Savannah daily herald. (Savannah, Ga.) 1865-1866, March 26, 1865, Image 4

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The Savarwah Daily Herald. SUSDAY. MARCH 20. IS«S. I'it on oust EVE\IV(i editeo* OF YESTERDAY. GLORIOUS XEAVS Sherman Arrived at Goldsboro i Reported -Tunctioj wita SchoSeld and Defeat ot Dskig’g'. [SPECIAL DESPATCH TO THE SAVANNAH SIEKALD. | By a dispatch from our correspondent at Hilton Head we bare received intelligence of’ the arrival of Gen. Sherman at Goldsboro. ft is also reported that bis army has effected a junction with that of Gen. Schofield, and that Bragg has been whipped and is retreat ing before our united and overwhblming* forces. A Feminine Wail fkom the Confederacy. —We have crime into possession of the fol lowing letter from a young lady belonging to one of the “first (amities of South C arolina, to her sister, the wife of sq attache to one of the Confederate agencies in England. It is intensely interesting, as giving an intimatp view of the gloom, the heart-sickness, the wild despair,that prevails in the once haughty homes of the fallen aristocracy of the Con federacy. The bit of feminine spite vented upon General Sherman is immensely enter-' tainiug. We omit all names and personal allusions, though we doubt not that much of the gossip would l>e well understood and ap preciated in Savannah: Hamburg, S. C., Ja". 26th, 1 StT,".. Mr Dear Sister I take my seat to writs you, perhaps for the last, time—for now Fort Fisher has fallen, our only po.i so closed, and good-bye to all blockade-letters and vessels for the future. We are mourn ing over the prospect grievously, for your loiters are the only bright, cheerful breaks in our monotonous life, for news from every- where else is so filled with sufferings, anxie ties and distress, that one feels a shudder at the sight ot a letter or paper, to know what next Is coming. Our poor cause appears doomed to fail, everything now combines to crush us, even the elements leud their help. We have had a terrible freshet, which has done more damage to the country and crops than the enemy could have accomplished in two years ; the railroads all through Virginia, North Carolina and this State have tdl suf fered terribly; some parts fiend remedying, and the materials and force are so small that ii will be long before communication is opened j again regularly. All the bridges are washed away, and twenty miles of this railroad, and ! as much of the one below. We are com pletely ent off from the world, and have had but one mail within a fortnight. It is i'eu - ful in these times with the enemy at your very door, to be so deprived of news, when of all times during the war it could not come at a worse moment. Charleston and Colum bia may both be taken, and the first intima tion we may have of our danger, may be Sherman’s presence here. For I hear he says, “ One of his objects in coming to Car olina is to hunt out Mrs. Johnson (Miss Lamb,) and revenge himself upon her fi>r having refused him when young.'’ 1 think, for the sake of her friends, she ought to leave our little village, as nothing else would offer inducements for him to come here, and she will have to suffer wherever she is. To think the brute was a long time iu Charles ton society, and, mother says, even danced at oar own house. Is it not too aggravatin'’ to think he should ever have been received there? We expected sister the very day of the storm, but don t know now when she will be able to come up. I never in all my life beard anything ra : n as it did. Tiie rushing and roaring of the sea is trifling in comparison to it 1 serious ly began to fear a second deluge was at hand. The mere noise it made ou the shed kept me awake the entire night, and then wound up with a terrifflc thunder storm. There has been a terrible fire in )?. ( destroying • quantities of government stores. 1 do not know what next can overwhelm this unhap py land. It must have been the most wick ed, sinful nation ou the fare of the globe, for in three years we have had plague, famine, war, tire and water ; what more cam we ex pect? Augusta, I hear, is almost ruined by the freshet; buildings, fences, lamp-posts and shrubbery are heaped in promiscuous masses, while the streets are impassable with holes and gullies. Yet the girls still find gaiety and amusemsut amid ail this ruin and destruction. One may say of them as of the Rhettfl, ‘ they will dance into eternity.’’ The fall of Savannah has filled Augusta with beaux, so the girls are in the seventh heaven of course. Father’s message is, “That though things look more gloomy and threatening, people more anxious and depressed than ever be fore, lie does not give up the hope of ulti mate success.” The City Ordinances and the Law s.— Many persons are laboring under a belief that the city being under Martial Law, the City Ordinances and the laws punishing of fences committed, are not in force. Persons labaring under this error are informed that the Ordinances of the city are fully in torce, only the cases arising by violating them are not tried in the Police Court, but are brought before the Provost Courts. % Stephen Girard. —The following extracts fiom a splendid sketch' of the life of this re markable man, by the eminent biographer, James Barton, Esq., cannot fail to prove in teresting to all who have ever heard of “the richest, man of Philadelphia.” Rich he unquestionably was, but the oil wells bid fair to make some Pennsylvaniaus more wealthy than was even Stephen Girard. HIS PERSONAE CHARACTERISTICS. Within the memory of many persons still alive. “Old Girard, ” as the famous banker was usually styled—a short, stout, brisk old gentleman—used to walk, iu his swift, awk ward way, the streets of the lower pari of Philadelphia. Though everything about him indicated that he had very little in com mon with his fellow citizens, he was the marked man of the city for more than a gene ration. His aspect was rather insignificant and quite unprepossessing.. His drets was old-fashioned and shabby ; and he wore the pigtail, ilie white neck-cloth, the wide brimmed hat, and the large-skirted coat of the last century. He was blind of one eye ; and though his bushy r eyebrows gave some character to his countenance, it was curious ly void of expression. He had also the ab- sent look of a man who either had no thoughts or was absorbed in thought ; und he s.iufded along on his enormous teet, look- I ing neither to the right nor to the left. ! There was always a certain look of the old mariner about him, though he had been fifty l years an inhabitant of the town. When he rode, it -.vaa in the plainest, least comfortable gig in Philadelphia, drawn by an ancient and : iil-lormed horse, driven always by tbe.mfts ; tor's own hand at a good pace. ‘He those still to live where he had lived for fifty years in Water 6treet, close to the wharves, in a small and inconvenient house, darkened by j tall storehouses, amid the bustle, and noise, 1 and the odors of commerce. His sole pleas ure was to visit once a day a little 1 arm ( which he possessed a few miles out of town, | where he was wont to take off his coat, roll up Iris shirt-sleeves, and personally labor iu the barn, hoeing corn, pruning trees, tossing hay,and not disdain n > even to assist iubutek er.r.g the animals which lie raised for mar ket. It was no mere ornamental or experi -1 mental farm. Ho made it pay. All of its produce was carefully, upy, scrupulously i husbanded, sold, recorded, and accounted i lor. He loved liis grapes, his plums, his ; pigs, and especially his rare breed of cauary birds; but the people of Philadelphia had i the full benefit ol their increase—at tiro high est market rates. Many feared, many served, but none loved this singular aud’lonely old man. If there was among the very few who habitu ally conversed with him, one who understood and esteemed him, there was but one; and he was of such abounding charity, that, like Uncle Toby, if he had heard that the Devil was hopelessly damned, he would have said, lam sorry tor it.” Never was there a per son more destitute than Girard of the quali ties which wiu the affections of others. His temper was violent, his presence forbidding, bis usual manner ungracious, his will in flexible, his heart untender, bis imagination dead. He was odious to many of his fel low citizens, who considered .him the hardest and meanest of men. He had lived among them for half a century, but he was no more a Philadelphian in 1830 than he was 177(1. He still spoke with a French accent, and ac companied his words with a French shrug and French gesticulation. Surrounded with Ciirhtian churches which he bad helped to build, be remained a sturdy unbeliever, and possessed the complete works of only one man, Voltaire. He made it a point of duty to labor on Sunday, as a good example to others. }le made no secret of the tact, that lie consid ered the idleness of Sunday an injury to the people, moral and economical. He would have opened his bank on Sundays, if any one would have come to it. For bis part, lie required no rest, aq»l would have none. He never travelled. He never attended pub lic assemblies or amusements. He liad no affections to gratify, no frtends to visit, no curiosity to appease, no tastes to indulge.