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Columbia Sentinel
I-UHLI9HKU EVERY TVI-HDW ASH UlllHV
AT H AHI.EM, GEORGIA.
ENTERED AR SECOND-CLASS MATTER AT THE ,
PORT OFFICE IN HARLEM. GA.
CITY AND COUNTY DIRECTORY
CITY COUNCIL.
J. W. BELL, Mayor.
J. 0. CUBBY.
11. A. COOK.
W. E. HAD HER.
J. L. HUHSEY.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
G. D. DARKEY, Ordinary.
O. M. OLIVE. Clerk »nd Treasurer.
L. L. MAGRUDER. Sheriff.
O. HXItbY, Tax Collector.
J. A. GREEN.Tax Receiver.
W. 11. HALL,Coroner.
R. R. HATCHER, Hnrveyor.
MASONIC.
Harlem Lodge,No. 276 F. A. M.,me< te2d and
4th Saturday*.
CHURCHES.
BapHet—Service* 4th Sunday, Dr. E. R.Cars
well. Hnndayflchoid every Sunday. Superin
tendent-Rev. J. W. Ellington.
Methodist Every 3rd Sunday. Rev. W. E.
Shaclth«f<»rd, pastor. Sabbath School i very
Hnndav, H. A Merry, Sunt.
Magistrate'* Court, 128th District, G. M., lib
Saturday. Return day 13 dav* before.
W. B. lioaui't ii, J. I*. |
Tire autograph flen'l ha* many ; r
Sources, but perhaps the most impressive
of them came to the support of a fiend
from Chicago. lie got into the British
House of Commons in the character of t
messenger having an important letter ad
dressed to a member, remained there tin
til adjournment, ami then went quietly
nround among the seats, ami picked ii|.
the cards which members had left in their
seats with their names written upon them.
“They make a very choice collection,” ho
calmly says.
Senator Charles D. Farwell, of 111in0..-,
has been making a journey to Alaska.
His party went to the head of the Dyra,
which is forty miles farther north than
tourists have been before. Concerning
the Indians in Alaska Territory, Senator
Farwell said to an Inter-Ocean repre
sentative: “The Indians in that country
seem anxious to work; they do not want
arms or rations, but are self sustaining,
as they say. What should be done for
them by the Government., in my judg
ment, is to teach them the English lan
guage and such trades as they can work
nt in that country, miniely, carpentry,
shoemaking, working in iron and other
things which can be utilized in Alaska.
They are good traders, and, as I said be
fore, are capable of taking cure of them
selves without any Government rations.”
A traveler who has visited the various
States and Territories of Mexico presents
a condensed view of his observations.
Nothing could be more sententious and
epigrammatic than the style in which the
people of the several States are described.
He, found in Yucatan, farmers; Vera
Cruz, merchants mid travelers; Tabasco,
plantation owners; Federal District,poli
ticians unil soldiers; Tlaxcala, ignorant
people; Chiapas, Indians; Oaxaca, fanat
ics; Durango, mule drivers; Queretaro,
priests; Morelos, fruit farmers; Guanaju
ato, lilicrnls; San Luis I’olosi, wealthy
people; Mexico, conservatives; Tamauli
pas, sick people; Chihuahua, savages;
Jalisco, potters; Zacatecas, miners; Nuc
va Leon, Yankees; Lower California, ad
venturers; Colima, Germans; Aguascali
entes, Government clerks; Sinaloa, fish
ermen; Guerrero, negroes; Sonora, horse
men; Coahuila, poor people; Topic,
mountaineers; Hidalgo, Protestants mid
English.
| A writer in the New York Commercial
Adrertieer says: “A weird interest at
taches to mummies, and their coming to
life, or exciting an occult influence when
resurrected in one day, has furnished the
foundation for several romances. Here
i* a prosaic mid true story, with the scene
laid in mntter-of fact New York, which
goes far to relieve the romancers from the
charge of romancing. Some time ago
Missis. Tiffany A Co. recieved an in- •
voice of mummies' eyes. I do not go so I
far as to say that they were the actual
eyes of leading citizens of Thebes mid
Memphis, but they were taken from the
eye sockets of mummies exhumed from
Egyptian tombs. They may have been
the actual eyes reduced to the hardness
of stone by the process of embalming, oi
they may have been only false eyes
like those used by modern taxider
mists in perpetuating the life
semblance of some pet Fido or
Tabby. At all events they were dubbed '
“mummy eyes,” and the jewelers set
about getting them ready foi the market.
