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Columbia Senthwl. t
PUBLIHMED EVERY TVFHDAY AND FRIDAY
AT IIXRI.I M, OBMGU*
ENTERED AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER AT THE
PORT OFFICE IN HARLEM. GA.
CITY AND COUNTY DIRECTORY !
CITY COUNCIL.
J.W. BELL. Mayor.
J.C CURRY.
11. A. COOK.
W. E. HATCHER. a
J. 1.. HUHSEY.
COUNTY OFFICKHH.
G. D. DARKEY, Ordinary.
O M OLIVE, ( In k and Treasurer.
1,. L. MAGRUDER. Sheriff.
<>. HAKfoY, Tax < 011. eto-.
.1. A. C.lll'.i.N.Tax Receiver.
W. 11. HALL, Coroner.
U. 11. HATCHER, Surveyor.
M ANOXIC.
HarlemT/xlge.No. 27« F. A M.,m« t»2d and (
IthSaturdaya.
CHURCHES.
R.pUH Hervife. 4th Sunday. Dr. E. R.< nr.
well Sunday School every Sunday. Superin
tendent Itov. J. W. Ellington.
Motliodiat Every 3rd hiinday. Rev. XV . J..
Sbackb-ford, pnator. Sabbath School every
Sunday, H. A. Merry, Hupt.
Magirtratc’i* Court. 12atli Diatrict.G. M., 4th
Saturday. Return day 14 daya before.
W. B. Rokuvck, J. P.
Thu United States Signal Service now
embraces 183 stations, front which re
ports are made daily, and employs about
400 mon, exclusive of a couple of hun
dred clerks in Wnshin-Jnn.
It is stated that in ten year ten mill
ion acres of forest have been destroyed
by fire in the I nite 1 Statei. In the
South it is common to bum oil the tim
ber so that tin- hinds may grow better
nasture.
A farmer near Hudson,-Mi h, got lib
wife to help him lower his mowing ma
chine from the barn loft, where it had
been stored, lie fusioned a rope to it,
ami passing it over a pulley asked his
wife to hold the. eml until he des ended.
She had just then taken u hitch with the
rope 'around her waist, when tin- mown ■
crashed down to the floor, and simul
taneously she shot up when- the mud
wasps do their nest hiding. There has
been only one subject of conversation in
that family since, ami- she has done all
the talking.
I , ””
/ The sword recently presen fed to Gen
eral Miles by the people of Arizona is
said to be, with one possible exception,
the finest gift of the kind ever received
by >iu officer of our army. The hilt is of
white shark skin and gold, and is set
withuhugo ametfiyst. It is ornamented
also with nn engraved portrait of Chief
Natchez. The scabbard, which is of gold,
bears on one side a portrait of Geronimo,
and a series of pictures of warfare on the
frontier. On the other side is the in
scription of presentation. The Spanish
blade is so perfectly temp red that it
point can be made, by bending, almost
to touch the hilt. The cost is kept secret,
but is supposed to be not les 1 than
SIO,OOO.
1 Within the past three years four cases
that have excited uatioual interest have
been tried in < hiengo, mid in each case
the jury has brought in a verdict which
has accorded with the evidence and
public opinion. The juries me known
us the “Joe" .Ma- kin jury, the Anarch
ist jury, the Mctjmigle jury mid the
“boodle" commissioners’ jury. A con
viction has been secured in every ea e.
The results are that Mackin, tried for
altering election returns, is in prison,
the anarchists arc awaiting the decision
of the court on an application for n new
trial, MeGarigle has escaped to Canada,
mid the “boodle" commissioners have
either paid their tines or are awaiting
tlie issue of mi appeal to n higher court.
/ Statistics are not always amusing, but
often suggestive, and those of the Dea I
Letter Otlice are depris-ing: 1,'.09,000
letters were last year sent to tin- Dead
Letter Ollice for various reasons, of which
3.. 000 wore unclaimed letters, 11?,.
<l5O were returned from hotels, 314,700
were misdirected, 133,000 Were held for
unpaid postage, 11,131 wete without
address. Os these 4,011,5i', were opened j
1,518,<125 were returned to writer . and '
2.. were destroyed. Os the above
letters 17,385 contained money . 20,260,
drafts; 34,400, receipts, paid notes, etc.,
and 85,000 contained postage stamps.
