8}; B Drills,
8. Princeton Factory—4-4 Sheetings, 71 7-8
Shirtings, 6; Tarn, (premium) bunch, 90c.
The Augusta Dry Goods Market.
Brown Cot-tow. Suffolk A 4-4, 8 ; Suf
folk B 4-4, 8}; Saolisbury B 4-4, 10; Saranac
3 4-4, 9; Fruit of the Loom, 11. Laoonea
E, 4-4 Fine white, U. Portsmouth B. 3-4 Fine
Brown, 6.
Bleached Sheetino and Shihtikg. —Canoe
27 inch, So.; Fruit of the Loom, 11; Lons
dale, 36 inch, 11; Wament ta O XX, 86 inch
12} ; Waltham 10-4, 30 ; Utica 10-4, 46. Pa
chaug4-4,7}; Greenville A 4-4, 124. King Philip
Cambric, 20. Pocahontas4-4,12}. Conewago7-8
B}. Campbell 3-4, 6}.
Pillow Case Cotton. —Amoskeag, 42 inch.
12}c.; Waltham, 42 inch, 12}; Androscroggin, 42
inch, 15.
OsNAßtmos.—Richmond, 10c.; Santee, No. 1.
104. Phoenix, 9}c.
Cambrics.— Paper. Garner, B}@9c.; High
Colors,B}a9; Lonsdale, 9; Man ville, 7}@B; Mas
on ville. 7}; S. 8. k Sons, 7}; Cambrics (glazed)
Elberton, 7; Franklin, 7; Harmony, 7: High
Colors, 8.
Ginghams. —Domestic, Gloucester, 1M; Lan
caster, 12}; Baird, 10; Scotch, 20.
Checks and Stripes— Athens Checks, 10}-
Eagle and Phoenix, 10}; Magnolia Plaids, 10-
Richmond Stripes, 10} ; American Stripes, 12;
Arasaphs Stripes, 10}; Lucaeville Stripes,lo®
12; Eagle and Phoenix Stripes, 10; Silver
Spring, 10.
Cosset Jeans.—Kearssge, 13}0.; Naumkee.
124; Laconia, 104.
Kentucky Jeans.—Fillette, 42}c.; Keokuk,
45; Hillside, 13; Pacific Railroad, 40; South
wark Doeskin, 45 ; N. C. Wool, 50. Arkwright,
84. Buckskin, 24}. Cave Hill Cassimere, 20.
Albany, 11. Silver Lake Doeskins. 85. Leee
burg, 32}. Henry Clay, 35. Satinets—mixed
Grey, 85; Heavy, 60: Black, 45, 65@60 oents.
Prints. —Garner’s Fancies. 70.; Ancons
! Fancy, 7 ; Gloucester, 9@94; Amoskeag, 7;
; Hartel’s Fancies, 7 ; Arnold’s, 7 ; Merri
macs, 7; Albion, 7; Pacific, 7; Bedford, 7;
Sprague, 7; Donnell’s, 7; Wamsutta, 6. Mav
erick, 5; Hamilton Shirting, 6c.
Augusta Manufactured Cotton Goods.
Augusta Factory—3-4 Shirting, 6}; 7-8 do.
7}; 4-4 Sheeting, 8}; Drills, 9.
Graniteville Factory—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
44 do., 8}; Langley A 7-8 Shirting, 2}; Langley
34 Shirting, 6}.
The Liquor Market.
Ale and Poster.- Imported, 92 25<®2 75.
“Brandy.— Apple, 92 50@3 00; Amerioan,
91 40@2 00; French, 96®12; Bohleifer’s Cali
fornia, 95 00; New, 94.
Gin.—Amerioan, 91 40@2 60; Holland, 93 00
®6 00.
Whisky.—Corn, country, per gallon, 91 36®
2 50; Bourbon, per gallon, 91 50@5 00; Gib
son's per gallon, 92 60@6 00; Bye, per gallon,
91 35(6)6 00; Beotified, per gallon, 9135®1 75;
Robertson county, per gallon, 91 60@2 50;
High Wines, 91 25.
Wine. —Madame Clicquot Champagne, 930®
2; Napoleon’s Cabinet, 980@32; Roederer’s,
$33®35; Roederer’s Sohreider, $30@32; Impe
rial American, 920®22 per case of pints and
quarts; Madeira, 95®10; Malaga, 92 50 per
gal.; Port, 92 60@6 00; Sherry, 92 50@)6 00.
Syrups and Molasses.
Molasses.— Muscovado, hhds., @88; re
boiled, hogsheads, 27 oents; barrels, 30 cents.
Cuba hhds., 45; bbls., 60 @ 63; sugar
house syrup, 66; New Orleans syrup, 70@85 per
fallon; Silver Drip, 75 cents; Sugar Drip,
1 50.
Hides.
Flint— 4(6)B cents.
Green— 2a4 oents per pound.
Salmon.—Per doz. lb. oans, 92 75; 2 Ib.
93 50. Salmon in kits, 93 50.
The Augusta Furniture Market.
Bedsteads.— Circle-end Gum, Bracket Ball,
95; Single Panel Blaok Walnut, 910 00; Walnut
Zouave, 99 00; Maple Zouave, 96 00; Imita
tion Walnut, 95 00; Cottage Zouave, 94 50;
Spindle do., 94 00; Fanoy Cottage, 93 50; Blaok
W alnut French Lounge, 918a30.
Chamber Sets. -Solid Walnut, 935a450
Enameled, 925a125.
,rA A ?. LOE Keps and Hair Cloth, 946a
150; Brocatelle, Satin and Silk Damask, 9160a
500.
Chairs.—Split Seat, white, per dozen, 98 00;
Cane Seat, painted and gilt, per doz., 913 00;
Rattan Seat, painted and gilt, per doz., 911 00;
Best Arm Dining, wood seat, 918 00; Walnut,
C. 8. Oil, per doz., 918 00a30 00; Walnut Gre
cian, 916 00a30 00; Windsor, W. S., painted,
per doz., 97 60.