— A liat. he once “aid of himself appeared to be true, that lie rose in the morning'with but a single object, and that Was to labor so hard all day as to be able to sleep all night. The world was absolutely nothing to him but a working-place. He scorned and scouted the opinion that old men should cease to labor, and should spend the evening of their days in tranqvility. “No,”hewouip say, “labor is the price of life, its happiness, its every thin?: to rest is to rust; every man should labor to the last hour of his ability.” Such was Stephen Girard, the richest man who ever lived in Pennsylvania. First Provost Court. This morning Robert Williams, David Hirst li, S. Gardiner, S. E. Byck. Robert Cohen, Eli Curry, Geo. Kuight and July Knight, charged with viola ting City Ordinance by butchering cattle within the city limits, were arraigned. Pei fondants plead guilty. Judge Parsons fined each SBO. Gen. Grover, in consideration of the offenders' ignorance of its being an of fence to slaughter cattle within the city lim -1 its, remitted the fines. List or I’assknouks per steamer U. S. Grant, for IliUou Head, IS. C., March ig th. Mrs. Mary Morse and child (colored), Mr. T- B Masters, Capu A. T. Lambert, Capt. TV". H. Homans, Lieut. Jewett, Lit-nt. Duffy, Joseph Shunnard, B. T. TV right, J. T. Fitz Patrick, Mr. Packard. Grand Mititahy Review.— This afternoon at 1 o'clock, tho troops at this Post will be reviewed by Lie vet Major Gen. Grover, upon the ground of south of Fortyth Place. For Hilton Head. —The steamer Sylph, Capt. Freueh, wili leave for Hilton Head to morrow [Sunday] morning at ten o’clock. Piety Quaintly Expressed* —A funeral of a freedman at St. Augustine, Fia., a short time since, she colored preacher who offici ated improved the opportunity to enlarge ou the gratitude that the freed men owed to" God for tne marvelous deliverance that He had wrought in their behalf, concluding as fol lows : j 'TM. v brethren, Gen. Sherman has done much torus by bringing soiuauy of our peo -1 P' e< [tit ot bondage ; Gen. Saxton has been our benefactor, by defending us from being imposed oa and given Us lauds ; Brother Lynch lias deserved our thanks by. our care for our spiritual welfare ; but remember, my I brethren, that the Lord has done more for us than any other man.'’ A New Tragedy. —There is a smart little paper in New York called the ‘‘ Play Bill," j which occasionally says some very clever ; things. Here is their idea of a terrific, sen sational, high-pressure, double-acting, stub aud-twist, high-falutin, camphene-aud-gun powder, hundred-and-twenty-pound, electric torpedo tragedy : a nautical melodrama. ACT I. [The deck of a pirate ship. Red Rover dis covered, sitting on an Armstrong gun, with a brace ot pistols iu his belt and a long sword at his side.] Red Rover.—What, ho! Jacques ! Awast! Jacques (entering).—Ay, ay, your honor. Red Rover.—Bricg me'some oysters stew ed in champagne ami a mint julep. Jacques (bringing breakfast). —Here’s the dejuner, your honor. Red Rover.—Die, villain ! Your pronun ciation is barbarous. (Shoots Jacques, who dies.) Saiiorß.—A gong! a song 1 BONO X\D CHORUS. Ever be happy, Never say die, Pride of the pirate’s home 1 Ev-er be happy, Nev-er say die,” Pre-ide of the pi-rate’s ho-o-me! Look-Out —A sail! Two pints on the port bow ! Red Rover (stabbing another sailor.) To arms! Splice the mainbrace and unship the jibboom. Ahoy! [The pirate overtakes the strange sail, boards her, several muskets were fired, and the black flag is hoisted.] Red Rover (shooting one of his crew.) The victory is ours. Hooray! The World shall yet dread the vengeance of tks Pe-i --rato of the Mam ! [Curtain.] Act. 11. [The Pirate’s Cave at night. Darkness is visible. The Cave is hung with jewels.] Matilda Jane (enters, wearing a magnifi cent moire antique dress and a waterfall.) — Here I am captive in the hannda of ruffianly freebooters. (Sound the firearms without.) They come. 1 appeal unto ’em. Red Rover (enters, shooting everybody right and left.) What, ho! my pretty b rd Matilda Jane—Please, sir, I want to go home to mother. Red Rover.