Most of these tire sent by o easiotml let
ter writers, who (hid the writing ami
mailing an irksome duty, and the loss,
of a letter to them is more annoying
than the loss of a letter t > a business
house.
The United States Treasury a,ent in
charge of the Alaskan seal i-lands reports
that the British marauders, during the
last season, have taken 50,000 skin- on
the islands belonging to the I'tii cd
States. The seals are killed not in the
waters within the disput d ur'diet on.
but’on the islands. The British case i
made up ou the theory tha: the offea.e
against the statutes of the I n <1 Sta'e--
are committed within the waters which
are claimed to be part of th high -e s
The fact seems to be that the British ves
seis land their crews on the islands and
kill the acais during the breed ng - a-on.
The offense has » fur larger importmiec.
therefore, than is involved in an oc a
sional infraction of the rights of this
country. If the British, position i
agreed to, the result m isj be the exicr- j
uiiuatiuu of the seals.
A CUT OF THE DESERT.
THE MARVELOUS RESULTS OF IR
RIGATION IN ARIZONA.
.. ■ . I
Making (he Territory's Dry Plains
Blossom a. the Rose—A Track
less Waste Reclaimed.
A Mesa City (Arizona) letter to the
New York World says: This la a garden
in tho desert. If a New York farmer had
been dropped d ,wn here ten years ago he
would have luuglAd to scorn tha sug
gestion that there would be planted vine
yards and orchards, and that here would
grow the finest grapes and other small
fruits on the American continent. Ten
; years ago this wide extended plain known
i a , the Salt Itivcr Valley wasalmost a track
less waste of sand, mesqUitC bushes and
i cactus. The sand was in many places as
1 bare and white as on the beach at Coney
Island, not one living blade of grass to
1 give it the sign of life and productiveness.
Its hidden wealth had not yet been
j discovered, mid the Government itself
I permitted Any daring settler that might
come this way to purchase at a nominal
price as much as a whole section of 040
acres. All Southern Arizjina was nd- |
judged, as much of it is yet, to be desert
land, and the belief was general that i»
was a sort of Dry Tortugas- a No Man’s
Land—tit. only for the son to shine on
and a playground for the winds to dis
port themselves in without let or hind
rance-
But in fewer years than there are
months in the year a settlement or town ;
of inorc than two thousand people has
established itself here, and ns I write I
look out over many Square miles not of j
sandy plain and broken patches of mes- |
quite, but of long and wide lanes bor
ii red on cither side by high cottonwood j
fields of the greenest alfalfa, vineyards
loaded with tho most ddiciolis grapes,
and orchards cf peach, apricot and pear
trees. The tallest one of these tall cot
tonwoods, whose leaves make unceasing
music with their rustic in the breeze, has
has not been planted above six years and :
most of them are but four years old.
One might Imagine the stroke of some
supernatural hand hadjrrought this pict
ure forth from the bosom of the earth
and set it out complete for the wonder
ment of mankind, so beautiful and com
plete is it, and so strikingly in contrast
with the barren plains mid nigged moun
: tains by which it is surrounded.
We have read stories of how weary
and thirsty travelers in the desert have
been deceived by the mirage, reflecting
streams of water, shady trees and green
grass. Here is a mirage of the desert
come true. I can think of no better il
lustration of the change that has been
wrought here in these last seven years.
And this splendid result has been accom
plished by building u few inexpensive
ditches and the diversion of a Xmall part
of the water of the Salt Hiver, one of the
principal streams of Arizona.
Mesa Gity is a series of embowered
homes. A single establishment answers
for post ollice, stage-office, dry goods
store,real estate otlice and everything else
that pertains to u purely mercantile side
of city life. Every householder in this
remarkable town is a horticuturist, liv
ing in reality under his own vine and
fig tree. One could go from one end
of the principal street to the other with
out discovering he was iu a village at all.
1 know of nothing approaching this de
lightful rural aspect except in some of
the more thickly settled ami highly cul
tivated country districts of France.
But the crowning charm of this village
of gardens is the Water Which runs
through it in clear and rippling streams.
The principal canals are three or four
I feet deep, and the current that flows
through them is of considerable size,
white in the smaller ont- it is but a rivu
let, but always, whether great or small,
us clear tis tho blue sky above and ns
fresh us the melting snow of the moun-
I tains can make it.
