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SAVE THE PARTY 1 It Must Not Be Placed inj Jeopardy. OUT IN IOWA. The Iowa democrats have learned wisdom from the unwisdom of Indiana and Illinois. They say not a word for Cleveland. From them his friends can derive no consolation and be supported Li no illusion.-New York Sun. -, * CHEERS ABE NOT VOTES. Every delegate eleoted by a convention that cheered Cleveland is nota Cleveland man. Only 132 delegates have been instructed for Cleveland up to date. DAN?EO?S WATERS. The democracy in its idolatry of Cleveland is venturing into dangerous waters. Its;dispostion to recognize no other leader shows that its vision is impaired, and that it is drifting rapidly upon a rock-hound beach, already thickly strewn with the. wreckage of pohtcal organizations -which have unsuccessfully opposed it in the past.-Chicago Herald. BOIES WOULD SUIT THE DEMOCRTS. Horace Boies is an ideal demo cratic;leader. He represents his party on the tairff, currericy and temperance issu#3 with an accuracy no other aspirant can boast. If Henry Watterson's advice is adopted, and the great west is allowed to . name the democratic standard bearer, the Chicago convention cannot very well do bet ter than to turn to Iowa's favorite son, It is true that he may no; be entirely acceptable to the mugwump. chntingent, but the mugwump contingent is not selecting democratic candidates. Boston Journal, AN AVAILABLE MAN. If grave doubts of availability exist neither should be more seriously considered than one of last year's bird's nests, for neither is essential to democracy, whose principles were well defined before either Cleveand or Hill vor any other man whose name is now mentioned in connection with the presidency was ever heard of out side of hie country. Attempts to extract sunbeams from cucumbers and to eli ase rainbows are well enough in their way, but they have never aided in carrying an election. The Gazette looks to practical results and can not be carried off its feet by seatimental blather and man worship-Arkansas Gazette. THE MAN WHO CAN WIN. The Messenger is for honest, true democrats with good political and personal records who may be nominated and who can beat the enemy. The Messenger is for the democratic party and the good of North Carolina, and not for this favorite or that who may prove a dead weight to the wings of the party and bring defeat." That is the kind of democrat The Messenger is,'and do not' forget it. -Wilmington, N. ?., Messenger. "Too many people would rather talk about the great dignity of labor than to do any of it. What if St. Paul had prescribed epsom salts to Timothy for his stomach? "Be praised not for your ancestors, but for your virtues." Disease comes in by hundred weights and goes out by ounces." Fear not the threats of the great, but rather the tears of the poor." Never take a crooked path while you can see a straight one." "Every little frog is great in his own bog. "A debt is adorned by payment." DU obedience Not Untruthfulness. A friend once told me that she did not know what to do with her little boy, four years old, who had for the last few days been telling all sorts of untruths, with no reason or sense in them. For instance, that morning she told him she did not want him to carry ont, as he had been doing, his little basket of ap ples to share with his playmates, as the apples were nearly gone. Two or three hours after she heard his little feet on the cellar stairs. She went out, and saw him coming up the stairs with his basket of apples. "Why, Eben, did I not tell you not to bring np any more apples for the chil dren?' . "Yetfin," answered the little fellow, pursuing his way. "Why do you bring them, then?" ?Tm not bringing them," said he. "Is not that a basket of apples you have in your hand?' "Yes'm." "Well, then, you are bringing up ap ples, as I told you not to, are you not?" "No, mamma," he said, with an honest expression pf face. She was shocked at his deliberate and stupid untruth, and also that he should seam so indifferent about ft The child waa, and is now that he is grown, per fectly honest and truthful; but here was a phase of development when the refrac tion of mental rays produced this crooked result in his mind. The prime element of untruth is deception, and here was no intention to deceive.