They were mnlx r colored, opaque and
lustreless. ]t was thought Ixest to polish
them before -etting, and a workman was
set nt the task. Before he had been long
at the work he Ix'canie ill of a fever mid
another man was put on the job. He too
bee line ill of the same kind of a fever
before he hit I spent much time on the
job. mid three or fourother workmen w ho
succeeded him were taken with the same
symptoms mid suffered a similar illness,
although others, working on other jobs
amid the same surroundings and under
•the same conditions, were enjoying their
usual good health Here is an excellent
opportunity for the Soc.ety for Psychical
Research. Were th illnesses simply •
Il goineidenc ', .r di.l the mummy eyes
really exeit s.. n< o < u t .rd baneful
power for their ow n protection, t
| AFTER PRAIRIE CHICKENS.
30QD TIMES FOR THE SPORTSMEN
| V’ 1 ,r * THE WEBTt \
i How file Toothsome Bird is Slain
Training I tic Dogs to Secure the
Ganic.
A letter from Appleton, Minn., to the
Boston Herald tell* how prairie chickens
ire hunted. The writer say* :
As nejir sunrise as possible the start
I ’aould be made, for the early moYnmg
| md the late afternoon tire the best hours
for finding chickens ; time enough to
make up for loss of sleep at the nooning
under a wheat rick. And so, while the
light is dim, out of the town, in an open |
wagon, we drive, dogs sprawling nt our I
feet, ami guns lx.tween the knees. After
h aving the settlement a few miles be
hind, we turn directly into the prairie,
where, except with a driver who knows
■ the country, a compass would not come
I amiss. The early mists still veil the
' landscape and magnify objects. A rick
lof wheat looms like a hill; a
I cow is as large as a house;
' man and team ploughing upon the
I near horizon, as seen from a hollow,
| are magnified into colossal figures.
Meanwhile, the youngest of the dogs lies
grown restive; his experienced compan
ions lie quiet and reserve their strength;
| but the hunting ground is reached and
I the youngest is let loose. Out he leaps.
! “Hie on! Blizzard.” But no need to
urge him : with nose on the ground he is
already fifty yards away, ranging with
graceful bounds, back and forth, in front
of the advancing wagon. “Charge,there,
Blizzard, charge 1” is the sudden cry
from the wagon. The dog has come to a
point. At the word of command he
drops his haunches, and, trembling,
awaits the gunners, who have alrea ly
sprung to the ground and who break guns
and insert shells as they hurry forward.
Close together inline they come up be
hind the .dog. His jaws arc working
convulsively, and now that he is bid tohie
on once more, he stalks forward with a
peculiar stiff movement, like a dog in a
trance. Now he stops, now he pro
ceeds, now he is at fault, no, he is close
upon them, and he slowly renews his
solemn gait. “Count five before, you
shoot," cautions Edwards. “ Whir.”
The birds arc up. it is a covey. “Bang!
bang! bang I” Several birds full, and
half n dozen fly off. “Mark them,” is
the command. We watch where the
birds settle down, part in the grass quar
ter of n mile off, the others hopelessly
scattered. One of .the birds has fallen in
the long grasi. “Dead Bird, Blizzard.”
Blizzard ranges a few moments up and
down, and finally conics to a halt over
the bird. Gathering up the game, we
trudge on afoot, followed at a little dis
tance by the wagon, toward the spot
where the rest of the covey lighted.
They lie hidden and rise slowly; we
nearly step upon them before they fly.
One by o.ie, however, the dog noses
them out. We take turns for the single
birds, and soon have added four or live
birds to our bag. It is not worth while
to waste time over- the single birds, so
we draw our shells and clamber into the
wagon. A new dog is let out, and the
once eager Blizzard, panting and hot,
springs in after us. His successor is
already far afield.
Not the least interesting feature of
chicken hunting is to watch the dogs—
the eagerness for the hunt; the graceful
bound of the setter; the stalwart trot of
the pointer, his active tail plying behind
him like a propelleF; the quick wheel in
answer to tlie whittle w hen the dog is
ranging too wide, the mysterious change
of gait from free run to stilled walk
when game is neiu-; the instantaneous
charge at the word of command after a
point has been reached; the cleverness in
finding the dead bird, and oftentimes hl
retrieving it; the patient obedience of
the tired animal after it has ceased to
boa pleasure to hie on; the interest with
which the animals in the wagon follow
the movements of their companion in
the field. The docility of the young dogs
is wonderful. Herds an English setter
whose first chicken has been shot over
her. She darts fiercely in and seizes the
bird in her jaws, and in another moment
will have torn it to bits—else what is till
this hunting of birds for i But this will
never do. The bird must be taken from I
her aud Miss Flora sharply cracked over
the head. The trainer now drops the |
bird again in the grass. The dog eyes
it intently, instinct and the late whip
ping at war ; thenCdart, and she is chew
ing it a second time. A second
trouncing, with, maybe n little
pinching of the overhanging skin
against the sharp teeth. which
causes a howl, and presently the lesson is
learned. Another time Flora leaves the
bird lying. Next the lesson is carried a
I step further and she is taught to retrieve,
j The bird is inserted between Flora’s
! jaws. She drops it. It becomes ncccs-
I snry to resort to a little more of the
pinching of the lips. This repeated once |
or twice, she holds the bird. “Now,
bring it, Flora.” Flora brings it. |
“Good girl." The process is repeated,
and soon Flora will pick up the chicken
and fetch it at command. Then she
must be taught t > distinguish between
chickens and gophe rs. A meadow lark
or even a game sparrow may well deceive
■in old dog, but gophers Flora must be
taught to disregard. A more sudden ,
tiansformntion from wrangling delight I
to huniiUated and crouching despair, I j
never saw than w hen his master surprised .
Grover digging into a gopher hole. With
a shout the min was upon the dog, but
Grover was too laptously engrossed to
heed. “Well, then” Grover has re
ceived a buTet that cists him sprawling!
head over heels. Being a docile animal,
Grover will be a better dog all the days ,
of his life for that buffet.
In the meantime we have flushed
sevc ral more coveys. Now a covey rises
wild and scatters to the four winds, and
in the next, perhaps, the birds keep to
gi t her and all. wv 4lienisel\c's to l e shot
like 1 so many barnyard fowls.
For the last hortr wc have abando’el :
the stnbbl where the birds forage I
while the mor iiqfiseool- and have been
looking for them in the prairie grass, and
especially in the • slews'' or meadow-like
hollows, that look as if th y had been
sxtampy hist spring. But the sun is
high, and the- dogs show n tendency to
hc'<-l behind the' wagon. We call them
♦in and diic ■ for a neighboring farm ■
h >|se. I here s, eins to be a grove' of .
trees near it, perhaps a tree c laim of ■
voting cotton woods; but no, it is but a
patch of rank weeds, dx or seven fe t '
high. Shade we must find under the I
wagon#! be hind a pile of straw. “May ’ <
wc water our horsesj” we ask of the I
farmer, who steps from the shinty. H c
replies in broken English, for hi’ is a
German only nino months from Prussia, t
He ■ glad to chat a bit in German. "It <
is not Ge rmany,” he says, ns he looks J
from his shanty to the prairie, hot ami ,
dry beneath the noonday sun. “It is | e
not Germany, but still I am my own , I
master, and I like it.” And in spite of l '
the meagrencss of hi* posse sions, he (
is better off than many of his neigh- f
liars. His house, though poor enough e
is above ground, ami has several rooms, e
and he owns a little stock. Very likely ]
his Scandinavian neighbor lives in a dtig-
I out, whose roof would totally disappear
! beneath a six-foot snow drift. At the ,
door of the dugout you will see a tow
haired, peasant woman, ami within you |
will discover tow-haired children, pad- ,
dling about on an earthen floor or spraw- I
ling in the bunk. Wood must be hauled |
far, and a comfortable farmhouse is (
scarcely to be met with. A vast, irregu-
, lar pile of straw, burrowed out inside, ■
, not infrequently serves for a barn. It is
; a hard struggle for these small farmers.