—Never ! until you become my bride. (Enters servant.) Ha! You have been listening, slave ! Die ! (Stabs servant) Matilda Jane.—Oh, you naughty murder er ! Red Rover.—l am no murderer, fair lady. See ! (Shows paper.) I have a commission from Jeff. Davis, Servant (at tho door.) —The fete awaits your pleasure. Red Rover.—Let the fete enter. And as for you, sirrah, go join j our comrade. (Slug's servant) [Pirates and piratesses enter and dance a Vir ginia reel. Some drink and some are drank.] Red Rover (killing a few of the dancers). My brave companions, behold your queen. [Drags Matilda Jane forward. She shrieks. Music by the band. Cheers, and all kneel.] [Curtain.] * Act 111. [On board a United States iron-clad. Every body in uniform, and plenty of large can non.] Admiral Blowem.—We do approach the piratual weasel. All Hands —We do ! Wo do ! [The priate vessel is seen in the distance. It approaches. The two ships grapple.] Red Rover (to Admiral). —Your hour has come. (Aims a thousand pound Parrot at Blowem). Now die ! Matilda Jane (rushing on deck). Not, while T can save him ! (Throws herself in front of the Parrot]. [Red Rover fires the cannon ; Matilda Jane clings to the cannon ball. and is thus car ried on board the United States ship. | Admiral Blowem—Safe ! Safe ! My jane! my Jane! Red Rover.—Ha! T shall not be thus balk ed of my revenge! Hoist the English flag. lam a neutral. (As he :-ays this he shoots everybody within reach.) [The crews of the two vessels now engage in deadly combat with cutlasses—three up and three down.] Matilda Jane.—Do I once more behold thee, dovvest? Admiral.—Thou dost. ’Tis I have rescued thee. Under this uniform beats the manly heart of a saileur boy, only nineteen years old. (They embrace.)' Red Rover.—She kisses him. That is too much! (Jumps overboard; sits astride a keg ot powder and touches it off with his cigar.) Bless you ! These are the last words of Hie Pc-i rate of the Main. (Explodes.) [Grand finale._ The black flag is hauled down and the pirates hung to the yardarm, j Cheers and “Yankee Doodle.”] ’ [Curtain.] N. B. —The copyright of thi3 melodrama is secured under every conceivable title, and tha editor of the Play Bill i3.prepared to pro secute all actors Avho do not play it accord ing to law. A correspondent of tlie Herald of Health gives a list of twenty-five ladies of Pleasant Valley, Willow Glade, and Lake-field, VVis:, who have adopted lire masculine mode of horseback riding, and donned a suit adapted thereto. It is thus described: Full dress blue cloth coat and cashmere vest, both very plain flat gilt buttons, dark blue cashmere pants, and black dress hat. This is worn to church, aAid sometimes kept on exclusively for days together. Tho ladies who adopt it are of high social standing, and bid fair to make the dress, at least iu that neighbor hood, eminently respectable, if not fashion able. Mutilated Currency. —The U. S. Mail, the official paper of the Post Office Depart ment, of January, stated that mutilated cur rency must bo redeemed by postmasters.— This February number, however, states that this is an error, and that the law does not provide for redemption by the postmasters, but that any one can send letters to the Trea sury Department, on official business, free of postage, and that it is the duty of that De partment alone, to redeem mutilated cur rency. SHIFPISG IXTKLLI6ESCE. Arrived—Steamer Syiph, French, Hilton Head. U. 8. steamer O. M. Petit, Greives, Hilton Head. Cleared—Steamer U. S. Grant, Dobbs, Hilton Head, schooner L. A. Hurl New York. CHURCH DIRECTORY. [ Compiled exjn-essly for the Savannah Daliy Herald .] CATHOLIC CHURCHES. Catkeral of St. John the Baptist—northeast comer of Perry and Drayton streets.—Mass 6 1-2 a. in., 8 1-2 a. m. High Mass 10 1-2 a. m., Vespers 4p. m. Sunday School 2 1-2 p. in., Stations of the Cross; concluding with the Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacra ment, Friday evening, 7 o'clock. Clergy— Right Rev. Augustus Verot, D. D. Bishop of Savannah; T. F. O’Neil, Sr. Vicar General; Rev. Peter Whelan, Rev. Peter Du fau, Rev. Henry P. Ciavreul. Bt.