-Harper's Bazar. Doti?? of thc Staid o' Honor. She is going to be maid of honor at the wedding of one of her dear friends, and abe wants to know what her duties are. Well, they are not very onerous. She walks alone, just ahead of the bride, in entering the church, or wherever the ceremony ia to be performed. Her dress must be a little more elaborate than that of the bridesmaids, but not of course as rich as the bride's. When the altar is reached she stands just beside the bride, holding her bouquet. At the moment when the ring is to be assumed she hands the bouquet to the first bridesmaid, and assists the bride in taking off her glow All this time the bride has been standing with her veil over her face, but just after the service is over, when the bride rises up after having been blessed, the maid of honor throws back the filmy cloud and the bride stands facing the bridegroom and ready for his kiss. Tho bouquet is then handed back to the maid of honor, by her given to the bride, and as the procession retreats she walks just behind the bride and groom, leaning on the arm of the best man.-Ruth Ash vun in Ladies' Home Journal. A GENTLEMAN OF HIS WORD. Iiviho Years Not TooxLong: for Ono Man to Ho m em ber a Promise. . "What makes some men the semi of honor?" asked the story teller. "Every one of us has had some experience ia life to prove to ns that there are men of unimpeachable honor. I think tho most honorable gentleman whom I ever met was a man of absolutely infernal luck. I first saw him in a frontier town. He had been a cowboy, but he had got caught in a terrible winter back on the plains, and at the time I first saw him he was only a wreck of a m n, with legs misshapen and weak, and eyes that were nearly blind. aHe seemed to be just clinging to life in that little Colorado town, doing what little he could in bar rooms or going slow errands, until fate should be kind enough to take him away from his misery. "He stopped me in the street one night. "'Will you lend mo ten dellars?'he said roughly. 'I am in a bad WP y and I need it.' "Now ten dollars was a good deal of money to me at that minute, for in my western experience I had my nps and downs, and at that time I was having my 'downs.' " 'Wouldn't a dollar do you? I asked.for the fellow looked so bad that I wanted to do something for him, but I knew that I should never see my money again. " 'No,' he said doggedly, 'it won't. I want to go to Denver. I am about crazy with pain and I want to get there and see if I can't find some relief. I haven't a cent in tho world.' (There were a good many men in that little town who were in the same predicament.) " 'But I can't spare ten dollars,' I an swered. 'I need it.' " 'You dont need it so much as I do,' he said fiercely. 'Lend it to me. I'll pay it back to you. Give me your name and address. Til find you-if I live.' "Well, I gave him the ten dollars. I told him that he need not worry about paying it back. I expected to get out of my troubles some day and then I should not feel the need of it. " 'No,' ho said. 'I won't touch it on any other condition. I want to pay it back with interest-12 per cent, a yeai'.' (Money was worth something out there.) "So I wrote out my name for him, giving him as my permanent address the home of my family in the east. The next day he went to Denver. Shortly afterward I climbed into a saddle and rode away to 'punch cows.' I punched them with varying succor all over the Colorado grazing fields for nine years. Having had enough of cattle raising by that time and my ideas of great fortunes having boen considerably modified, I sold out my cattle and came back. "Of course, after the first few months following my loan of ten dollars to the cripple, he never came into my thoughts, though there were times when that ten dollars would have been a good friend, but I completely forgot about it.- I had been east for three years, had married and was the proud father of thc two handsomest children in New York, when a letter was forwarded to me from my father's home in Massachusetts. It was from the cripple. In it was a postoffice order for my ten dollars and interest on it for twelve years, at 1 per cent, a month. There was no word in the letter except thanks for my kindness and the assur ance that he was now 'doing pretty well for him.' * "I call that man a gentleman and I told him so when I wroto him, and I also told him something in the letter which I hoped would please him-that on that day I had made tho first bank deposit for my baby son, and that the amount was $24.40, his loan and the in terest, and that though the interest for the .boy would not be anything like 12 per cent., the deposit ought to bring hun good'luck. That's all there is to this story."