' Few of them whose farms are not heavily
! mortgaged. Farming implements are ex
pensive, ami furniture, machinery and
crops are apt to be pledged to the. money
lender. Then when $ it) is to be.' bor-
I rowed in some emergency, a S2O bonus
! must be paid to the lender, who, besides,
' ' exacts a note for $75 at ten per cent.
1 j The sun beats down oppressively, and
■ ■ the straw pile affords little coolness for
j the nooning. Finally, in the middle of
I the afternoon, the dogs are watered and
swashed down, the horses hitchc d up, I
' and with "Adieu” to our German ac
' quaintance, we stretch again across coun-
I try. The last hour before sunset is
worth two at any other time, and we
hunt until sundown. Perhaps fifty birds
are in the bottom of the wagon when
! we begin the drive of ten or tifeen miles
home in the gloaming.
WISE WORDS.
Live up to your engagements
Never be idle, for work prevents pov
erty.
Good character is above all things
else.
It is better to be nobly remembered
I than to be nobly born.
W1 at do we live for if it is\iot to make
life less difficult to each other.
Moderation is the silken string running
through the pearly chain of all virtues.
Do not be guided by the impulse of
the moment, but by your best cultured
judgment.
Let friendship gently creep to a height;
if it rush to it, it may soon run itself out
of breath.
Men love to hear of their power, but
have an extreme disrelish to be told of
their duty.
The wise prove, and the simple con
fess, by their conduct, that a life of em
ployment is the only life worth leading.
To be amended by a little cross, afraid
of a little sin, and affected by a little
mercy, is good evidence of grace in the
soul.
Polish is easily added if tho founda
tions are strong; but no amount of gilei
ing will be of use if your timber is not
sound.
If we bring into one day’s thought the
evil of many, certain ami uncertain,
what will be and what, will never be,
our load will be as intolerable as it is un
reasonable.
It is enough that we have swallowed
these truths, we must feed them as in
sects on a leaf, till the whole heart be
colored by their qualities, and show its
food in every, the minutest, fiber.
Coleridye,
Heavy Losses in Modern Battles.
It is not uninteresting to state what
have been the bloodiest battles of the last
hundred years, that is, to compute the
percentage of 10-s to the numbers en
gaged. Within the allotted time the
Napoleonic battles come first. Arcola
was the most sanguinary struggle of the
Italian campaign. The forces engaged
numbered about 70,000, and the lossxvas
about 25,000, or about 35 per cent. At
Rivoli there were 80,000 men engaged,
I and the loss xvas 40,000, but 20,000 of
' these consisted of Austrians who sur
rendered to Napoleon, so that the real
loss was only 25 per cent.
After Bonaparte's return from Egypt
he fought the battle of Marengo. In its re
sults this was one of the most momentous
engagements in history, but all accounts
agree that it was the worst planned and
worst fought of all Bonaparte’s victories.
There were (iO,OOQ men engaged, and the
loss was 17,000, or about 28 percent. At
the battle of Austerlitz, which by many
is considered Napoleon’s most brilliant !
victory, the French and Austro-Russian
armies numbered 210,000 men, and
’ the loss was 40,000, or about
ilB per cent. At Jewa-Auerstadt
j there were 325,000 men engaged,
and the loss was 40,000, or about 12 per
cent. At Borodino there were 170,000
men in battle, and 80,000 were killed
and w ounde d,amount ing to more than 16
percent. At Leipsic there were 500,000
men in the battle, which lasted three?days,
and the loss was 110,000, or 22 per cent.
I At Waterloo 140,000 men were engaged,
i and the loss via s 40,000,or28percent. In
j tho Crimean war there were 135,000 men
! at the battle of Inkermann, and the casu
alties amounted to 25,000, or2o percent.
At Magenta there were22s,ooomen; the
loss was 11 per cent., or about 25,000.
At Solferino there were 350,000, and the
; loss was 40,000, or 16 per cent. At
Sadowa the hostile forces numbereel
175.000, and 70,000, or Hiper cent., v ere
killed and wounded. At Gravclotte
the re w ere 450,000 men in the encounter,
of whom 45,000. or about 8 per eent.,
were killed and wounded. At Shiloh
tlx armies numbered 60,000. and the loss
was 30,000, orone third. At Fredericks
i burg there were 180,000, and the loss
20,000, or 11 per cent. At Antietam
there were 150,000, and the loss was
20,000, or about 13 percent. At Chicka
mauga there 1 were 105,000, anil the loss
was 30,000, or 20 per cent. At Chancel
lorsville there were 150,000, and the loss
was 30,000, or 29 |>cr cent. At Gettys
burg there were 160,000 anil the loss I
amounteel to 57,000, or 30 percent.
Thus the figure's show that Borodino I
was he blooelii'st battleof modern times, !
with Gettysburg in the second place. I
' —(\ntrier Journal. '
DODGE’S C.C. C.C-
Certain Chicken Cholera be.
Eight roars of careful experiment anil pains
taking rosearah have resulted in the discovery
of an infallible specific lor the cure anti pre
vention of that most fatal ami dreaded encniy
of the feathered tribe- t’leolera. After tliu
fullest and fairest tests possible, in which i-verv t
claim for the remedy was fnllv substantiate!!,
the remedy was plaeeel upon tin market, anil
everywhere a single trial lias been all that was
required to prove it a complete success. The
directions for its use- arc plain anil simple, anil
the cost of the remedy so small that tlec saving
of a single fowl will repay ffio cxpepsc. Its
effect is almost magical. If the remedy is
given as directed, ths course of the ilw-ase is
stopped at once. Given occasionally as a pre
ventive, there need be no fear of < hot era,
which annually kills more fowls than all other
diaeasc* combined 11 ie true to name, a Cer
tain Cure for Chicken Cholera. No I
raiser or farmer can afford to be without it. It , j
wilLdo all that is claimed for it. Lead the fol- |
lownig testimonial :
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Department or Aoricui.ttbe, ,
Atlanta, Ga., March 19, 1887
To the Public : The high character of tbo
testimonials produced by Mr. Dodge, together
with his well known reputation tor truth ami
veracitv, afford convincing evidence of the
high value of the Chicken Cholera Cure ho is j
now offering upon the market. If I were en- j
gaged in the business, I would procure a hot- .
tie of his medicine, little doubting the success
that would attend its administration. |
Yours truly, i
J. T. iIENDERSON,
Com’r of Agriculture.
Price 25c. Per Package,
Manufactured Exclusively by
a, r X>ODG£:
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
names and prices of eggs for setting. Chickens
in trios and breeding pens for sale after Sep
tember Ist, 1887: *
Langshans*2.oo per setting of 13.
Plymouth Rocks 2.00 per setting of 13.
White Face Black
Spanish 2.00 per setting of 13.
Bolivians 2.00 per setting of 13.
Wyandotte 2.00 per setting of 13.
Silver 8. Hamburg*.... 200 per set ing of 13.
Amcr’n DAmiiiique 2.00 per settling ot IJ.
White Leghorns LSO per setting of 13.
Black Leghorns 1.50 per sotting of 13.
Brown Leghorns 1.50 for setting of 13.
Game3.oo per setting ot 13.
C. C. C. C. for sale by G. M.
Reed, Harlem, Ga, and W. J
He"gic, Grovetown, Ga.
MB, S. M.H.
THE GREAT
PIANO! OM
DEPOT OF THE SOUTH
\~. • n
oosit 01 OOEt ‘OSZt 'OIZS ‘oslt ’SOM fid
SEEING
Is believing. Behold us ai we are. Im m ense I
So H is, a®d all need In our own Music and Art
KWft PIANOS AND ORGANS
In which we lead all, and SAVE buyers
1°. ,8 ftp °J3 ra*'!’ Instrument sold.
LIVE HOUSE! Kight you are. Dixie’s blaz
ing tun don’t even wilt us one bit. fSf" See our
GRAND SUMMER SALE
Commencing Juue l. 1.000 PIANOS and
I OROANS to bo sold by Oct. 1. Splendid Bar-
gain! I Price® way down. Terms easier than ever.
PIANOS $5 to CIO Monthly.
ORGANS S 3 to $6 Monthly.
BETTER~¥ ET!
ga OUR gM
P SPECIAL A)
SPOT CASH PRICES, with credit
until Nov. 1. No Monthly Pay
ments. No Interest. Buy in Juno,
July, August, or September,and
pay when crops come in.
Write for Circulars.
REMEMBER
Lowest Prices known.'
Easiest Terms possible.
Finest Instruments
Fine Stools and Covers*
All Freight Paid.
Fifteen Days’ Trial.
Full Guarantee.
Square Dealing Always,
. Money Saved.
Write to
LUDDEN h BATE
SOtTFHFRH
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 is an
incalculable blessing to mother and
child. If you arc 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
f#t and frolieing 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 St<we. Harlem. Ga.
and by W J. Heggie, of Grovetown.
W. I. DEI.PH.
831 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, - - - GEORGIA.
3 car loaiIs'COOKING and HEATING STOVES.
1 car load of GR ATES, Plain and Enameled- 13, 14, 15,16, 17, 18,19 and 20 inchr.
150 boxes ROOFING TIN, 20x28, standard brands. - '
5,000 FIRE BRICK, 15 bbls. FIRE CLAY.
200 Joints Terra Cotta Pipe, 500 Sets of GRATE BRICK,
1,009 pounds No. BOLDER. 500 pounds half aud half SOLDER.
100 buntfes SHEET IRON.
One carload Tin Ware, Pressed and Pieced.
Buckets. Cup*, Dish Pans, Wash Pan*, Milk Pans, Milk Buckets, Strainers Oil Cm,« o
Pits, Pic Plates, Measures and Funnels, Woodcnware in great variety ’ l ° '
Has been sold for the past fifteen years giving satisfaction. Twenty different sizes. T|u> X
Excelsior is very handsomely finished. Wo have a few Portable and Stationary Ranges si ",
and Iron. b
Call or send your orders to 831 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
W. I. Delph-.
mm a
COTTON FACTORS AND COMPRESSORS.
AUGUSTA, GA.
Warehouse and Compress occupying block bounded by Washington,Twion s
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 Consignments-
OFFICE ;739 ZREYISTOLDS ST.,
• Rooms for Several Years Occupied by Auflusta Cotton Exchange.
E. Ti. SCHNEIDER,
IMPORTER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
Fine Wines, Cigars, Brandies, Tobacco,
Mineral Waters, Whiskies, Gin,
Porter, Ale, Etc.
Agent for Veuve Cliqtiot, Ponsardin, Urbana Wine Company,
Anheuser-Busch[Brewing Association.
601 and 803 STKEET,
AUGUSTA, GA.
AT
J. U. FBABEY’S;
Call and examine my Stock before making
purchases.
*9. Mi EURdELE
Cotton Factor and Commission Merchant,
CONTINUES BUSINESS AS HERETOFORE AT
FIRE-PROOF j WAREHOUSE,
No. 19 Mclntosh Street, Augusta, Ga.
JB@“Striitt attention to all Consignments and prompt Remittances.
w. s. jessup. (Sign Red Front.) GEO - K - ,EfSUP
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 ami Repairing done in the best man
ner by the best mechanics.
532 Street* AugusU) Ga
Clffiß'Y £ CD.r 7 ’
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants,
105 M’rRTOSSii. St. (Cor. Reynolds) yl EG'ES'YI 1.6-1 ■
Save money by sending your Cotton to us. Commission 50c per bale
insurance 10c. per bale. No other charge when left for immediate sale.
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,
CTJORY CO.
Pure and Fresh Candies.
"VX7"® are making up our Fall Stock of (ANDIES and can assure our cußtoniora that ail 1
V V goods are FRESH AND PURE, having none but the best. Wc manufacture o’ir h"
and know what we are selling. We are expecting a large trade and shall b? pleased to.» ‘
our old customers and many new ones. Alead.juarters for
Stick Gandy, Fruits, PJuts, Etc.
DENNING & CO.
swum warn paw
Having secured the Agency for the celebrated
a Burnham Water Wheel
Georgia and South Carolina, I am prepared
®g||KS|lfElspecial inducements to parties wishing to put in wfaf<'wE f ‘
" ~i am ft ' so P re P are d to do any kind of Mill Work,*new cr r"
Correspondence solicited.
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