Bureaus.— Walnut, with glass, 915@25; Wal
nut, } Marble, with glass, 918@S0 ; Walnut, }
Marble, with glase, 918@30; Marble Top, 918a
AI S? _ c ?2 c 5 n,0 ’ —Boston '"go full arm,
each, 92 50y Boston Nurse, no arm, 91 35;
Nurse, cane Shat and back, 93 60.
Cribs.—Walnut, 94 00@20 00.
Mattresses.—Cotton, best tick, 914; Cotton
and Shuck, best tiok, 910; Cotton and Shuek,
97; Straw sndExoelsior, 95 00; Hair, best tick,
per lb., 91 00.
Sates.— Wire, with drawer, 99 00 ; Tin, with
drawer, $8 00; with oupboard and drawer, sl2;
Wire, with drawer and cupboard, sl3 00.
Tables.—Fanoy, with drawer, 91 60; round
30 mohes, 92 00; Bound 86 inches, 92 60;
Round 48 inches, 96 09; Marble Tope, 96a40.
j.o' a SH ~ aTANDS ' —Open with drawer, Walnut,
93 00; open with drawer, Poplar, 92 25; Wal
nut, with three drawers, 98 70; Marble, with
hree drawers, 916 50; Marble Tops, 912a6.
Leather and Leather Gooda.
G. D. Hemlock, Sole Leather, 29@32; Good
Hemlock, 88@37; White Oak Sole, 45@50;
Harness Leather, 44@60; Upper Leather,
country tanned, 92 50 to 93 50 per side; Calf
Skins, 936 to 955 per dozen; Kips, 940 to 9100.
Bridles— Per dozen, 95@20.
Collars— Leather, per dozen, 910@60; wool,
$54.
Single Buggy—harness. 4 Jp, or x. o. S. A,
Pads, 1 trace, web reins, sl2.
Carriage Harness.—One-half x 0., 8. A.
Pads, without breeohing, 925 ; Silver Plated,
Tompkin’s Pads, with breeching, 940 ; Silver
or Gilt, extra trimmed, 980@100.
S*PLE Pockets —93 50@8 50; Saddle Cloths,
sl@B.
SADDLES-Morgan, 94 60@26; Buena Vista,
•W ; Shatter, 940 - Plain, 910@20
Side, 90@00.
Plantation Wagons,
One and one-half inch axle, 985@96; 1}
uch axle, $100@105; 1} inch axle, 9110; 3 inoh
himble skin, 990; 8} inoh thimble skin, 996.
Hay.
Choice Timothy—oar load lots, 91.20 per
hundred; Western mixed, 91.1051.25 per hun
dred; Eastern Hay, 91.60 per hundred; North
ern, 91,10.
Country— 9l per ljundresJ.
Hardware Market.
In the following quotations the price of many
ledaing articles are lowered, particularly Swede
Iron and Nails:
Pices — 9l3 50@15 per doEen
Shoes— Horse, 95 60; Mule, 96 60.
Steel— Plow, 8 per lb.; Cast, 20 per lb.;
Springs, 13 per lb.
Castings—6c.
Sad Irons—6 per lb.
au H 1 9!6 60 per dozen. ;Ames’
and h, 915 76 per dp?.
and hf 600 ® 8 ’ 1 b ’ 116 00 4<W-; Ame8 ’
Anvils— Solid Cast Steel, 160. per lb.; Peter
Wright’s, 15 per lb.
Axes— Common middle size plain, 911 60 per
doz.; Samuel Collins’ middle size plain, 912 00
per doz.; Samuel Collins’ light, 911 50 per doz.
Axles— Common, B}o.
Bells— Kentuoky cow, $2 25@12 00: Hand,
$1 25@16. ’
Bellows— Common, $12@14; Extra, 18®24;
Caps—Q. D., 45 per m.; W. P., 90 per m,.
Musket, $1 00 per m.
Cabds— Cotton-Sargents, $4 60 per doE.
Hoes— Hd. Planters, J 8 2Q@lO 33 per doz.
Iron— Swede, 7<jj>B; Hqrse-shoe, 6; Bound
and Square, 4; Nail Bod. 10.
6Q4, #3 50; 84, #8 76; 6d, $4;
4d, $4 85: 3d, #| 75; 104 to 12d. finished, $4 60;
Bd, finished, $5; 64, finished, $5 25 ; 3d,
fine $7 26; horse shoe, 20@8g,
Stores And Tinware.
Stores vary in ptioe according to manufac
ture and size, from sl6 to $76.
P° tß ’ 2 to 8 pints, per doz.
$2 00 to $5 00; Covered Buckets, 2 to 6 quarts,
s2@s ; Coffee Mills, $4 to $8 ; Foot Tubs, sl2;
Bifters, $4 00; I. C. Hoofing per box, sl3 00;
Bright Tin, 10x14 per box, $lO. Solder per
tb, 17c.
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.
Conoeniratpd Lyp, ppr oaep, $6 75@7 26;
Potash, ppr case, $8 26 : Blacking
Brushes, per dgzph, $1 62al 65; Brooms, per
doz., $2 50a4 60; Blue Buckets, per doz.
$2 25a2 76; ifatches, ppr gross, $8; Soda-
Boxes, 64; kegs, 6Ja7e.; Soda—boxes, 7|aß4;
Starch, 64; ; feathers, 62(368.
Wood and Coal.
Coal—Coal Creek Coal per ton, $9 00; An
thracite per ton, sll 60.
Wood —Hickory and Oak, $4 00 per cord;
sawed 500. higher; inferior grades from $1 to
$2 per cord less.
THE AUGUSTA MARKETS.
Augusta, January 13, 1877.
Conan.
Cotton quiet and steady—Ordinary, 104a
10}; Good Ordinary. 11J; Low Middling, Ilf;
Middling, 124; Good Middling, 124; receipts.
644; sales, 863; stock in Augusta by actual
count on Japuary 13. 12,080; stock last year,
January Btb, 17,894; receipts since September
Ist, 164,953; last year, 134,052; receipts at all
United States ports Saturday, 18,900; cor
responding week last year, 19,172; last week,
12,930.
Seed Grain.
Seed Bye, $1 35: Seed Barley, $1 36; Seed
Wheat, white, $2 25;. Seed Wheat, red, $2;
Seed Wheat, rust proof, sllO.
Bacon.
Clear Bibbed Bacon Sides, 11; Dry Salt
Clear Bib Sides, 10a —; Dry Salt Long Olear
Sides, 94a—; Bellies, lOtall; Bmoked Shoul
ders, 8f to 8f; Dry Salt Shoulders 74a8; Sugar
Cured Huns, l£al6; Plain'Hams, lul6; Pig
Hams, lfi; Tennessee Hams, 154,
Grata.
Cob*—7s for Tennessee White in car
load lots ; broken lots 3c. higher.
Wheat— Choice White, $1 80; prime White,
$1 76; prime Amber, $1 70; prime Bed, $1 60.
Oats— 66o. in oar load lots; broken lot,
600.
Floor.
Cm Mrus— Supers, §7 60 ; Extras, $7 76 ;
Family, $8 26; Fancy, 41).
Wester*—Supers, $6 56; Extras, $7; Tami- ■
ly, $8; Fancy. $8 60.
Sacars apd Coffees.
Suoabs.— We quote C, 1C4@11; extra O, Ills
12; yellqws, 104 to lOf; 'standard A, 12}a
124. *
Coffees.—Bios—Common, 21; fair, 23; good,
24; prime, 24a25; Javas, 28®33.
The day and Stuck Feed Market.
Hat.—Choice Timothy—oar load lots, $1 20
per hundred; Western mixed, $1 00 to 115 per
hundred; Eastern Hay, $1 40 to 1 60 per hun
dred: Northern, $1 26.
Beak axd Stock Meal.—Wheat Bran, S2O
per ton ; Meal, 65®70.
Fodder.—7s to $1 00 per hundred.
Couhtrt Hat. —90 per hundred.
" -
FORUM MB DOMESTIC MAMETS.
COTTON MARKETS.
Liverpool, January 12, noon.—Cotton quiet
and unchanged—Middling Uplands, 7d.; Mid
dling Orleans, 74d.; .sales, 10,000, speculation
and exports, 3,fjSo receipts. 14,900; American.
11,600. Futures opened weakeY with seller*
at last night’s prices', but ha Ye' since become
1-32 J. dearer—Uplandd,' L. M: O:,‘landing. 6
13-16 d-; January"os February delivery, 618-16d.
a6 27-324.: February or March 6|d.a6 16-16d.;
March or April, 7d.a7 1-3 id-; April or May,
7 l-16d.; May or Jane, 74d.*7 5-32d., June or
Jnly, 7 8-16da7 7 32d.; shipped December or
January, per sail, 615-16d.; January or Febru
ary, 6 81-82d.a7d.; February or March, 7 8-32d.
74d.; sales for the week, 130,000; speculation.
12,000; exports, 6,090; stock, 608,000; Ameri-
c*n. 365,000; receipts, 138.000; American, 107,-
000; actual export, 4,000; afloat, 365,000; Ameri
can. 308 000; sales American, 56 000.
1:00, and m.—Uplands, L. M. 0., April de
livery, 7d.
8:30, p. m—Cotton sale- to-day, 6,900 Ameri
can; Uplaudl? Low Middling clause, March or
April delivery. 7 1 33d.; April or May, 7 S-32d.:
March or April delivery, 7 l-16d.
4:30,p. m.—Yards and Fabrics strong. Up
lands. Low Middling clause. January deliv
ery, 6|d.; February and March delivery, Td :
shipped January and February, per sail. 7
shipped February and March, per sail,
6fd.; Uplands, L. M. O , ship named, 6 31-32d.
5, p. m.—Futures steady—Uplands, L. M.
C , Match or April delivery, 7 3 32d.; also, 7 1-
16d.. shipped February or March, per sail, 7
8-lid.
Liverpool, January 12.—The circular of the
Liverpool Cotton Brokers’ Association, in its
review of the week ending last night, says the
market was animated during the early part of
the week, and with very extensive business
prices advanced considerably. There has been
quieter tone since Tuesday. The market was
flat to-day and Thursday, with a pressure to
sell, and a portion of the advance was lost.
The American continued iu very extensive re
quest in the earlier part of the week, and
prices dvanced 5-16d. The market has been
less active since Tuesday, end, being freely
supplied, l-16a}d. of the advance has been
loet. Sea Island has been negleoted, but
prices are Arm in futures. Transactions con
tinue large, with considerable fluctuations in
prices.
New Yobx, January 12. noon.—Uplands, 18;
Orleans, IS 8-16; sales, 506.
Futures opened firm—January, 13}; Feb
ruary, 13}, 13 3-16; March, 131. 13 7-16; April,
13 19-32, 18}; May, 18}, 13 13-16; June, 131,
13 16-16.
New Yoke. January 12. p. m.—Cotton
net receipt <, 628; gross, 1,626.
Futures dosed firm—sales, 36.000 bales, as
follows : January, 13 3-16, 13 7-32; February,
13 11-32, ISf; March, IS 9-16, 13 19-32; April,
13 25-32. 13 iS-16; May. 13 31-32. 14; June,
14§, 14 5-32; July, 14}, 14 9-32; August.
14 15-16; September, 13}, 13 15-16; October,
13 9-16,18}; November, 13 6-16, 13 7-16.
New York. January 12, p. m.—Comparative
cotton statement for the week ending Friday,
January 12,1877:
Net receipts at ail United States ports. 104,493
Same time last year . 160,183
Total to date 2,777,130
Total to same date last year 2,642.421
Exports for the week 119,6 4
Same week last year 102,777
Total to this date 1,616,510
Total for same date laßt year 1,467.091
Stock at all United States ports 924,238
Last year 830,358
Stock at interior towns 128,657
Last year 127,749
At Liverpool 608, ( 00
Last year 636,000
American afloat for Great Britain 308,000
Last year 361,000
Wilminoton, January 12, p. m.—Cotton
nominal—Middling, 12}; weekly net receipts,
2,495; stock, 13,743; sales, 403; exports ooast
wise, 2,935.
