Newspaper Page Text
I
Columbia S'entinel.
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PVSUWED EVEBY TUESDAY AND FUtDAY
AT IfARI.EM, OEOBOIA.
ENTEHKD A* BEOOND-C LASH MATTER AT THE
POST OFFICE IN HARLEM. OA.
CITY AND COUNTY DIRECTORY |
CITY COUNCIL.
J. W. BELL, Mayor.
J.C CUBBY.
JL A. COOK.
W. E HATCHEB.
J. L. HUSSEY.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
G. D.DARHEY, Ordinary.
<l. M. OLIVE. Clerk and Treasurer.
L. L. MAGRUDER. Sheriff.
O. HARM. Tsx Collector.
.1. A. GREEN. Tax Receiver.
W. B. HALL. Coroner.
It. It. HATCHEB, Surveyor.
masonic.
Harlem Lodge,No. 27# F. A.M.,mccts3dand
4th Saturdays-
CHURCHES.
Baptist Services 4th Hundsy, Dr. E. It. Cars
wall. SundayHclioolpvery Sunday. Superin
tendent Bo*. J. W. Ellington.
Methodist Everv 3rd Sunday. lb v. W. E.
Khnckleford, pastor. Sabbath School ovary
Sunday, H. A. Merry, Hupt.
Magistrate’s Court, 1 Mtli Dish id, G. M., 4th
Saturday. Return day 1» (lavs before.
W. It. lUIKBt'CX, J. P.
The Washington correspondent of the ,
i’hila lelphia Lnbjrr has found that the
gold in tiie Treasury weighs 519 tons,
and. if packed into ordinary carts, one |
ton to each cart, it would make a pro
cession two mill s long, allowing twenty
feet of space for the movement of rach
horse and cart. The weighing of the
$231,000,000 in silver coin produces much
more interesting results. Its weight
would be 7,390 tons. To transport it
would inquire the services of 7,896
horses and carts, making a procession
twenty-one miles in length. Testing it
by wood measure and putting it tip on
Pennsylvania avenue, it would make
thirty-seven cords of gold and 190 cords
of silver and would make a solid wall of
gold and silver, eight feet high and four
feet broad, seven-eights of a long.
■ i>
The United States, which is only now
becoming reconcile I to the rivalry of
Russian petroleum, is menaced by serious
competition in a fresh quarter nearer
home. In Venezuela the petroleum de
posits of Lake Jlaracaybo, which have,
long been known for their copiousness,
are at length b -ing opened up by capi
talists, and there are rumors, reported
by tliX,Anp rican consul, Plumacher, that
the Rotlichilds are likely to secure a
monopoly of the affair. Mnracaybo is
situated in the northern part of Vene
zuela, ami necor ling to Consul I’luma
cher, one of the streams of oil tested by
a traveler was found to flow at the rate
of nearly 6,900 gallons a day, the w hole
of which was wasted upon the sandy
soil. The Venezuelan oil appears to oc
cupy a midway position between the
crude article extracted in the United
States and Russia, yielding 59 per cent,
of illuminating oil, or kerosene, of high
quality as compared with the 70 per
cent, of the former and th' 30 of the
'.utter.
———————
Apropos of the monument erected at
Saratoga in commemoration of General
Hurgoyne's surrender, the Detroit Frt i
Preo says editorially: One by one the
monuments of the Revolution are being
completed. A few years ago the
Washington monument, the loftiest of
all, was finished and dedicated and now
it is announced that the Saratoga monu
ment, commemorative of Hurgoyne’s
surrender, is practically done. It is
authoritatively announced by the trustees
one of whom is the Honorable Elliott
T. Slocum, of this city, that the deliea
tio 1 will take place in September of next
year. It would have been dedicated this
September but for the failure of the State
to make a necessary appropriation. Con
gre s at its coming session will be asked
to provide fertile deficiency, which it
w ill probably dy in addition to providing
for the dedicatory expenses. The cele
bration will naturally be a most interest
ing one. The scries of military opera
lions and conflicts which end d in tlit
s irrender of Biirgoyne and his army wa
one especially worthy of < online norntion:
ami the surrender itself was one of tin
mo t important and noteworthy events
of the war.
A Town in the Tirol.