-New York Tribune. A Faithful Car Horse. A queer and intelligent Norwich ani mal is the Franklin street hill horse, belonging to tho Norwich Horse Rail way company. For several years she has done duty on tho hill, and knows quite as much about tho business of running horse cara as any other em ployee. She has no driver. After break fast she trudges up to her station at the foot of thc Franklin street hill alone, and when a loaded car comes to climb the steep grado voluntarily takes her place in front of it and helps to drag it half a mile to Bockwell street. At that point the driver relieves the hill horse, and she goes leisurely back to the bottom of tho hill. Sometimes she goes clear down to Franklin square, where the cars are started, and exceeds her duty by helping the other horses along the route before tho hill is reached.-Connecticut Cor. New York' Sun. When Pus Is Dangerous. Pus is at first healthy. By its forma tion nature seeks to check or cure in flammation; but if the pus cannot find a freo vent it soon becomes septic, when no medicine oilers any hope, and even a surgical operation but little. The time for an operation is beforo the pus be comes septic-generally on the second or third day.-Youth's Companion. Why a Steamer Vibrates in Calm "Water. Mr. Yarrow says that tho cause of vibration in screw vessels when running in smooth water with their propellers well immersed is mainly due to the forces produced by the unbalanced mov ing parts of tho machinery, such as pis tons, piston rods, valves, gear, etc. New York Times. Never Get Hurt. Old Lady-O-o-o! Horrors! There's a runaway, and there's a man in the wagon! 0-o-oi He'll get killed! Bystander-Calm your fears, madam. He'll como out all right. 'Tisn't a man. It's a boy.-Good News. White of Egg: tor Hoarseness. For hoarseness beat up the white of an egg, flavor with lemon and sugar and take some occasionally.-New York Journal._ Not ljuite tho annie. Slight mistakes in speaking a foreign language, or in understanding it when some one else speaks it, are commonly nothing more than amusing, but a mem ber of the Alpine club mentions au in stance of a more serious nature. He was climbing one of the Alps with a guide, who persisted in talking bad Eng lish instead of indifferent French. "My guide," ho says, "had just crossed a snow bridge over a wide crevasse, and turned to await me on the farther side. I asked him if it was weak; he an swered, 'No strong.' "Naturally I attempted to walk across it instead o" crawling. I had almost reached tho oihcr side when tho bridge) gave way, and after a delirious scramble to save myself I subsided helplessly into the crevasse. "However, I did not go far, and when I had crawled out, with snow down my neck and up my amis and in all my pockets, I discovered that my friend had meant 'Not strong.' I strongly en joined him to reservo his English hence forth for use in the valleys."-Exchange. Tne Spring is Upon Us, And we are receiving this week a nice line of Spring Calicoes, Ging hams, etc. Call and examine tnem. Very; truly, : AV. H. TOKNKK & Co. LIZARDS IN SINGAPORE. Tho Cold, Clammy Creatures Get Into lied rooms by Scored. There are lizards in Singapore-largo, scampering, suddenly dropping things, of all sorts of colors. You seo them on tho walls of your hotel, in the sunshine, and admire thom. At evening, sitting with fan and iced drinks, one suddenly falls on you, and. it is colder than your toddy. How can any organism hred in this" seething spot ho so cold? You go to hed, you and your wife. Each has a canopied couch, rods remote from the other, for sleeping apartments aro ample. You stretch out on a light mattrass over which is one sheet. For upper covering pull up the darkness and draw the mosquito nets. There is no need of a sheet over you any more than there is for a warming pan. The night orchestra, strange sounds of tropic insects and trees and airs outside, finally lulls you asleep. Presently plunk! and then a scampering of some nimhle clawed thing on tho floor near your hed. My lady, over at the other sido of the vast waste of chamher, squeals, "A mouse!" You assure her that it couldn't be mice. "Mice don't fall from the ceiling like a lump of mud. It's only the lizards!" This cheerful information elicits no squeal. With mice out of the question, what woman would not he brave? There is a hush in the distant couch, a silence too still for sleep. You know your partner lies over yonder listening hard for more lizards. Presently there are more little dull thuds. The lizards seem to be falling in several places.- They seem to be chasing each other or some venomous prey or possibly making away with your shoes. When one is fagged out with sight seing, to He awake in inky darkness in rile midst of a lizard carnival is a little hard on the nerves. Ah, something is pulling at the canopy of your bed, as if a young kitten were trying to climb it! There comes a very subdued voice from the distant corner: "This is awful. Won't yoi: get up and strike a light?" 'And step on the b'loomin cold beasts with my bare feet! You try it; you'r nearer the matches than I!" 'But wc can't lie herc like this. Call somebody!" .And one of the omnipresent "boy*," who :seems to have been on guard at the threshold, conies softly in. "The lizards will not hurt you, lady. They catch the mosquitoes and spiders. Sometimes they get under the nets on the bed; but don't you mind." Reassuring, very; but madame was ready for one tropic dawn hours before it came.-Buffalo Express. MASTER'S ?^AT^IS. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, EDGKFIKLD GO???TV. Court Common Pleas. * The American Free'hold Land Mort gage Company of London, Limited, against J. A. Creighton, as Adm'r, and in his own right, et al. NOTLOE is hereby given that; by vir-] tue ol' Hie decree and order in this cause, I will sell at Edgefleld Court House, South Carolina, on salesday in June, 1S92, the following described mortgaged premises, to wit : All that tract or parcel ol' land, lying, being and situate in thc county and State of South Carolina, to wit: The four hundred and fifty (450) acres, more or less, bounded on the north by lands ol' F. E. Creighton, R. B. Mc Crocry, and S. Mors4; on the south by lands of E. Still and B. L. Youngblood*; 'on tho east by lands of YV. H. Howard and W. S. Logue; and on the westby land of F. G-. L. A. May. TERMS OY SALE: Cash. Purchaser .to pay for papers. W. F. ROATH, Master E. C. HERE'S BOTTOM Corn, in lofs, 75c. Bacon, 500 lbs, G%c. Meal, in 5 s'k lots, $1.35 pr s'k. . Hay, $1.20 per hundred. Bran, $1.20 per hundred. C. O. Molasses, 18c. by barrel. Magnolia and Kingan Hams. Ga. Ratchet Plow Stocks, 90c. Harman Plow Stocks, $1.50. D. B. Slock, complete, $1.85. 35 Dowlaw Cotton Planters, $4.50. Full lot Building and Plantation Hardware. Nails, basis, $2.50 per keg. Counting the freight, which is Gc. per bushel on corn, Ile. per sack on meal, 8c. per gallon on molasses by bar rel, $2.20 per ton on hay, etc., etc. You can buy as well in Edgefi.-ld as Au-j gusta. Come in and see, we have al big stock. E. J. NORRIS. Il, We arp still doingour best to sustain a First-class Clothing, Shoe and Hat House. We don't attempt but a few lines of goods-CLOTHING, SHOES, HATS AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS-but we propose to do this in first-class order. lt is reasonable to suppose that where one gives his time to a very few special lines that he can do better, than if lie should carry everything. So when you wish a Suit of Clothes, Hat, pair of Shoes, or anything in Gents' Fur nishing Goods, call to see us. We can show you the latest styles, first-class goods, and at prices that will give sat isfaction. CLOTHING.-Everything in the Clothing line that is kept by any first class clothingestablishment, for Child ren, Boys and Men. A first-class $5.00 suit of Clothes for $:-?.OD. $12.50 suit for $S.00. $16.50 suit for $12.50. All the liner grades at cor responding low prices. We have a full line of .- amples of gooils for suits, and any one wishing can select his goods and we will have suit made by first-class tailor, at much lower price than is usual for suit made to order. GENTS' SHIRTS.- \ full stock of the very best fitting Shirts, in laun dried and utilaundried. All the latest styles in Collars. Large stock of Cull's. Immense stock of Cravats 'made spe cially for us. Complete line of Gents' Underwear. SUSPENDERS.-Large stock and Hie best quality. Marris' Wire Buckle. Something very durable HATS.-Tremendous large slock of Hals. All tho latest styles. Immense stock of Straw Hals, from very cheap ones to the finest, gr;i(h's. First-class assortment ol' Trunks and Valises. SHOKS.