Water is, of course, the agency through
' which this mirage of the desert had been
fixed and made n reality. Here is seen
one of the many wonderful results of ir
rigation, which is creating u revolution j
in Southern California and which is des
tined to add almost untol I millions of
acres of the richest tillable land to the
domain of the United States.
Mesa City takes its name from tho
broad mesa (the Spanish for plain or val
ley), upon which it is built. All South
ern Arizona abounds in these most level .
stretches of land that to the casual ob- ,
server seem to be but sand wastes with
the scantiest vegetation. But it has been
discovere 1 that these mesas are covered
with an alluvial deposit varying in depth
from seven to twenty feet, which has
been deposited through ages of time by
heavy washings from the sides of moun
tains which spring up in nil directions
without apparent order or system. The
sand is but a thin covering of decompos
ing or rotten -ton ■ and underneath it is a
soil of the richest brown loam. As soon
ns the soil is broken up by a harrow or
plough mid water'npplii<l to it, the most
surprising results follow. Almost every
form of vegetation will grow with unpre
cedented rapidity, and to unexampled
proportions and abundance. Nature is
full of compensations and remedies for i
what may appear to be the most insur
mountable difliculties. Without the
magic touch of irrigation nil the broad
plains of Arizona, as well as the now
fruitful fields of Southern California,
must have remained forever dry and
parched deserts, only to be dreaded and
avoided by mankind.
A Strange Control of Horses.
An Assistant Chief in the St. Louis
Fire Department said to a GMf-Democrat
rep liter: “Since boyhood 1 have always
had a strange control of horses. 1 can
no more explain it thm I could ted you
why my eyes are black: but it is a tact
that before 1 have handled a horse long "
he w .11 follow me like a dog and answer
my command. I once hid the four
horses that pull the engine at Broadway
mid Almoud under such control that at
the dis nice of a block they would
answer my whistle and race like the wind
to see which could reach me first. An
old tire horse was once sold to an ash
man. He was hitched to a jiost a block
away, and 1 thought 1 recognized him.
and I whistled. 1 had not seen him for
two year-, but he recognized my whistle,
and, breakingthehitehiugstr.-ip. he came
tearing to me with th- cart rattling be
hn 1 him. A few m'.nutes later the ex
cited owner c une up and thanke 1 me
warmly for catching his runaway horse."
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL. !
A New York electric light company i
is now furnishing lights at 25 cents each :
per night. Lu t year the charge was 75
cents. '-r
The importance of soft water for do
mestic purposes is illustrate 1 by the ex
liericnce of a large London Asylum, in
which a change from hard to soft water
has resulted in an estimated annual sav
ing in soda, soap, labor, etc., of more
than $ 1,000.
Dr, Felix L. Oswald declares, in the
North Anicrican Iterietf) that “in six
teen different European languages, the
word cotd has become a synonym of an
affection of which the absolutely conclu
sive evidence of physiological facts
proves to be u result of vitiated warm
indoor air, and to be Curable by cold
outdoor air.”
The steamers of the new American
“Arrow L ne" are to be constructed upon
a new principle, and with a view to an
estimated speed sufficient to make the
voyage between New York and Liver
prol in a little more Ihrtii foflfdny’. The
Pocahontas will be 540 feet long, will bo
provided with 1,060 water-tight com
partments, 500 of which are to be below
i the water-line, and will have twenty
boilers with etiginCs- of 27,986 horse
power and capable of giving a speed of J
twenty-twO knots an hour.
An Irishman, Mr. Francis Hazlett, has
invented, and ail Irish eorrtpUrty have
boughtout, a mechanical apparatus for
blowing glass bottles which dispenses
j with the old fashioned method of blow
! ing glass by the mduth. Hitherto it
' has been thought IntpoSsiblc to improve
j upon the human lungs, and so the glass
I blowers of theworld havcgoncon puffing
■ themselves away at forty-two years of
! age, which is the low average of life
I among these handicraftsmen. The new
invention dispenses entirely with human
lungs, ami injects the air into the mol
ten glass by an air-pump not unlike an
ordinary syringe iu shape and action.
'This is fa-tened to the ordinary blow
pipe. itud little difference to the
workman iu handling.