‘Patrick’s Church—southeast comer of West-Broad and Liberty streets, —Rev. Ckae. Prendergast,—Mass 8 D1 a. m., High Mass 10 1-2 a. m. PROTE9ANT EriSCOPAL CHURCHES. Christ’s Church—east side of Johnson Square comer Bull and Congress streets; Rev. Charles Colev Assistant Rector. Sendee 10 1-2 a. m.; Sunday School 4 p, m., Prayers Wednesday and Friday 11a. m. St. John’s Church—west side of Madison Square, comer Bull and Charltrn streets; Rev. C F. Mcßae, Rector. Service 10 1-2 a. m., 3 1-2 p. m.; Sunday School 9a. in.— Wm. S. Bogart,* Superintendent. Prayers daily at 5 p. up METHODIST CHURCHES. Trinity Church—west side St. James Square, comer Barnard and York streets; Rev. A. M. Winn, Pastor. Service 10 a. m.; Sunday School 3 1-2 p. m.; Mr. Magill.— Service Tuesday at 4 p. m. LUTHERAN CHURCHES. Savannah Lutheran Church East side Wright Square, corner Ball and State streets; Rev. D. M. Gilbert, Pastor. Services 10 1-2 a. in., 3 1-2 p. m., Sunday School 9a. m.; John T. Thomas, Superintendent. Service Thursdays 3 1-2 p. m. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES. Independent Presbyterian Church—South west corner Bull ancl South Broad streets. Rev. I. S. K. Axson. D. D., Pastor. Ser vices 10 1-2 a. m., 3 1-2 p. m., Sunday School 9 a. m.; John W. Anderson, Superintendent. Service Thursday afternoons. BAPTIST CHURCHES. Savannah Baptist Church—West side of Chippewa Square, comer Bull and Hull streets ; Rev. Sylvanus Lundrum, Pastor.— Service 10 1-2 a. m. Sunday School 3 1-2 p. n?.; Geo. W. Davis, Superintendent.— Service COLORED CHURCHES. First African Baptist Church—West side Franklin Square, corner Montgomery aud Bryan streets ; Rev. Wm. Campbell, Pastor. Service 10 1-2 a. m., 3 1-2 aud 7p. m. Sun day School 2p. m.; James Sims, Superin tendent, Charles L. De La Motta, Assis tant. Church service Thursdays 7 p. m., prayers,.Mondays 7 p. m. Second African Baptist Church—West side Green Square, corner State and Houston streets; Rev. John Cox, Pastor. Service 10 1-2 a. m., 3 1-2 and 7 p. m. Sunday School 2 1-2 p. m.; Herman Eves, Su perintendent, Wm. Gorgan, Assistant. Pray ers, Tuesdays and Thursdays 7 p. m. Third African Baptist" Church Bryan, near Fahan street. Rev. E. Houston, Pas tor. Service 10 a. m., 3 and 7p. m. Prayers Mondays and Thursdays 7 p. m. Fourth African Baptist Church—Liberty, near Montgomery street. Rev. Isaac Brown Pastor, Rev. Henry Taylor, Assistant Pastor. Service 10 1-2 a. in., 8 1-2 and 7 p. in. Pray ers. Tuesdays and Thursdays, 7 p. m. St. Stephen’s Episcopal Church—West side Calhoun Square. Rev. James Porter, Lay Reader. Service 10 10 a. in., 7p. m. Union Methodist Episcopal—New street, near Fahan street, north Central Rail Depot. Rev. Wm. Bentley, Pastor. Service 10 a. in., 3 1-2 p. m., 7p. m. Sunday School 121-2 p. m. Henry Bates, Superintendent. Hebrew congregations. Mickva Israel, north-east corner of Whita ker and Liberty' streets. Rev. A. .Epstein, Reader. Service Friday 3 o’clock p. m. Sa turday 9 1-2 o’clock a. in, Bnai Beritli Jacob, Army Hall building, west side Wright Square, corner Bull and State streets. Services Friday, 5 o’clock p. m. Saturday 9 o’clock a. m. CHURCHES CLOSED. German Lutheran Church corner of Dray ton and Gordon streets. Wesley Chapel—North-east corner of Lin coln and South Broad streets. Penfields Mariners Church—Bay street, south side between Abercorn and Lincoln streets. MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT. Mayor—Richard D. Arnold. Aldermen—Jno. L. VUialonga, Christopher C. Casey, (ieo. \V. Wylly. Joseph Lippman, Jno. P. G’Byrne, Henry Bingham, Henry O. Freeman, Iltrani Roberts, Francis L. One, Edward C. Wade, John Williamson. CITY OFFICERS. Treasnrer—Richard T. Gibson. Cierk of Council—-James Gugcl. Messenger of Council—Benjamin Franklin. Keeper Laurel Grove Cemetery—A. F. Torlay. Pump Contractor—Alfred Kent. STANDING COMMITTEES OF COUNCIL — 1864-5. On Finance—Aldermen Vllialonga, Brigham, Wil liamson, Freeman. ~ m , Dry Culture—Aldermen Rooerts, Lippman, V, ade. Health and Cemetery—Aldermen Lippman, W Uliam son, Gne. Streets and Lanes—Aldermen Brigham, Luchlison, Casey. Accounts— Aldsimen One, Villalonga, Freeman. Public Sales and City Lota—Aldermen Wylly, Free man, Wade. Market—Aldermen Lippman, Luchlison, Vllialonga. Fire—Aldermen Casey, One, Lachlisou. Jail—Aldermen Lachlisou, O’Byme, Wade. Pumps—Aldermen Freeman, Wade, O’Byrne. Docks and Wharves—Aldermen Williamson, Roberts, Lippman. Public Buildings—Aldermen Wade, Freeman, Vilial onga. Gas—Aldermen Roberts, