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Columbia Sentinel.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT HARLEM
OEORC.TA.
ENTERED AS BEOOXD-CLASS MATTER AT THE
POST OFFICE IS HARLEM. OA.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 18s6
TIuRnIX
Is to inform yon that your snbscrip
tion is d ue > an as we nee< l th*
tnonev, kindly ask all in arrears to
eome up and give us a helping hand
bv paying up their subscription.
CITY AND COUNTY DIRECTORY
" -- •
CITY COUNCIL.
J W. BELT.. Mayor.
C. W. ARNOT.n.
W. E. HATCHER.
W. 7. HOLLIDAY.
M. FULLER.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
G.D.DARSEY. Ordinary.
O. W. GRAY, Clark and Treasurer.
B IVEY. Sheriff.
O. HARDY. Tax Collector.
J. A. GREEN. Tax Receiver.
J. C. GOETCHIUS. Coroner.
MASONIC.
Harlem Lodge, No. 276 F. A. M., meets 2d and
*th Saturdays.
CHURCHES.
Baptist—Services 4th Sunday, Dr. E. R. Cars
W ell r Sunday School every Sunday. Superin
tend'ent-Rov. J. W. Ellington.
Methodist— Every 3rd Sunday. Rev. W. E.
Shackleford, pastor. Sabbath School every
Snndav, H. A. Merry, Supt.
Magistrate’s Court, 128th District, G. M., 4th
K»turdav. Return day 15 davs before.
W. B. Roebuck. J. P.
Paul 11. Hayne.
Atlanta Constitution,May 27th, 1886:
Paul H. Hayne ? How often had I
read that name in old print, and how
often had I felt that indescriable
emotion as I read the words of fire
that felt like molten gold from his
nervous hand. And yet when I met
him I was taken aback. Not that I
was disappointed —far from it It
was not a disappointment, but a sort
of surprise. You see I have become
so accustomed to building up a fine
ideal, from hearsay, and then on com
ing face to face with my ideal, find
ing it cold clay, that I have fortified
myself against such surprises. Paul
Hayne, from hearsay, was so im
measurably superior, that I naturally
expected to find Paul Hayne, in every
day life, a very common individual,
with indifferent manners, and a make
up after the dull manner of common
place humanity.
But the Paul Hayne of fancy was
surpassed by the real flesh and blood.
Paul Hayne, the sweetest songster of
our own Sunny South ! In every line,
curve and angle of his make-up I
seemed to discern something different
from what one daily jostles against in
the business of bread winning. In
short, the man was everything that
the productions of his master hand
would indicate. Were you to see him
walking along the street amid a I
throng of ordinary mortals you would I
take a second look, or pause and i
whisper to yourself: “He is more
like a walking, breathing soul, with
the merest gauze of mortality shining
in vain to hide bis spirituality, than
any man I ever met.”
Os slight build and a figure the
medium height, he stands straight as
an arrow, and every gesture and
motion is a poem in itself. He is
poetry personified, the beau ideal of
the genius of song. The smooth,
rather pale face, clean shaved, except
the bristly mustache of mingled gray
and brown, is lit up by a pair of
brown eyes that gleam with the light
of geniality. The broad and full
veined forehead, betokening a highly
cultivated degree of natural intellect
uality, is crowned by a closely crop
ped head of grizzled hair. The
nervous hand is conspicuous for the
large number of prominent pulsating
veins, denoting the fire that burns
within that heart, where all that is
noble, good and beautiful sits en
throned. He is not effeminate. Oh,
no! Not in the least effeminate. He
is a man, strong of brain and with a
brave heart, ever ready to stretch
forth a hand to the unfortunate— pure,
manly and unselfish. Perhaps
physical debility helped to make him
more spiritual in his appearance when
I met him, but I imagine he is just
the sort of man to tread the thorny
path of life courageously, preserving
at all times and under all circum
stances the strong and telling features
of his individuality. He does not
appear to be ever diffident, neither is
he overbearing in his claims. He is
simply Paul Hayne, the poet, and
there is the end of it
But I never realized what the man
was until I heard his voice. I confess
to be wonderfully susceptible to the
persuasive tones of the soften sex, but
i men’s voices generally have little
i effect, on mo. But when I’.v.il HayhO
spoke, I recognized the voice of a;
I master. Soft as the Summer breezes
that whisper among the pine boughs,
, and as well modulated as the sooth*
! ing cadence of rippling waters, it is a
voice whese accents could only be
regulated by a soul well tuned to the
beautiful and the good. It is captiv
ating, and ore can afford to listen,
just for the sake of the voice when
Paul Hayne speaks. Like the distant
mean of the breakers on some shining
strand, or tiiejmystic a sum
mer night, is the voice of our poet
laureate. Without commanding, he
enlists the sympathies of his audience,
and
magic influence of that wonderful
vo.ci. Oue 1 v s Paul Ila ne at first
sight, just simply because he cannot
help it. He is so pure, so unselfish
in every word and act. that a soul
would have to be doubly case-harden
ed that would not yield to his un
ostentations influence. No flourish
or grandiloquent manner markes his
appearance before an audience, but a
simple dignity, and quiet self possess
ion that puts all at ease. We forget
that we are in the presence of the
sweetest psalmist of our sunny land
as we listen to the heart-felt express
ion of his rhythmic lay. Paul Hayne
is a poet. In every fibre of his being
the spirit of poesy, pure and unde
filed, holds sway. They say he is
fifty six years old. Time has dealt
kindly with him if this be true. His
soul is an offshoot of the fiery Caroli
nian spirit, which has invigorated the
hearts, arms and tongues of some of
the grandest men the world ever saw.