PwiT.AnKT.PHiA, January 12.—Cotton quiet—
Middling, 13}; weekly net receipts, 1,106;
gross receipts, 2,527; exports to Groat Britain,
107.
Savannah, January 12.—Cbtton quiet—Mid
dling. 12}; weekly net receipts, 15,472; stock,
74,776; sales not reported; exports to Great
Britain, 6,345; continent, 4,652; ohannel
,600; coastwise. 1,419} ,
New York, January 12, p. m.—Cotton firm
—Bales, 409 bales at 13*13 3-16; receipts of
the week—net, 7,605; gross, 22,035; exports to
Great Britain, 7.408; to the Continent, 386;
sales, 8,028; stock, 236,678.
Port Royal, January 12—Cotton—weekly net
receipts, 402; exports coastwise, 452.
Providence, January 12 —Cotton weekly
net reoeipts, 672; stook, 8,000; sales, 460.
New Orleans, January 12, p. m.—Cotton
steady—Middling, 12}; Low Middling, 12};
Good Ordinary, 11}; weekly net reoeipts, 22,-
832; gross, 31,521; stook, 262,533; tales. 36,300;
exports to Great Britain, 34,745; to Franoe,
8,997; to the Continent, 5,515; coastwise, 2,463.
Mobile, January 12.—Cotton quiet and
steady—Middling, 12}: weekly net reoeipts,
10,200; stook, 65,038; sales, 8,000; exports to
Great Britain, 4,478; to France, 1.333; to the
Continent, 1,810; to the Channel, 4,140; ooast
wise, 6,226.
Memphis, January 12.—Cotton steady—Mid
dling, 12}; weekly reoeipts, 4.355; shipments,
12,632; siook, 80,283; sales. 13,600.
Galveston, January 11, p. m. Cotton dull
—Middling, 12}; stook, 120,549; weekly net re
ceipts, 22.992; gross receipts. 23,058; sales,
19,934; exports to Great Britain, 14.720;
France, 1,257; to the Continent, 3,663; coast
wise, 11,772.
Norfolk, January ll.—Cotton quiet—Mid
dling, 12}; weekly net receipts, 10,230; stock,
24,505; sales, 1,200; exports to Great Britain,
—; ooastwise, 9.262.
Baltimore, January 11, p. pa.—Cotton firm
—Middling, 12}; stock, 7,808; weekly net re
ceipts, —; gross, 586; sales, 2,189 ; spinners,
445; exports to Great Britain, 1,376; Continent,
—; ooastwise, 485.
Boston, January 11, p. m. —Cotton quiet—
Middling, 13}; stock, 7,366; weekly net receipts,
3,203; gross receipts, 16,571; sales, 1,426; ex
ports to Great Britain, 2,476.
Charleston, January 12 —Cotton steady—
Middling, 12}; weekly net reoeipts, 6,980;
stook, 73,329; sales, 12,600; exports to Great
Britian, 7,903; France, 3,409; Continent, 3,315;
coastwise, 2,211.
Montoomery, January 12.—Cotton quiet—
Middling, 12a12}.
Macon, January 12—Cotton quiet—Middling,
12}: net receipts, 1,734; sales, 2,511; stook,
10,629; shipments, 2,512. *
Columbus, January 12.—Cotton firm—Mid
dling, 124; receipts, 2,104; shipments. 3,209;
sales, 2,864; spinners, 538; stock, 10,568.
Nashville, January 12.—Cotton quiet and
firm—Middling, 12;" net repeipts, 636; ship
ments, 1,749; e%les, 1,414; spinnprs, 46; stook,
5,266.
Livebpool, January 13, noon. Cotton
steadier—Middling Uplands, 7d. ; Middling
Orleans, 7}d. ; sales, 13,000 ; speculation
and export, 2,000; receipts, 11,300; American,
600. Futures oppned partially l-16d. dearer,
but the advnnpe has singe beeh lost—Uplands.
L. M. C., January er February delivery, 6
29-32d.| February or March, 7 1-16, 7 l-32a7d.;
March or April, 7|a7 3-S2d.; April or May,
7 3-16d.; June or July, 7 9-82d; shipped Jan
uary or February, per sail, 7}d.; February or
March, 7 8-16d. In yesterday’s weekly report
afloat should have beeu 437,000; Amerioan,
380,000.
2, p. m.—Futures quiet--Uplands, L. M. C.,
January and February delivery, 6}d.; Feb
ruary and March delivery, 6 31-82d.; Maroh and
April delivery, 7 1-16<}-; Apfil apd May delivery,
7 5-32d.; shipped February and Maroh, per'
sail, 7 6-82d.; sales of American, 7,800.
New lORK, January 13, noon.—Cotton
steady—sales, 602; Uplands, 13a13}; Orleans,
13 6-16.
Futures opened easier, as follows: January,
13 3-32, 13 5-32; February, 13 7-32, 13}; March,
13 16-32. 13}; April, 13 21-32 13 11-16; May, 13
27-32, 13 29 82.
New York, January 13, p. m.—Cotton Bteady
—sales, 878 bales, at 13}a13 5-16 ; consolidated
net reoeipts, 18,900; exports to Great Britain,
10,573; to France,- 1,424; to the Continent,
2.32 Q. T
New jaupaay 1§ p. m-—Cotton—net
reoeipfs, 1,0g6j gross, 2,570.
Futures closed barely steady—sales, 21,000
as follows 1 January, 13 5-S2d, 13 3-16; Febru
ary. 13}; Maroh, 13 12.82; Ap.il. 18 11-1S; May.
13}: June, 14 132, 14 1-16;.July, 14 5-82, 14
3-16; August, 14 7-32; 14}; September, 18}. 13
13-16; October, 18 7-16, 13}; November, 18 8-16,
Memphis, January 18.— Cotton quiet—Mid
dling, 12} ; receipts, 1,143 ; shipments, 3,231;
sales, 2.100.
Charleston. January 18.—Cotton steady—
Middling, 12|; net receipts! 2.249; sales, 1,000;
exports to Great Britain, 1,781; to Continent,
1,670. ’
Galveston, January 13. Cotton quiet—
Middling, 124; net receipts, 2,808; sales, 1,-
068; exports coastwise, 0.