Considerable success appears to have
attended the system of purifying water
by agitation with iron and by sand fil
tration a process which has been ca ried
out with good results at Antwerp, where
the water supply is derived from an im
pure so iree, the river Nethe. The water
is first passed through ordinary filtei
sand, beneath whilfh is a layer of coarse
gravel and granular iron—one part ot
the latter to three of the former—the water
being finally filtered through ati ordinary
sand bed. The condition of the mixed
iron and gravel, after continued use, de
monstrates in a very striking manner the
chemical action of the iron in removing
front the water impurities held in solu
tion. After this system hail been in use
at the Antwerp water works some four
years an extension of the supply became
necessary, and, as the acquisition of new
land for filter beds would have been at
tended with great cost, in addition to the
purchase of nine hundred tons of granu
lar iron, it was determined to resort to
the plan of agitating the water to br
purified with iron particles in such a
manner that the iron surfaces should be
brought into intimate contact with the
mass of water being treated, and this
plan pre veil successful.
Mother-of-Pearl Fishing.
Mother-of-pearl fishing is carried on
all over the Bed Sea, from the north
dowu to the Gulf of Aden, but the best
fishing grounds arc in the neighborhood
of Suakiin, Massowah and the Farsan
Islands. The fishing fleet consists of
about 300 boats, mostly belonging to the
Zobcid Bedouius, a tribo inhabiting the
coast between Jeddah and Yainbo.
About fifty belong to Jeddah and others
to other localities. They arc open boats,
of from eight to twenty tons burden,
with one lateen sail. The crew varies
from eight to twelve men. There arc
two different fishing seasons, one of four
and the other of eight months, and dur
ing these the boots remain almost con
j stantly at sea, except for a few weeks.
The crew-, consisting in great part, of
black slaves, receives two-thirds of the
catch, deduction being made for their
; food; the owners of the boat keep tho
other third. Accidents are seldom heard
of, ami the divers are remarkable for
their physical vigor and robust health.
They range in age from ten to forty, and
the work seems to do them no harm.
I The fishing grounds are in the neighbor
hood of coral reefs, where the boats arc
anchored. The divers then go out iu
small canoes, specially imported from
the Malabar coast for the purpose, and
begin their work all round. It is neces
sary that the spa should be calm, other
wise the shells cannot be seen. For
some years past the negroes have been in
the habit of using old tin canisters
with glass in the bottom, to enable
them to see better.. In the course of the
last ten years the catch has fallen ten to
twenty per cent., but by reason of the
increased price good and bad shells have
met with a ready sale. The annual pro
duction varies from $120,000 to $170,000.
; —l'/iilaJil/thia Call.
\ Peculiarity of Icebergs.
There is one peculiarity of icebergs
that is fortunate for those cruising in
their vicinity, says Lieutenant Schwatka
in S ’lence; and that is, their visibility at
long distances during dark nights and
heavy weather. 1 remember on the 10th
of July, 1878. while milking for the east
ern entrance of Hudson Strait, and while
off the Labrador coast, our second mate,
n keen-eyed Scotchman,caught the faint
est glimmer ahead, during a misty morn
ing, about 2 o’clock, when daylight was
just commencing to break. He pro
nounced it an iceberg, and estimated it
to be two or three miles away; and,
, wearing ship and laying to, we found in
the morning that he was not any too far
out of the way. This colossus of ice was
flanked on either side by its debris for
three or four miles, some of the pieces
standing fully as high as the foremast of
our little schooner. With my unseaman
like eyes, even with the aid of a powerful
murine glass, 1 could only make out the
slightest break iu the inky clouds hug
ging the horizon; nnd the mate told me
that the navies of the world, a score
abreast, could have passed between us
and the berg and been invisible. It isa pe
culiar sheen of their half polished faces,
characteristic of glacier ice, that pene
trates so far, mid under circumstances
where a bank of snow or a ship’s sails
would not be seen.
' DODGE’S C. C. C. 0. -
Certain Chicken Cholera Core.