The people of Mosare. says a foreign
letter, are pious; they are fond of cut
ward shows mid ceremonies, and the
men religiously observe the feast -days, '
of which there aie about two a week.
On these day's the women work harder
than usual. vWile the men occupy them
Mlv.s wih playing.emis and drinking
wine. Very largu quantities of wincart
consumed by the peasants. Dr. d’irehcr
is my authority for saying that many
peasants who never drink a drop of
water, and drink far too much wine,
live to a good old age. They eat heartily
and heavily ; tire meals a day are required
to apprise their appetites; ateaehmed I
.■-luuke Im. it.puiize ami lilac; bread are i
eaten. "Ihcbiv.ul is baked four times a
year, so it is generally, stale ami satisfy- i
Ing. In spe<ch'the people tiro Germans, ‘l
And they shiAe f 6*.l.We of the Italian t
Hood and charactertytics whit h are eon- ,
spicuoiis in other parts of South Tyrol. 1
11 is ptobahle, however, that the stock
is very mixed, v the |>eople of many |
nations have successfully occupied this
jxirt of Europe.
A Tot No man went into a Centre :
* reet drug store the other day and tohl i
th? clerk he a anted some iv<k and I
rye without any rock.
A NOTED MONTANA CHASM.
THE MOUNTAIN HOME OF A CU
RIOUS LITTLE ANIMAL
A 4. rent Cleft Supposed to tic Itl« h
hi Treasure— The “Fleck o' Gold"
Fou ml There.
One of the most prominent objects in
this region of mighty landmarks it the
Devil's Bite, says a letter from Leander,
Montana, to the New York .>/<»</ und A>-
prew. This is a huge chasm which
cleaves in twain the great Wind Moun
tain range at its highest point. The
chasm itself is in plain view from the
streets of Leander, but in the dearest
weather the keenest CyC cannot penetrate
its dark and yawning depths. Aside
from its commanding position ns n land
mark. the Devil’s Bite is famous on two
accounts. One is that it gives birth to
mighty mountain waters, and the other
that within its recesses tradition lias lo
cated the richest gold deposits of the re
gion.
The waters sent forth by the Devil’s
Bite are those of the I’apoagie and Big
Sandy, the first one of the strongest afflu
ents of the noble Wind River, and the
second a principal tributary of the Sweet
water, a mighty arm of the great Platte.
The chasm of the Devil’s Bite is several
miles in length, and within its recesses
are piled large masses of perennial snow
and ice. Lower down are other snow
and ice deposits, renewed every season,
and from these spring the sources of the
I’apoagie and the Big Sandy.
The chasm is dotted with the yawning
shafts of long-disused mines. These
mines were worked at a period so remote
that even tradition has no information as
to the time or the workers. The Devil’s
Bite and vicinity is one huge iron out
crop. With the exception of anotable
discovery lately made at Miners’ Delight,
the great gold-bearing iron belt from
which so many of the richest mines of
Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado are
carved, has never shown up in this
region. Therefore the deduction is
drawn that in the chasm of the Devil’s
Bite this great and rich gold-bearing iron
belt has risen to the surface, and that
there will be found the most extensive
and valuable mines of the Northw est.
There is found in the chasm of the
Devil’s Bite, and there alone, a curious
little animal which is generally known as
the fleck o’ gold, though it also rejoices
in the equally glittering names of the
golden guide and the golden gopher.
The little fellow undoubtedly belongs to
the gopher tribe. The fleck o’ gold is of
a general golden hue. This hue repre
sents the various shades of gold from the
duller colors of the precious metal in its
native state to tlie brilliancy given by the
stamp of the mint. Tiie duller hues are
blended on the body, while the brighter
one spreads itself along the tail. This
tail is the glory of the fleck o’ gold, and
the wonder of the beholder. Fifteen
inches in length, or more than three
times as long as the little animal of which
it is such a dazzling continuation, this
tail is as the glance of gold. It is in
stinct with action, an action which lias
no apparent purpose but that of display,
and jerks and writhes, curls and twists
with the swiftness and lightness of a sun
ray. The fleck o’ gold is vainglorious
concerning this tail, and when for his
own edification lie folds it many times
around his body, transforming himself
into a ball of burnished bullion, the
brilliant exhibition pleads hird in ex
tenuation of the little fellow’s vanity.