But he has been so long a Georgian
that we must claim our share in the
fruit of the Carolina spirit engrafted
o:i the nobility of Georgia manhood:
and while we devide the honors with
our favored sister State, we still claim
the mature Paul Hayne as our very
own. I fvar that it will be many and
many a year that Georgia soil will be
able to boast of another such singer
as Paul H. Hayne.
M M. F.
Macon. Ga.
Sick Headache, a sensation of oppression
and dullness in the head, are very commonly
produced by indigestion; morbid despondency,
irritdbility and over sensitiveness of the nerves
may,a in a majority of cases, be traced to the
s; mo cause. Dr. J. H. McLean’s Homeopathic
Liver and Kidney Balm and Billets will posi
tively cure.
For sale by all druggist.
I MACHINERY!
Engines iSTEIM & WATER!
Boilers I'ipcA Fitting!
Saw Mills Briiss Valve t
Grist. Mill>~~SAWS~"|
Cotton Presses i
Shafting p j ec t°rs |
"Pulleys"' Pumps J
"Hangers Water Wliiels I
Jotton Gins C astings
Gearing Brass & Iron
A Full Stock of Supplies
flieap and good.
Belting, Packing and Oil
At Bottom Prices"
AND IN STOCK FOR
Prompt Delivery.
Gf-y*Repairs promptly done.“YjiSa
GEO R. LOMBARD A Co",'
Fcnmlry, Machine anil Boiler Works,
AiH'iintii. Ga.. above I’assenu'er Depot.
* Is the Celebrated
* Adjustable Reclining ant Folding
nnnm with over FIFTY Change#
l.nUln OF POBITION -
Unjlll| Mere than IC.OOO no? h Uni
A LUXURY 'Cx
THAT Vjggfk
SHOULD BE IN
EVERY HOUSE. SF
THINK OF IT!
A PARLOR, LIBRARY. SMOKING, RECLINING OR
INVALID CHAIR. LOUNGE. FULL LENGTH BED,
and CHILD’S CRIB. Combined, and Adjustable to
any Position requisite for Comfort or Convenience.
Send at once tor one of our Catalogues.
TflE COMPLY,
| • 930 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
H.H. P.
J
>
Try it once and you
will be pleased.
Read and be con
vinced.
What Maj. Wilkins Has
to Say :
Mr. XV. IT. Barrett —After
faithfully trying - your 11. 11. P.
on myself and as a family medi
cine, I pronounce it. for the
cure of headache, indigestion,
constipation, and all diseases
proceeding from a disordered
liver, one of the best medicines
I have ever used.
Hamilton Wilkins,
Road Master (la. li. R.
For sale by Dr W. Z. Holliday.
Do You Expect
TO
FAIWT t
Read this—it may save yon
money. Paint your property
with '
Ready Mixed Paints
This i« no new paint in these parte—we have
hoM in the past live or six yearn thousands of
gallons of it. Some of the nicest residences in
this city and surrounding country are painted
with it. We refer to the pr operty, it stands an
its own advertisement. Will give names of
parties who have used this paint and property
painted when you call. We WA CIIANT (anil
understand our warrant means Homething)
LUCAS’ HEADY MIXED PAINT. It will not
crack, chalk off, peel or blister—this makes it a
perfect paint. Thirty two shades. We carry
twenty shades and White. One gallon covers
200 square feet—2 coats. Here the prices. Ail
ordinary shades, in 1 gallon cans, single gal
lon. $175 ; 10 gallon lots, in gallon cans, ?1 45;
in bulk, half bbls, end bble„ $135 gallon.
Come and see,
BEALL A CO.,
612 Broad Street.
Special Notice.
A LLparties indebted tome for medical
service are requested to come forward
and settle at once, either by note or the cash
or they will find their accounts in an attorney’s
hands.
janll A. J Sanders M. D.
Spring Millinery.
New and Beautiful Goods.
MRS. N. BRUM CLARK respectfully informs the Ladies that her Spring opening wi 1
be held on Wednesday and Thursday, April 14th and 15th, to which she invites the specii 1
attention of every lady in Augusta and vicinity. Her present styles and assortments hav o
never before Deen equaled.
MRS. N. BRUM CLARK.
F. L. FULLER. M. B. HATCHER. RICHARD SUMMERALL
FULLER, HATCHER & CO.,
(Successors to Young, Huck A Co.)
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
GROCR RS,
901 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA.
HAVING purchased the interest of Young A Hack, we propose to offer to the trade a full
line of carefully selected
Groceries and Plantation Supplies,
At Lowest market prices. All business with ns will receive prompt attention.
FULLER, HATCHER & CO.
H: N. REID,
DEALER IN
IMPROVED MACHINERY,
With the following as specialties :
-
_ JL iiw-i Mr* urtu j uf stable curved seed board.
f 2nd Monarch Bailing Pre##. Best
hand press in the w< rld.
3rd. Improved Engines and Saw
Milla
The Standard Boiler Feeder,
IB! only one handle to operate. Is the
■jl P rac tical graded machine in the
■J IjiTwMF market.
Hmm Call and see me, at
738 Reynolds St, Augusta, Ga.
Home Council
We take pleasure in calling your
attention to a remedy so long needed
;in carrying children safely through
i the critical stage of teething. It is an
incalculable blessing to mother and
! child. If you are disturbed at night
■ with a sick, fretful, teething child, use
; Pitts’ Carminative, it will give instant
relief, and regulate the Dowels, nnd
make teething safe and easy. It will
cure Dysentery and Diarrhea. Pitts’
Carminative is an instant relief for
colic of infants. It will promote di
gestion, give tone and energy to the
■ stomach and bowels. The siek, puny,
suffering child will soon become the
fat and frolicing joy of the household.
It is very pleasant to the taste and
onb - n ost« cents ;er bottle. Sold
by druggists.
For sale ui Holliday’s Drug Store
and Poeple’s Drug Store.Harlem,Ga.,
and by W. J Heggie, of Grovelown.
H. H. P.
What the Matron of The
Augusta Orphan Asy
lum Has To Say:
Augusta, Ga., April 3, 1884.
Mr. W. H. Barrett: Dear Sir—Af
ter using your Hill’s Hepatic
Panacea for two years in the Augusta
Orphan Asylum. I cheerfully rec
ommend it as one of the best medi
cines I have ever used for indigestion,
headaches, and all diseases arising
from a disordered liver. It has been
of great benefit to the children, al
ways affording prompt relief.
A. E. McKinne,
Matron Augusta Orphan Asylum
G. Barrett & Co.,
PROPRIETORS
Gilder’s Liver Pills,
AUGUSTA, GA.
For sale by Dr. W. Z. Holliday.
GLOBE HOTEL BARBER SHOP-
Shaving, Hair Cutting and Shampooing done
in tlie neatest and most Hcientitic manner by
Mclntosh a Roberts.
Hot and void bath. Give uh a cull. Polite
attention.
Day & Tannahill,
/ A \ •< A * y'
I ***] \ J/
x /- y ' ■
HEADQUARTERS FOB
Carriages, Wagons, Coach Materials,
Saddlery, Harness, Leather, Shoe Finding
ZBuELTITTGh.
The Finest and most varied assortment ol Children’s Car
riages ever brought to the City, at all prices.
• !O’——
Tidings of Comfort and Joy
To those who have been wrenched nnd Jerked about by so-called road carte. We now offer vob
the most delightful vehicle, with FINEST wheels and axles for
$35.00.
Try one and save your health. Every num who owns a horse, or wishes to train a coll, should
have one, as the price is within the reach of all.
DAY & TANNAHILL. - - AUGUSTA GA.
W. D. BOWEN,
Manufacturer and Dealer In
Guns, Pistols, Powder, Shot, Caps,
Catridges, Fishing Tackle, Etc.
1028 iißroad St., Augusta, Ca.
All work anddrepa done with neatness and dispatch.
WATCHESI DIAMONDS I JEWELRY'.
Largest and Handsomest Stock in Georgia.
TTAVINO purehawul F. A lIItAHE’H ENTIRE STOCK OF JEWELRY nnd c.mwlfd.t.d
i "!»• < h gnnt stock formerly curried by me at my old stand under the Central Hotel
1 now otter at reduced iihcd k tin* handsomest stock of Jewelry, Silverware, Ac., ever oeea in
this city, at my NEW Hl OBE, Corner Broad nnd Seventh Btrecte, and familiarly known aa
'‘Brahes Corner.
Mr. BRAHE will remain with mo, and will be pleased to see bis friends.
WILLIAM SCIIWEIGERT,
Jeweler, 702
Owners of Water Power.
fit Having secured the Agency for the celebrated
ILa Burnham Water Wheel
Georgia ami South Carolina, I am prepared to offer
Wmliel I inducements to parties wishing to put in water wheels,
t 1^— tF|tl “ ulho P n T ,are< l to do any kind of Mill Work, new or r»i
pair.
Correspondence solicited.
Chas. F. Lombard,
AUGUSTA, GA,
JESSE THOMPSON & CO.,
MANUFACTURERS OF
DOORS, SASH & BUNDS
Mouldings, Brackets, Lumber,
* Laths and Shingles.
DEALERS IN
Window Glass and Builders’ Hardware,,
Planing Mill and Lumber Yard,
Hale Street, Near (’mitral Railroad Yard, Augusta, Ga
Till-: MARKHAM.
BEST HOTEL
IN o THE » SOUTH I
Quiet, Dignified, Homelike. Best Atten
tion. Magnificent Table. Reasonable Rates..