-The mos? complete line of Slices ever shown in Edgelleld. We know that we can do beti er for you than it is possible for you lodo else where. We buy very large steeles, and bave advantages thal, cannot he ob tained except hy persons dealing in special lines. Styles for Children, La dies ?ind Men. Large stock of Ladies'Slippers. For quality and price we cannot be excelled, ( ?ive us a call and save money. E. IB. ZK^IECT &s GO., _EDCEFIELD S. C. Ch on j) Crud los. $1.75 will buy a six finger Crain Cradle, with a celebrated Blood's blade (best known.) W. H. TUKNKR & Co. MANLY TIMM DENTAL SURGEON. Dffice over Bank of Edgeficld. Hours from 9 a. rn. to 4 p. m. JOHN WARE, TONSOBIAL ARTIST. EDGEFIELD,. - - S. C. Satisfaction in a Shave and a Eair-Cut guaranteed. Moor * Plotoir GROUPS, SCHOOLS, BUILDINGS, ANIMAL, ' ' nd any other kind of out-door ?vork promptly and carefully done. Orders from the country andneighbor ng towns solicited. All photos made m the new ind beautiful Aristo paper. Write for terms and prices. nchl4t GEO. F. MIMS. ?tn. In tho rear of the Y. M. C. A. Hall I have opened a Roof Market where I will bc prepared it all times to serve the public. FRESH BEEF, PORK, SAUSAGE md MUTTON. Give mo a call. W. E. Eubanks. ASISTO PHOTOGRAPHS (VRE NOW M ADE AT MY STUDIO. Duplicates from the negatives now >n hand will be liner and prettier on Aristo paper than those first sent out. Crayon Portraits Enlarged from small portraits are as popular as ever. I have delivered seventy and they give general satis 'actioii. PRICES LOW. Childrens'Photos a Specialty nchl02m :R. H. MIMS GEORGE B, I AKE - AGENT FOR - The MU TUR AL LT FE ?NSUR ANCE CO., of N' \v York. The largest arid liest Life Companj in the world'. Agent also for ibo following Fi Companies : HOME, of New York. 3REENWICH, of New Yorlc. EIAMBURG-BREMEN, of Ham burg, Germany. LANCASHIRE, of Manchester England. 3T. -PAUI^GJ?Rl^N, of St. Paul Minn. MECHANICS and TRADERS, of New Orleans. TRAVELERS ACCIDENT INS CO., of Hartford, Conn. S..L WYANDOTS Exclusively. "DOTT," ?core 94. THE GREATEST YETI At Columbia, S. C., the largest Southern )ho\yin iSot. my hirds swept the field. Here re tlie prizes won : ist, 2d and third an cockerel, ame on pullet, ?ame on pen. Special for best ipckercl, special for best pen. And the grand pullet he has seen this season. My urds arc not excelled in America. Fowls for ale at all times. Eggs $3.00 per 13, $5.00 for 26, SCOTT MAXWELL, VAUCLUSE,S. C. FOR GENTLEMEN HE BEST SHOE IN THE WORLD FOR THE MONEY? It is a seamless shoo, with no tacks or wax thread J hurt tho foot; mado of the best floe calf, stylish nd easy, and because we make more shoes of thia rci?e thtm any other manufacturer, lt eqtoals Lau J owed shoes costing from S 1.00 to $5.00. 00 Genuino Hand-sewed, tho finest enif iJ&B shoo ever olTcrcd for $5.UU; equals French mportcd shoes which cost from gs.ft) to $12.00. T*/} 00 ll mid-Served Welt Shoe? fino calf, PSii stylish, comfortable and durable. Tho best boo ever offered nt this price ; same grado as cus oin-nwde shoes costing from Sti.Ou to $!>.uu. jo 50 I'olice Shoot Fnrmera. llallrnnd Men Pvi and latter Cnrrlcrs All wear them; Uno calf, eamli'ss, smooth inside, heavy thrcu soles, oxten lon edge. Ono pair will wear a year. 3 ?5 50 fine cnlft no better shoe over offered at ?}?mm this price; ono trial will convinco thoso rho want a shoo for comfort and service. J?ir> ~~> mid S3.00 Wm Hi II;-111:1 n's shoes aro very strong nud durable. Thoso who ave given them a trial will wear no other mato. BAUe! $?.00 and SI.75 school shoes aro UT ?3 worn by the boyscvery where; they sell n thcTr merits, ns tho Increasing sales show. I ?ri'oc S.'J.OO llnnd-nowcd shoe, best Wall IC Sf pongoln, very stylish; equals French mportcd shoes costing from g l.di to 80.01). 1 ,n c! i cr-' 2.50, S2.00 und Si.75 shoo for lisses aro tho best line Dongola. Stylish and durable. ?JniiHon.-See that W. 1.. Douglas" name and rico aro stamped on tho bottom of euch shoo. Ey TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE, JU Jtruislon local advert land dealers simplving von. tv. JJ. DOUGLAS, 1!rockton, Hon's. sjidUV' J..M. COBB, EDGEFIELD, S. C. t. I JLSTO. 2 Park Row, .IMPORTERS OF FIXE Wines, Liquors, Tobacco, Cigars, Stone Moit? Con Whiskey a Specially. Will move to our new quarters in about thirty days in the HUFFMAN NTEW BUILDING. CH ?GERT The Je^reller% -732 Broad (Under Central Hotel,) Street. eider, Wines, Liquors and Cigars, IMI'ORTKKS OF FINK AND DKALKKS IX Bourbon Rye and Corn Whiskey. 