The fleck o’ gold digs deep, and his
burrow is regarded as (in unfailing indi
cation of the presence of gold. As a
matter of course, many and diverse spec
ulations are extant in regard to the origin
of this singular ahd bril.iant little ani
mal. Tlie theory most advanced and be
lieved in is that the fleck o’ gold was at
first but a common gopher, buh that the
constant contact with the golden soil in
which he burrowed so flecked his coat
with the precious yellow particles that
Nature herself at last took cognizance
of the matter and the golden coat was
made hereditary. The extraordinary
length of the tail is accounted for by the
supposition that it is a sympathetic
growth, designed especially by nature
as a brilliant advertising vehicle of the
hidden riches of the Devil’s Hite.
New York's Millionaires.
The number of millionaires in the
country has steadily increased, and the
number of poor men lias been made to
increase with them, though in n ten fold
ratio. The almshouse records show this
hitter fact, and a recent statement of the
number of millionaires, even in New
York city alone, ‘ indicates the correct
ness of the former. There are scores of
men there whose wealth ranges from
$1,000,000 to $10,000,000 each, and many
who go beyond either of these figures.
John Jacob Astor is probably tlie
wealthiest man in the metropolis, his
possessions being estimated at $200,-
000,0(10. Jay Gould is thought to come
next in rank, and there are those who
judge him to be the wealthier of the two.
Estimates as to other New Yorkers arc
interesting. Cornelius Vanderbilt, SIOO,-
000,000; W. It. Vanderbilt, $90,000,000;
Russell Sage, $(’>0,000,000; Winslow, La
nice A- Co., $30,000,000; D. O. Milis,
Whitelaw Reid's fatlier-in-law, $20,000,-
000; I’ierrepont Morgan, $18,000,000;
Bob Garrett, $20,-009,000; Fred Vander
bilt, $15,000,000; Sydney Dillon, $lO,-
000,000; Addison Commack, $8,000,090:
John Rockefeller, the Standard Oil man,
$10,000,000; Hi Rockefeller, his brother,
$8,000,000; August Belmont. $20,000,-
000; Cyrus W. Field, $10,000,000;
Deacon S. V. White, member cleet of
the new Congress, $7,000,000; R. P.
Flower. $3,000,000; Wash Connor, Jay
Gould's old broker, who has just married
the divorced wife of the ex-lottery king,
Simmons, $3,000,000; Victor Ncwconte,
$4,000,000; Henry Hart, who is manipu
lating Pacific Midi, $10,000,000; Oswald
Ottendorfcr, editor of tlie ■''taats Zeitunp,
$5,000,000; James Gordon Bennett, of
the //< <(/>/, $10,000,000; Austin Corbin,
$30,000,00(1; Enistus Winan, $3,000,-
000, .W<Pir7i<'(.?• (.V. If.) I’nioH.
Nong of the Head Waiter.
1 want to be a head-waiter.
And at the do >rway stand;
A smile beneath my mustache,
A menu in thy hand.
Ami there to every 1 ntixwi
I'd bend my supple knees.
Until my ample |s> ket-
Bulge I out w ith big. big fees.
—.VeirAuHt 77x»ie/«r.
NEWS AND NOTES FOR WOMEN. '
Changeable velvets will be much worn
this fall.
Feathers will drive flowers from bon
nets this fall.
Beaded materials continue as much in
favor as ever.
It is said that polonaises and redingotes 1
are to prevail in the immediate future.
Xis predicted that long velvet redin
otes, with satin shirts, will be extensively |
worn.
A Texas woman has a pet alligator
that wags its tail when his name is I
called.
Phloxes and lantanas are old-fashioned
flowers, lately imitated in the fashionable
floral jewelry.
Beads about the size of a pea made of
Swiss lapis lazuli are favorite necklaces
for young girls.
Brunettes should not wear pearls, but
they have the exclusive right to ame
thysts and rtlbies.
New for bonnet trimmings arc bands
of feathers, arranged for winding around
the hat like braid.
White felt sailor hats, with a white ;
band around the crown, are worn with ,
flannel dresses of any color.
A Florida woman lias made abed quilt I
containing 16,000 pieces, each less than '
the size of an average thumb-nail.
Clusters of nuts intermingled with
tulle are a novel of trimming sometimes
seen upon Leghorn and Manilla hats.
There are only eleven different sorts
of point lace in existence, and several of
these never find their way to this
country.
The women of the Presbyterian Church
of this country have raised during the
past sixteen years about $2,150,000 for
missions.
Miss Minnie E. Folsom, a near relative
of Mrs. Grover Cleveland, has become
preceptress of the Brookings Agricultural
College in Dakota.
The Princess of Wales and other Eng
lish women of fashion arc wearing Leg
horn bonnets, trimmed with large flowers,
poppies, artemisias or roses.
The belle of West Virginia is said to
be Miss Nannie Reynolds, of Charlestown.
She is twenty years old, and a perfect
representative of tlie mountain beauty.
Mrs. Floyd, of Boston, has invented a
waterproof bonnet, which is handsome
and dressy enough for almost any occa
sion, and is absolutely impervious to
moisture.
Military styles will predominate in the
jackets ot next season. They will be
adorned with Brandebourgs, frogs,
fourageres and regular aiguilktcs tagged
with metal.
Blouse waists are very’ popular, and a
pretty firm belt for them is made by
winding a ribbon two inches wide three
times round the waist and tying it
through a heavy antique silver buckle.
Jet handkerchiefs are the latest idiocy.
They are of net lacc, with jet embroid
ered borders. When the jet wears off
they may be utilized as dusting cloths,
but that is all the use that can ever be
made of them.
French advices state that the polonaise
increases in numbers and favor over all
other styles of corsages. Made of thin
materials they are sometimes loose,crossed
on the bust, the waist being defined by a
pointed girdle.
Low slioes arc very generally worn;
they have rounded, not pointed, toes, are
laced across the instep, and have medium
high heels. Dull kid uppers with patent
leather foxing, or at least tips of patent
leather, aic most used.
Earrings, while not entirely out of
fashion, arc not worn nearly so much s.s
they were a few years ago, and unless
one possesses a diamond set for state
occasions there is very little interest
toward earrings displayed.
Miss Mary Iveson, of Columbus, Ga.,is
the only successful insurance agent in the
country. She does an annual business
which nets her thousands in profits, and.
there has never been a complaint lodged
against her by policy holders.
Small, short curls are again worn on
the back hair, sometimes with a coil or a
Psyche knot, and again forming all the
back of the coiffure. Nets of beads and
of silver or gilt cord for holding the
back hair are worn by Parisicnnes.
Boston has a temperance club exclu
sively for young unmarried women.
Miss Julia Surpluss, Treasurer of the or
ganization, says no member is permitted
to accept the attentions of a man who
drinks, no matter how moderately.
When sashes are worn with basques
they follow the outline of the front, and
may be folded narrow and flat, or left
wide or loose, as is more becoming to the
wearer. The loops pass under the
position, making tlie back very bouf
fant.
Queen Victoria is mourning the death
of her old nurse, Miss Skerritt, who re
cently passed away at the mature age of
ninety-four. Miss Skerritt had seen
service under Queens Charlotte and
Adelaide; and had nursed Queen Vic
toria, the Prince of Wales, and other
royal children.
North American Cannihnis.
Dr. Frank Boas, in a report on the
Indian tribes of British Columbia, says
that the principal figure in the mythology
of several of them is a raven, who created
all things, not for the benefit of man
kind, but to “revenge himself.” Can
nibalism is practised by some tribes in
connection with the winter dances, and
there is a Kwakiuti tradition that one of
their ancestors descended from heaven,
wearing a ring of red cedar bark, and
taught the people the cannibal cere
monies. The ceremonies have been
adoped only in part by the Qomaks,
who content themselves with eating
“artificial” bodies, which they prepare
“by sewing dried halibut to "a human
skeleton.”— lionton Herald.
Portable Electric Lamps.
Electric lanterns will, it is thought,
take the place, in course of time, of the
ordinary mining safety lamps. A port
able electric lamp can be made, possess
ing the following features : Weight,
about three pound#; illuminating power,
five candles; size and shajie. similar to
the present lamps; duration of light, ten
hours; cost of repairs, charges of battery
and materials, two cents for teu hours.—
.iMeriom M’lnufactunr.
DODGE’S C.C. C. C-
Certain Chicken CHeia Cute.
of an infallibl* specific for the. c ur < 4 » 11(1
vention of that moat fatal and dread.*! enomj
of the feathered tribe-Ciiolera. At.sr Uie
fullest and Wrest teste possible, in which t en
claim for the remedy was fully substantial. A
the remedy was placed “P' ,n ‘.^en was
everywhere s single trial Us st>een sll tha
required to prove it a complete
directions for Its use are saving
the coat of the remedy so small that th. saving
Os a single fowl will repay the expense. Its
effect is slmost magical. If I>e a
given as directed, th? course of the disease i»
Stopped at ooce. Given occasion*llv “ j;*'
a entire, need be no fear of (
which auiiuallv kills more fowls than all other
diseases combined It is true to a
tain Cure for Chicken Cholera. No poultry
raiser or farmer can afford to be wuthont it. It
will do »H that is claimed for it. Bead the fol
lowing teatimooial:
STATE OF GEORGIA,
iJEbxßmuVTcr
Ga., March 19, 1887
To tho Publie: The high character of the
testimonials produced by Mr. Dodge, together
with hie well known reputation for truth and
veracity, afford convincing evidence df the
high value of the Chicken Cholera Care he is
now offering the market. If I were en
gaged in the business, I would procure a bot
tle of his medicine, little doubting the success
that would attend ite administration.
Yours truly, „
J. T. HENDERSON,
Com’r of Agriculture.
Price 25c. Per Package,
Manufactured Exclusively by
ft. F X>Ot>CE
No. 62 Frazier Street, - - - - Atlanta, Ga
For Sale by all Druggists.
SINGLE PACKAGE BY MAIL 30 CENTS
Also breeder of the best variety of thorough
bred Chickens, of which the following are the
hamee and prices of eggs for setting. Chickens
in trios and breeding pens for sale after Sep
tember Ist, 1887 :
LangshaneM.OO per sett ng of 13.
Plymouth Rocks2.oo per setting of 13.
White Face Black
Spanish 2.00 per setting of
Houdans 2.00 per setting of 18.
Wyandotte 2.00 per setting of 13.
Bilverß. Hamburgs.... 2 00 per setting of 13.
Amer’o Dominique 2 00 per setting of 13.
White Leghorns 1.50 per setting of 13,
Black Leghorns 1.50 per Betting of 13
Brown Leghorns 1.50 per setting of 13.
Game3.oo per setting of 13.
C. C. C. 0. for sale by G. M.
Reed, Harlem, Ga, and W. J
Ileggie, Grovetown, Ga..
L’iU.M.H,
THE CRgAf
PIANOiOBGAN
DKPOf OF THE SOUTH
8 I
** as
i §
g I MWfl “
* SSSiIP *
SEEING
bbslisving. Baboldni u wsu*. Immense!
Bo ft is. sad all usd In our own Music and Art
fro®.each instrument told.
LIVE HO I SE! Right yon ire. Dixie’s blaz
ing son don’t sren wilt u$ one bit. ty See our
GRAND SUMMER SALE
SMAu.m wsaiffis
gains 1 Prioes way down. Terms easier than ever.
PIANOS $6 to $lO Monthly.
ORGANS >3 to SB Monthly.
BETTER YET!
■■ OUR ga
|r SPECIAL l|
SPOT CASH PRICES, with credit
until Mov. 1. Ho Monthly Pay
ment!. Ho Interest. Buy tn June,
July, August, or September, and
pay when crops come in.
Write ior Oirenlart.
REMEMBER
Lowaat Prlcaa known.'
Eaaieat Terma poaeible.
Flneat Inetrumente
Fine Steole and covers!
All Freight Paid.
Fifteen Days’ Trial.
Fun Guarantee.
*> Square Dealing Always,
Write to
LUDDEN & BATEf
SOUTHERN MVANWL Gfi
Home Council
We take pleasure in calling your
attention to a remedy so long needed
in carryitjg children safely through
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 bowels, and
make teething safe and easy. It will
cure Dys’entery and Diarrhea. Pitts
Carminative is an instant relief for
colic of intants. It will promote di
gestion, give tone and energy to the
stomach and bowels. The sick, puny,
suffering child will soon become the
fat and frellcing joy of the household.
It is very pleasant to the taste and
only costs 25 cents jer bottle. Sold
by druggists.
For sale at Holliday’s Drug Store
and People’s Drug Store,Harlem, Ga.,
and by W J. Heggie, of Grovetown.
W. I. DELPH,
831 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, - - - GEORGIA.
WT
3 car loads COOKING and HEATING STOVES.
1 ear load of GRATES, Plain and Enameled—l 3, 14, 15,1 G, 17, 18, 19 and 20 iuchcs.
150 taxes ROOFING TIN, 20x28, standard brands.
SJXM) FIRE BRICK, 15 bbls. FIRE CLAY.
2lJi> Joints Terra Cotta Pipe, 500 Sets of GRATE BRICK,
pounds No. SOLDER. 500 pounds half anti half SOLDER.
JOO bundles SHEET IRON.
Ono ear load Tin Ware. Pressed and Pieced.
BuckotH. Cups, Dish Pans, Wash Pans, Milk Pans, Milk Buckets, Strainers, Oil Cans Coff*.
Pots, Pie Plates, Measures and Funnels, Woodenware in great variety. ’
jj ag been sole’for t li < ’P aK )flft eel i y care giving satisfaction. Twenty different sizes. The
Excelsior is vicry hanasfunely finished. We have a few I’ortablc and .Stationary Ranges- st.,;
and Iron.
Cull or seud your orders to 831 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
W. I. Delph:
! Rim a imwt ~~
COTTON FACTORS AND COMPRESSORS.
AUGUSTA, GA.
Warehouse and Compress occupying block bounded by Washington,Twiggs
Calhoun and Taylor streets, and connected with all the rail roads center
ing here by double tracks extending into our yards.
Moderate Charges. Drayage Saved.
Consignments Solicited- Liberal Advances Made cn CcntignuenE
OFFICE F 39 ZREYINTOLIDS ST.,
Roopis for Several Years Occupied by Aufiusta Cotton Exchange.
zeTir. sczhjstetidzelb,
IMPORTER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALEB IN
Fine Wines, Cigars, Brandies, Tobacco,
Mineral Waters, Whiskies, Gin,
Porter, Ale, Etc.
Agent for Veuve Cliquot, Ponsardin, Urbana Wine Company,
Anheuser-Busch[Brcwing Association.
601 mid *O2 ISIiO-A I> STREET,
AUGUSTA, GA.
AT
H. NLOOnr’S;
Call and examine my Stock before making
purchases.
—= irw = iuisi£C =— “
Cotton Factor and Commission Merchant,
CONTINUES BUSINESS AS HERETOFOBE AT -
FIRE-PROOF-i WAREHOUSE,
No. 19 Mclntosh Street, Augusta,Ca.
attention to all Consignments and prompt Remittances.
w. s. Jessup. ’Sign Red Front.) GEO - K - ,KSUP
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Stoves ‘ and Ranges, Fireplace Heaters
Furnaces, Tinware and House-Furnishing Goods. Sole agents for the Cel
ebrated “Favorite” Cook Stoves, conceded by all to be the best Stove ever
made. Roofing, Guttering, Spouting and Repairing done in the best mar.-
'ner by the best mechanics.
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants,
105 BPIKTOBH St. (Cor. Reynolds) A UGVSTAAiA.
Save money by sending your Cotton to us. Commission 50c per bale.
Insurance 10c. per bale. No other charge when left for immediate Side-
Consignments Solicited.
Liberal Advances made on Consignments.
JNO. U. MEYER, who has had several years experience, will have charge
of the Sales. Hoping to have a share of your business,
We remain, yours respectfully,
C I If A Ac CO.
Pure and Fresh Candies.
x T7"E are making np our Fall Stock of CANDIES and can ai-Hiire our customers that all '"ir
VV goods are FRESH AND PURE, having none but the best. We manufacture *
and know what we are selling. We are expecting a large trade and shall bo pleased to etc an
our old customers and many new ones. Headquarters for
Stick Candy. Fruits, Nuts, Etc.
DENNING & CO.
imm of wB sow
Having secured the Agency for the celebrated
j|L|Biirnhani Water Wheel
y'Ml or eor ff ia South CaroliD*, I am pr#f*re4i to off*!
indueeaifftits te parties wishing to put in wtlbr whe-eb
am also prepared to do any kind of Mill Work,’new or re-
Correspondence ealieited.
AUGU9T4, GEORGIA