Norfolk, January 18. —Cotton quiet and
steady—Middling, 12}; net reoeipts, 2,483;
sales, 160; exports ooastwise, 2,014.
Baltimore, January 18. Cotton Arm-
Middling, 12}; sales, 276; experts coastwise,
Boston, January 18.—Cotton quiet—Mid
dling, IS}; net receipts, 95; gross, 705* sales,
376.
Wilmington, January 18. Cotton quiet
and steady Middling, 12}al2}; net reoeipts,
285; exports to Great Britain, 1,044.
Philadelphia, January 13.—Cotton quiet—
Middling, 13}; net reoeipts, 86; gross reoeipts,
Savannah, January 18.— Cotton —Middling,
12}; net receipts, 2,569; gross, 2,582; sales, 900;
exports to Great Britain, 2,825; exports coast
wise, 1,036.
New Orleans, January 18.—Cotton firm—
Middling, 124; Low Middling', 12}; Good Ordi
nary, 114 ; n&t receipts, 3,771; gross receipts,
5,450; sales, fi.QQO; exports to Gfreat Britain,
4,863; JiTanog, 1,424; to tfie Qontment, 6§o.
PRODUCE MARKUTa,
New Yobk, January 18, noon.—Flour quiet
and steady. Wheat a shade firmer. Com
firm. Pork dull at $lB. Lard quiet—steam.
sll 25a1l 30. Spirits Turpentine firm at 46}a
|7. Bonin quiet at $2 46*2 55 for strained.
Freights quiet.
New Yoke, January 18, p. m.—Flour a
shade firmer with moderate trade reported for
export and home use, closing firm at sfia? 60;
common to fair extra Southern, $7 05a9.
Wheat la2 better and rather quiet, and an ad
vance asked materially checks export and
milling demand, with moderate speculative.
Com {better fqr npw fair export and home
trade demand; eld quiet; 68 for new yellow
and mixed Southern. Oasts, la2 better with
gqod dpma and. Berk lower and dosing a
shade firmer —Mess, sl7 75. Lard closed un
settled-prime steam closing at sll 25. Coffee,
Sugar, Bice and Molasses quiet, Turpentine
firmer at 47*49}. Boein quiet at $2 45a2 55
for strained. Freights quiet.
Baltmobe, January IS, p. m.—Oats nomi
nally unchanged. Bye quiet and steady. Pro
visions firm, quiet and unchanged. Coffee
firm and unchanged. Whisky dull and nomi
nal at $1 12. Sugar active and unchanged.
U ouisville, 13—Flour steady—ex
tra, ssa6 50; family, $5 76*6 75. Wheat quiet
and unchanged. Com firm at 44. 'Bye steady
and in good demand, Oats easier at 46 for
white; 3Tfor mixed. Pork in fair demand at
$lB. Bulk Meats firmer, but not qnotably
higher. Baoon dull and nominal. Lard quiet
—tierces, 12; kegs, 12}. Whisky firmer at
$1 05. Bagging, 11 j.
St. Loins, January 13.—Flour strong—su
perfine Fall, $4 90a5 40; extra ditto, $5 60a
6 85; double extra ditto, s6a6 25. Wheat
etrong—No 2 red Pall, $1 55al'5fi}; No. 8 dit
to, $1 48*1 48}. Copn firm at 40 Oats firm
and unchanged. Bye aotive but firm at 76a76.
Barley steady and unchanged. Whisky quiet
at $1 08. Pork dull at sl7 50 asked. Bulk
Meato dull—buyers and sellers apart—64, 84
and 8} for shoulders, clear rib and clem sides;
the same bid fpr boxed. Bacon quiet and un
changed. Hogs—buyers and sellers apart
packing nominally $5 75a 10. Cattle quiet
xdq unchanged.
CmonraATi, January IS.—piour Bteady but
Aim. Wbeat stronger—red, $1 45al QQ. Com
earner hut net qnotably lower at 44a45. Oats
9"e‘ , Btefcd y 84*89. Bye quiet at
®*riey heavy—northwestern Spring,
70*75. Pork dull at sl7 50. Laid In fair de
mand—steam rendered. 11; kettle, 12*124.
Bulk Meats quiet—shoulders, 6**64; short nb
sides, Bfc short clear ditto, #. Bacon quiet
and steady—shoulders, 7J. clear rib aides, 10;
dear sides, 10}. Green Meats in fair demand
—shoulders, 6}. Whisky firm at $1 06. Butter
dull and unchanged. Hogs dull—oounuon
$5 25*6 80; fw tQgood iigh?.s4 90*6 S&heMy
Peking. $610*6 4 chorne held Higher'
remrnff EBSold. Receipts, 1,977; shipments.
New Orleans. J*an*ry 13.—Com dull and
lower—white, 68*70. Bulk Meate dull and
’ 7; o'®"nb sides, 8* dear
sffls 'Jk TB '^ nOD ’
lJ—Flour in fair demand
but nrtu. Wheat active and highe*—s
SMSfcSKWsrfrWfc
86} MaSdT By* steady
ami unchanged. Barley dull, weak and lower
—6Uoeal; 68March. Pork dull end lower—
•JJ 85 caab;sl7 50*17 66 F*bnry;sl7 86
*l7 874 March. Lard in good demand and a
IN 'W AdvertiHemeuts
ALLCOCK’S
POROUS PLASTERS !
Ask for AXLCOCK’B, and obtain
them, and so avoid miserable IMITA
TIONS.
B. BKAMIKETH, Pres’t,
Office, 294 Canal 8t„ New York.
nov29-dAw3m
DREGS AND MEDICINES
-A- BE being regularly received, fresh and
: pure. Particular attention given to the pre
scription department. By
Ur. FRANK J. MOSES,
Brushes, etc.
B 11 l of all kinds, a great variety for
Toilet and Kitchen, 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.
SoAP.9, Cologne and Extracts, both Foreign
and Domestic, a large assortment always to be
found, at Dr. FRANK J. MOSES’,
For Christmas. .
A LARGE and seleot assortment of Toilet
Sgta, Vases, Violet and Bouquet Stands, in
Glass and Bohemian Ware; small Toilet Sets
for Christmas for childrens’ presents, will be
sold low, by
Dr. FRANK J. MOSES,
No. 880 Broad Street,
deol7-7
Anpsta Music House.
L. P. Q. 8.
0. O, ROBINSON. LUDDEN <fc BATES.
G. 0. ROBINSON & GO.
lew Prices, Quirt, Sales.
THE TRIUMPH of A1 TANARUS, new and charming
PIANO-HAKP ORGAN, the most Beauti
ful Combination of Musical Tones; oan be
used separately or in connection with either or
all, the stopß of the Organ. Manufactured by
the celebrated Mason A Hamlin Organ Oo
patented in Europe and America. ’
PIANOS AND ORGANS.
THE most complete and attractive assort
ment south of Baltimore. THE BEST
MAKERS, TE[E LOWEST PRICES; *6O to
SIOO sayed is the verdict of the numerous
patnops of the
AUGUSTA MUSIC HOUSE.
New York wholesale prices to cash buyers.
Small oash payments monthly will seoure an
elegant Fiapo or Organ at Lowest Factory
Prices.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS of every variety.
SHEET MUSIC and MUSIC BOOKS, the
Latest Publications. Orders Promptly Filled
at Publishers’ Prices. Best Italian Strings
and everything pertaining to a First Class
Musio House.
Pianos and Organs for Rent.
Tubing and Repairing by a First Glass Work
man of 25 years practical experience. Orders
from the eoiffltry will receive prompt attention.
G. 0. ROBINSON & CO.,
SOS Broad St.
decl7-dtw<tw6m
My annual tfeiaiug.e of Vegetables and
Flower Seed for 1877 will be ready by Janaary,
and sent free to all who’apply. Customers of
last season need not write for it. I offer one'
of the largest collections of vegetable seed
ever sent out by any seed house in Ameriea, a
large portion of which were grown on my six
seed farms. Printed directions for cultivation
on every package. All teed sold from my estab
lishment wan anfed tQ be both fresh and true
to name ; so far, that should it prove other
wise 1 will refill the order gratis. As the origi
nal introducer of the Hubbard and Marblehead
Squashes, the Maiole head Cabbages, and a
score of other new vegetables, I invite the pa
tronage of all v>ho are amtous to have their teed
fresh, true, and of the very best strain. New
vegetables a specialty.
JAMES J. H. GREGORY,
janll-weow2 Marblehead, Mass.
#KAfk A MONTH to Active Meu selling our Letter
’ Copying Book. No prese or water used.
Sample copy worth *3 FBKE. Send stamp for
circular. EXCELSIOR M’F’O. 00., 99 Madison and
139 Dearborn St., Chicago. “
CENTENNIAL CABINET.
OM Illuminated I of Centennial and State build
"r“ VIB Ws. | ings, as printed on the grounds
duriDg the Exhibition; size cf each, 814*4)4 ; price,
58c. prepaid; liberal reduction to dealers; sent to
any part ol U. 8. or Canada, post paid. BOOERS &
Printers and Engravers, 429. Walpu^St.,
HE4 DACHE.
DB. C. W. BENSON’S
CELERY AND CHAMOMJLE PJLhh
Are prepared expressly tp cure Sick Headache, Ner
vous Headache, Dyapeptip Headache, Neuralgia,
Nervousness, Sleeplessness, and will cure any case.
Price, 50c.. postage free. Sold by all druggists and
epunfry stores. Office, 108 North Eutaw Street,
Baltimore, Md.—Reference: Q. J. LESTEB, Cashier
Howard Bank, Baltimore, Md. 4 W
Ont—Selling Immensely—The
CENTENNIAL EXPOSITION
DESCRIBED AND ILLUSTRATED.
The only complete richly illustrated, low price
work, 7a(J piges, only $2 50. Treats of the entire
history, grand buildings, wonderiul exhibits curi
osities, great days. etc. The best chance of 100
years to coin money fast, as everybody wants this
wort- 1,000 agents appOiutjed ’ flrsT fou? weeks,
6,000 wanted. For fuU particulaos address quickly.
BUBBAEO BBpp., publishers, 783 Santom St.,
cilifioN
FANCY CARDS, all styles, with name, 10
<*W °t., Prt paid. J. B. HUBTED, Nassau,
Rena. Cos., N. Y. 0011-4 w
TRIFLING
WITH A COLD IS ALWAYS DANGEROUS.
USB
WELLS* C488014C TABLETS,
a sure remeqy fey Coughs, and all diseases of the
-sS?s<’ 4-uugs, Chest and Mucous Membrane,
PUT CP ONI.Y IN blue boxer.
T • Y SOLO by all orugSKts.
C. N. CBITTENTQN, 7 Bth Avenue, New York. 4w
AGENTS WANTED for the STORY of
CHARLEY ROSS
Written by his father. A complete account of this
most mysterious abduction and exciting search.
With I'ac-Simile Letters and Illustrations. Outsells
all ofh?r hooks. One agent took 50 orders In one
day. Terms liberal. Address,
John E. Potter, A Cos., Fob's., Philadelphia. 4w
rpHE readers of the Chronicle and Sentinel
X are informed that the Holidays am being
duly oelabrated at thg
Cblna Tea aid Cole Stare
This year is a peculiar manner, as the thou
sands of customers whe weekly throng this es
tablishment for supplies, in Groceries, staple
and fanoy, can testify. The proprietor calls
especial attention to the fact that choice and
reliable stocks can always be obtained here *4
reasonable rates, and peculiarly is this the oase
with Christmas at our doors. The “Little
Folks’ jcan always get lust what they want, in
Fireworks, Candy, Toys and French Candies
Older ones usually find no difficulty in being
suited with our Fragrant Tqa* and Aromatic
Coffee, and if ta dkys requiring any addi
tional BtUhuiaWwe dan furnish a pure and
1 wholesome article of Choice Wines and Liquors
—fit to b® set before a King. We hone auy who
are in want of these will ea}l seam' as we ex
pect to close ont arc bqqbr stock with the
holidays. 80, friends, drop in and stay long
enough to leave me an order, so you can invite
all your friends to gather around the family
board. With all good gheer, jju sps qf Auid
Lang Syne.”