Flvht yearn of careful experiment and pains- I
Ukui" research bare result. <1 iu the discovery .
of an infallible specific for the cure ami pre
v, jitivti of that most fatal ami dreaded enemy ,
of the feathered tribe Clioli ra. After the |
fullest and fairest tests p-.ssiblc, in whic.i every
Claim for the remedy wa» fully enbetentiateX |
im. r medv was iilaeed upon the marie t, ami
everywh.re a single t.hd‘im- been all that wa,
required to prove it a<■ mmk-tc em.'.mss Iho
.lii-ee-tmns for its use are plain ami simple, ami
co ,t of the r< mrfly noßmall that th* favin#
fa single fowl will repay the expense Its
almost magical. If dm remedy in
given as directi'd, the course pl the disease is
Sopped at once. Given occasionally as a pre
vntive, there med be no fear < imh ra,
which annually kill" m n r e h’"'" tha " all i! ?
aiHi nRUH combined. It 11 true to name, a Cor
ufn Cmre for Chicken Cholera. No ]« nltrv
r i SCI OT farmer can afford to be without it. It ,
wilL.lo all that ie claimed for it. Read the fol
lowing trttimoniaP:
STATE OF GEORGIA,
DEPAnTMENT OT AoniCTT.TVW!,
Atlanta, Ga.. March 19, 1387
To the Tnblic : The high character of the
•tl'timonials produced by Mr. Dodge, togeth' r
with his tieif known reputation for truth ami I
veracity, afford convincing evidence of tiiC .
high value of the Chicken Cholera Coro ho is
now off. ring upon the market I! I were en
gaged ill the business, I would procure a bot
tle of his medicine, little donbtmg the success
that Would attend its administration.
Youra truly.
J. T. HENDERSON,
Com’r of Agriculture.
Price 25c. Per Package,
Manufactured Exclusively by
No. 62 Frazict Street, - - - - Atlanta, Ga
For Sale by all Drilgeiet*.
SINGLE PACKAGE BY MAIL 30 CENTS
Also breeder of the best variety of thorough- I
tired Chickens, of which the following are the
namesand prices of eggs for setting. Chickens
in trioe and breeding pens fvr sale after >.ep
tember Ist, 1887: .
Langshans*2.oo per setting of 13.
Plymouth Rocks 2.00 per setting of 13.
White-Face Black
ftisnish 2.00 per setting of 13.
Homians 2-‘« P' r fie - n 8
Wyandotte 2.(1!) per setting of 13.
Silver 8. Hamburgs.... 200 per si-ttlilg ot 13.
Amer’n Dominique 2.00 per Betting of 13.
White Leghorns VK per 6C »- g °U«
Black Leghorns 1-50 perse mg of 18.
Brown LeghornsLoO per setting of 13.
C. C. C. C. for sale by G. M.
Reed, Harlem, Ga-, and W. J
Heggie, Grovetown, Ga..
LMS. Mi H
THE CREAT
PIANOIORGAB
DEPOT of ths south
'®a'fssfw«E*
I "I ■■■■ "I 1 ■ 11
•ifOD9 QQSIt WEt , OSZI Vizi *SVNVId
SEEING
In believing. Behold us as we are. Immense!
So it is, and all used In our own Music and Art
btatfS'oi PlANOS AND ORGANS
in which we lead 111, and SAVE buyers
from 825 to ®fi() on each Instrument sold.
IjIVE HOI’SE! Right you aro. Dixie’s blaz
ing sub don’t oven wilt us one bit. 29“ Sea cur
GRAND SUMMER SALE
Cqmnunoin, June 1. 1,000 PIANOS and
ORGAN* to be cold by Oct. 1. Splendid Bar
gains I Prices way down. Terms easier than eror.
PIANOS SB to SIO Monthly.
ORGANS S 3 to $5 Monthly.
BETTER" YET!
m OUR ffig
r spECfAL
SPOT CASH PRICES, with credit
until Nov. 1. No Monthly Pay
ments. No Interest. Buy in June,
July, August, or September,and
pay when crops come in.
Write for Circulars,
REMEMBER
Lowest Frloes known,’
Easiest Terms possible.
Finest Instruments
Fine Stools and Covers,
All Freight Paid.
Fifteen Days’ Trial.
Full Guarantee.
** Square Pealing Always,
Money Saved.
Write to
.BOOEN ft IATE~
SOUTHERN f'l'"’" • lie:,
Home Council
We take pleasure in calling your
attention to a remedy so long needed
in carrying children safely through
the critical stage of teething. It isaij i
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 Dysentery and Diarrhoea. 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 sick, puny,
suffering child will soon become the
fat and frolicing joy of the household.