601 iind So2 l^roa.cl Street, March, April, and May r will ?ell EGGS to persons in Fd<reJieId county at $1.50 per sitting ol' 13. Sem For illustrated circular, showing SHOW record. Farmers can dono bette ;han to PLANT a lew chickens t his year. SF GRANITE VILLE, S. C. McHusIi Bros, Bdgefield, S. C., We have now removed to our new quarters on tho corner next to [he Farmers' Loan and '..avings Bank, whore wc shall be pleased to 3eo and entertain our friends and the balance of mankind, right royally. That we are prepared to do this, a bare inspection of our inner j idornings will establish. Our Liquors, Wines, Cigars, Etc., Etc... are of the latest, best, and most approved brands. Give us one cal and-you will need no further invitation. Respectfully, McHugh Bros": EDGEFIELD, S. O. -REPRESENTS Thc UNION MUTUAL LIFE, of Portland Maine. Hs police ire tho most liberal now offered to tho public. -ALSO The PENNSYLVANIA FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, of j Philadelphia. It will be to the interest of parties contemplating insurance to ex irnine their contracts before insuring elsewhere. TA7"E are receiving SPRING GOODS every day and will be glad tc have the public come and see them. We do not require yoi to buy but only wish to satisfy you that wo have a nicer selection thai, you can get elsewhere in the town. Also that We Guarantee Prices. Everything has come in except Dress Goods, Gloves, Hosiery and Embroidery ; these goods we are looking for every day. We will have i LARGER and MUCH NICER line of DRESS GOODS this season ilian ever. Mantau ?VEalsLirag We have added Mantua Making to our business. Miss Amoss, a selebrated dress maker from Baltimore, will preside over this depart nent. Remember wo guarantee, every dress to fit. Our terms aro STRICTLY CASH. SHOES! SHOES!! We will also carry a large line of Ladies' and Gents' Shoes, the >est, without any exception, that has ever been brought to this place; laving bought close and discounted every bill we care nothing for] lompletion. Try us and see ! Zep?iyrs o,mci Sillas. We have added Zephyrs and Embroidery Silks to our stock ; onie and see them before they are picked over as they are selling very ast. OUR We will not quote prices or mention, at this time, the different :inds of goods we carry in stock, as we keep everything that, is wanted n a first-class dry goods store. You Viii save money by trying us ll wc ask is a trial and wc will convince you. PEARCE & ALLEN. High Prices for Cotton IS MADE POSSIBLE BY INVESTING WU EUE YOU CAN OBTAIN ?JEST VALUES FOE LEAST CASH. ( LOWEST PRICES, A GOOD TEAM < ( BEST GOODS. Weare hwiclquartors fur BLANKETS, CLOAKS, DRESS GOODS JNDEUWEAR, and eveVytli?ng in Dry Goods. Come nnd seo us when you come to the city. MTJLLARKY & H ARTY, 310 Broad St., Augusta, Ga. IF YOU ARB LOOKING OK POPULAR PRICED, STLISH, WELL MADE CLOTHING. We with all sincerity recommend you to call when in Augusta, and ?ee the immense stock of I. C. LEVY & CO., Tailor Fit Clothiers. AUGUSTA, - - GA. GEO. R. LOMBARD & COMP'Y MACHINE, BOILER ail Gffi WOBB MILL, ENGINE al Gffl SUPPLY HOUSE. AUGUSTA, - - - - GA Is thc place to get Machinery" and Supplies and Repairs at Bottom Prices. 50 New Gins and 62 New Engines in stock. If you want a First-class COTTON GIN at Bottom Prices write for a New Catalogue and Reduced Prices of IMPROVED AUGUSTA COTTON -GIN. Sec the extra fine recommendations of last year's work. Mention THE ADVERTISRR when you write. . jly301y OUR I0TT0, "QUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS." AGENTS FOR THE "FAMOUS OLD HICKORY AND TE1E8SFE MI." BEST IN THE MARKET. CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, ?ROAD CARTS, HARNESS, SADDLES, TRUNKS, VALISES, BUGGY PAINTS VARNISHES, . LEATHER, SHOE FINDINGS ( 949 Broad St., ( REPOSITORY, ] FACTORY, \ 914 Jones St. ( 946 Jones St. ( THE BEST, CHEAPEST, AND MOST RELIABLE HOUSE C O V> I-I l-l I-? C rc Ol ? I 6 C o o H F fe lil o Pi cn O ? -P .r1 rd H 5 o OMDQ .w CC i s ce 2 9 fe c? ? CS ^ ? +3 C p ? c a efl r i-i c o H C?'w c? d H Cw > 9 2 S ", o o g j * ; .iH . rt O < fl 4 ?ri 35 ci 0 ri B ff Bi TU l-M QC il ?. ? JOHNSON, PRBSIDKXT. WI H. WILLIMS, SUPEBINTKNDHKT ?MS. F. DEGr ENT, General Manager and Secretary and Treasurer. IE AUGUSTA LUMBER COMPANY, MANUFACTURERS OF Lumber, Laths and Shingles, Doors, Mouldings, Blinds, Sash, ALL KINDS OF Dressed Lumber and General Building Material, >fllce, Factory and Yard, Adams, Campbell, P'Antignac .?ind Jackson Streets, Augusta, Oa.