Sfv" N, HOTUHA,
Proprietor.
. deelT-tf
WANTED!
ONE GOOD MAN to solicit qydars for oar
Goods In Augusta, and four to travel in
Georgia mid. Alabama. A good salary and. per
mapent employment to the proper men, Ad
dress, with reference,
UNION INDUETBIAL WOBKB CO.,
Janfi —w 4 Cincinnati, Ohio.
W®w Advertlaementu,
AN EXTR ACT
TOOK
THE BULLETIN BOARD:
TTli© Union Drifting Toward
Monarchy, Revolution, or
Bankruptcy. Where Tlii®
Thing wiU End,No Living
Man Oan Say. We Know
We Have and Will Revo
lutionize Prices in DRY
GOODS Before that Ever
Famous Hay.
T j at _^ re Valued at
Thousands May IVot Be Worth
Hundreds! listen to This Thrill
iug Epitome in the History of
These Eventful Times :
i~ ■ ™>.
8,000 Yards French Plaids, at 10 cents per yard
lOODozen Ladles’Laoe Ties at 180., or two for 250.
4,000 Yards Dress Goods, in Cashmeres. French Rrndariea ..
was sold in the early part of the season at 60o!*60o. and 760* B * rganai9 Cloths, at 250.,
3,000 Yards Colored Silks, at 70c, 80c. and *1
#4 per yard. 6088 *“• ,r ° m 86 °* to *. w. formerly sold at *125 to
500 Sets Furs, from 91 75 to 910-just half prioe.
™ Pieces. Slack Alpaoa, from 25c. to 600., worth 400. and 750
390 Pairs 11-4 Blankets, at 93 75, sold in the season at 96 50
60 Pairs 12-4 and 18-4 Blankets, at 98 and 99, sold for 912 and >u
750 Pieoes Lonsdale, Semper Idem and other Shirtings at 9L?
600 Ladies’ Spanish Laoe Ties, at 12}o. each. ln ® * 9 *°’
Then On With the Ball, Ne Use Talking,
J. B. WHITE Jk- 00.
Mem Business,• BE? 60098 Must Tram Like 11^.1-
800 Cardigan Jaokets, for Poor Men, at 85c. 6 *
}OO Pieoes Bibbed Oaseimere, at 250. per yard.
100 Pieoes Elegant Cassimere, at 50c., 650. and 750.. all wool
t^w l^ 008 h,t ® an t ß6,l from 15c. to Silk Warp, at 91 25
In Notions, the Butohery is frightful: Hair-Pins 1 Dennva nanr 1,
a card; Buttons, 1 penny a dozen; Penoils, 1 penny* nieoe and E^ B *’ 1 P enn J r
Tieß ; 1 Cfnny a pieoe, and thousands of articles U ’ 1 pennjr * Ronu “
100 Dozsu Corsets at 25c. 60c., 75c., up ***
QuaUtythe True Test of Cheapness
TlsS'rtprio^toat^^nSswr amazes —*dMtrajaha^bt^^bmwrand^H SPECIAL
compeI you in self -defense to buy of us. Prices that will at omSf ih^ eller lu Fl S Qres that Will
between buying for CASH and upon credit, bStweeS' v “‘ differe3 °®
THE LEADERS OF LOW PRICES.
J. B. WHITE & CO
PACIFIC GUANO CO.
CAPITAL, - 81,000,000 1
Soluble Pacific Guano !
AND
COMPOUND ACID PHOSPHATE
FOR COMPOSTING WITH COTTON SEED,
THE CHEAPEST AND MOST POPULAR FERTILIZERS IN USE!
INTRODUCED IN 1865 I
PRICES IN AUGUSTA, GEORGIA:
Soluble Pacific Guano, Cash .. a
r Tim® § wlth 180 . CettOTOptton! 00
Compound Aold Phosphate, Cask v
Compound Aold Fhoepate, Time, witlj 18c. Cotton Option. . . - . 42 00
DELIVERED AT ANY BOAT OR DEPOT IN THE CITY FREE OF CHARGE
- , Ti^!.®‘ leß P‘y &blo fe y th ,® °* NOVEMBER, 1877, without interest, with options of nav-
J. O. MATHEWSON & CO..
GENERAL AQENTB. AUGUSTA. GEORGIA.
Legal Notices
LINCOLN COUNTY.
Lincoln County Sheriffs Sale.
WILL be sold before the Court House
door, in Linoolnton, Lincoln oonnty,
Georgia, within the legal hours of sale, on the
FIRST TUESDAY IN FEBRUARY, 1877, the
following property, to-wit:
Seventeen acres of land, more or less, in
said county, adjoining the town of Linoolnton.
Levied on as the property of Chapley R.
Strother, to satisfy a mortgage fl. fa. In favor
of John H. Fitzpatrick vs. Chapley B.
Strother. Said property pointed out in arid fl.
fa. Notioe served on defendant aoeordine to
l*w. ¥>. WILLINGHAM,
Deoember 18,1879. Sheriff L. O.
ded2B-lawwtd
SOJUYEN COUNTY.
Q EOKGIA, 80BIVEN COUNTY —Wher: as, M. E.
V J Hollingsworth has applied to me for Letters
of Administration on the estate of Isaao B. Hollings
worth, late of said county, deceased:
These are.thcrefore.to cite aU conoemed te be and
appear at my office, within the time prescribed by
“7> andshowcause, if sqy they oan, why Letter* of
Administration should he granted.
Witness my hand and offioial signature this Jan
umy Ist. IW7. CURTIS HUMPHREYS, Sr.,
lanl-ytd Ordinary.
T W. Bolton, Administrator of John L. Bolton
deceased, has applied to me for Letters of Adminis
tration on the estate of said deceased :
These are, therefore, to cite all tersons concerned
to be and appear at my office in Sylvania, Berrien
connty. on or before the second Monday in FEBRU
ARY, 1877, to show cause, If any they oan, why said
letters should not be granted,
Given under my hand and official signature, thla
27th day of December, 1878.