It is very pleasant to the taste and
only costs 25 cents }er bottle. Sold
by druggists.
For sale at Holliday’s Drug Store
and Peeples Drug Store,Harlem,Ga..
and by W J. Heggie, of Grovetown.
W. I. DEI.PII,
- 881 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, - - - GEORGIA.
8 car loads COOKING and MEATINO m and 20 inches
1 carload of GRATES, Plain slid Enamefed-13, 14, lu, IG, 17,18,13 and ZU incncs.
150 boxes ROOFING TIN, 2(>r2B s|«iidan?brauds.
5,000 FIRE BRICK, 15 bbls. KJBE CLAY.
200 Joints Terra Cotta Pipe, 500 ,Sets of GRATE BRICK,
1 000 pounds No. SOLDER. 500 pounds Inilf and half SOI.DI-.11.
100 biindleß SHEET IKON.
n v ? M r^™ o Tii«V n p^n B r %lfsb Pans xMilk Pans, Milk Buckets, Strainers, Oil Cans, Coffeo
Buckets. r I .11", funnels’, Woodenw.ro in great variety.
U CuU or send your orders to 831 Broad Street. Augusta, Ga.
W. I. -Delphi
rafffl a ~
COTTON FACTORS AND COMPRESSORS,
AUGUSTA, CA. /
Warehouse and Compress occupying block bounded by V- ashingtoi',Twiggs
Calhoun and Taylor streets, and connected with all the rail roads ct 'titer
ing here by double tracks extending into our yards.
Moderate Charges,. Drayage Saved. #
Consignments Solicited- Liberal Advices Made cn Comignments-
OFFICE :739 REYNOLDS ST.,
Rooms for Several Years OcmpK” l by Aufiusta Cotton Etahangg
e. r. sczmtrirLTTEiß,
IMPORTER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEAY'ER IN
Fine Wines, Cigars, Brandies, Tobacco,
Mineral Waters, Whiskies, Gin,
Porter, Ale, Etc.
Agent for Veuve Cliquot, Ponsardin, T’rhar.a Wine Company,
Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association.
601 and SOS BROAD STREET,
AUGUSTA, GA.
AT
J. H. VKABBY’S;
Call and examine my Stock before making
purchases.
I XW BUjIdSLL,
Cotton Factor and Commission Merchant,
CONTINUES BUSINESS AS HERETOFORE AT
Fl RE-PROOF i WAREHOUSE,
No. 19 Mclntosh Street, Augusta, Ca.
attention to all Consignmei ts and prompt Remittances.
w. s. JESSUP. (Sign Red Front.) . E0 - K - JESKDP
WHOLESALE AND BETAIL DEALERS IN
Stoves and Ranges, Fireplace Heaters
Furnaces, Tinware and Hcuse-Furuishing 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 man
ner by the best mechanics.
03$ Broad Street* Augusta, Ga
CURR'Y £
I Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants,
105 M’IKTOSH St. (Cor. Reynolds) A UGUSTA,GA.
Save money by sending your Cotton to us. Commission 50c ppr bale-
I Insurance 10c. per bale. No other charge when left for immediate sale.
; Consignments Solicited.
Liberal Advances made on Consignments.
JNO. U. MEYER, who has bad several years experience, will have charge
of the Sales. Hoping to have a share of your business,
We remain, yours respectfully,
CURRY S CO.
Pure and Fresh Candies.
TTTE are making up our F/iil Stock of CANDIES and can assure our customers that all our
V V goods are FdESH AND PURE, having none but the best. We manufacture our gooew
and know what we are selling. We are expecting a large trade and shall b? pleased to sec a
our old customers and many new ones. Headquarters for
Stick Candjf. F’l’uits, FJuts, Etc.
DENNING & CO.
wfii W WEB pram
SL Having secured the Agency for the celebrated
Ma Burnham Water Wheel
For Georgia and South Carolina, I am prepared
s P e cial inducements to parties wishing to put in
am a ’ so P re P are d to an y kind of Mill Work.Toevf or re-
Correspondence solicited.
AVGCSTA, GEOKUIA.
00St of ’O2S ‘SHVOUO '