OUBTIS HUMPHBEYB, 8r„
deo3l-wtd Ordinary.
H. B. Kemp, of said county, has applied to me
for Exemption of PepecQ<fity, and I will pass upon
the same at my office, in ftylvani*. at 10 o’olock,
a. m,, op the mb. dY of JANUABY, 1877.
, „, OUBTIS HUMPHREYS. Sr.,
Jjanl4ewß Ordinary S, 0.
COLUMBIA COUNTY.
FITITION FOB LETTEBS OF DISMISSION
-STATE OF GEORGIA. COLUMBIA COUN
TY.— Whereas, 8. 0. and John T. Lamtln, Admin
istrators on the estate of John ns. deceased,
applies to me for Letters of Dismission— ’
This is, therefore, to cite all persons coaoerned.
kindred and creditors, to be and appear at my
office, within the time ppeserihed to Jaw, to show
cause, if any they ogq, 'why said Letters should
not be granteq.
Given under my hand and offloUl signature, at
office in Columbia, this Bth day of Deoember, 1876. ,
decflvw3m D. O. MOORE. Ordinary.
Petition for Exemption of Personally.
QEOBGIA, COLUMBIA COUNTY—
Cooni OF Obwbh*V. a Otuxomas,!
January 2d, 1877. (
James M. Harris* has applied for Exemption of
Personalty and setting apart and valuation of Home
stead, and J Win pats upon the same, at 10 o’clock,
a. m., on the 9|th day of JANUABY, 1877, at my
D. O. MOORE,
jant—wh Ordinary,
Landreth’s
WARRANTED
GARDEN SEEDS.
WE have juit received a large and well
assorted stook at the above
Reliable Seeia,
Which we wifi nail free of poetage at 60 cents
per dozen paper*.
Extra inducements offered to dealers.
Send for Catalogue.
WM. H. TUTT A BEMSEN,
> Wholesale and Retail Druggist*.
Garden Corn.
XjANDBETH’S Extra Early Corn.
Adam’s Extra Early Core.
Early Sugar Core
Large White Flat Core.
Mamwoth Sweet Cora, £O., in the Ear, at
W. H. TUTT A BEMSEN’S,
Wholesale and Retail Druggists.
In Bulk.
hjNU Pm. .n<j Bmo., Dwarf ul Ban
ners, of every variety. Onion Bets, Yellow
and Silver Skin, Spring Turnip, Millet, Ac., at
W. H. TUTT A BEMSEIS’Sj
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRUGGISTS.
Janl4-dAw
Prices Reduced
AT
O. J. T. BALK’S,
No. 136 Broad Street, Hall Block Above
Lower Market.
TN order to close out all my Winter Goods, I
X have reduced the prioee on many Goods to
about one-half their former value. The sale
opqn on MONDAY MORNING end con
tinue until *U suoh Goode as I wish to dispose
l of are (dosed out. No samples will be given
during the sale, Ooaae early and often and
bring all thamopex yon oan spare and invest
It in the best real bargains in ry Goods ever
: offered 1n this city. Printed worsted Dress
1 Goode, a splendid artida tar ladies’ house
i dresses, st 12}©., worth 20c.; double width
Waterproof (Doth, in black and brewn, at 60e.
yard; White Union rlaaaal at 16c, yard wide;
White Shaker Flannel, very heavy, at 80 and
400. % yard; heavy Ootton Flannel, at 10o.;
Plain Gotated Cashmeres and Delaines, at 20c.<
Ksek Alpaca, at 25c.; fine ei'k finished Black
Alpaca, at 85 to 600. a yard; BUnkeh and
Shams at a great sacrifice; new style Indies’
Trimmed Hate, at half prfc; Calicoes, fast
colors, from 6}c.; Hottespeps, ip bleached and
brown, at sq. Remnants of an kinds nearly
given qw*y. A Xli at No. 136 Broad street wUI
satisfy yon that this is ne humbug.
frnT—if. O. £ T. BALE.
fitfHl filHtMli
TTTANTED, a GERMAN GARDENER, who
V Y understands the management of Veg
etable and Fruit Culture. App yat .
jan7—suAweSw THIS OFFICE.
Legal Blanks
OF
EVERY DESCRIPTION
A
FOR
AT THE OFFICE OF
He CMcIhM Sentinel.
To THE LEGAL PROFESSION,
Magistrates, Ordinaries, and Officers oi
Court, The Chronicle and Sentinel of
fers a full line of Legal Blanks, 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 FOR TITLES).
MORTGAGES,
AFFIDAVITS AND WARRANTS,
PEACE WARRANTS,
RECOGNIZANCE, COMMITMENTS,
BONDS TO PROSECUTE,
SEARCH* WARRANTS,
INDICTMENTS,
CORONERS’ COMMITMENTS,
BENCH WARRANTS,
MAGISTRATES’ SUMMONS, FI FAS,
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CHANICS’ AND LABORERS’ LIEN,
DECLARATIONS ON NOTES
AND ACCOUNTS,
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GARNISHMENT AFFIDAVITS AND
BONDS,
LETTERS OF DISMISSION,
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BOND,
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ATTACHMENTS,
ATTACHMENTS UNDER THE LAW
OF 1871,
I COMMISSIONS FOB INTEBROGA
TORIES,
JURY SUMMONS, CLAIM BONDS,
NATURALIZATION BLANKS.
REPLEVY BONDS,
marriage licenses,
POSSESSORY WARRANTS,
DISTRESS warrants,
ASSUMPSIT (O&mmon Law Form),
SUBPfENAS,
LETTERS TESTAMENTARY,
TEMPORARY LETTERS OF ADMIN
ISTRATION AND BOND,* *
All orders will receive prompt atten
on.
WALSH A WEIGHT,
WANTED!
Kb
®xperiene, qualified to teaob
the Bngheh Branches and Music, desires
a situation either in a family or private school.
Moderate Best of references
Address. “F..’’ Key Box 87, Auguste, G*.
)shß-sulAwß
USE
jTCANDjMNGERS
H*-wiy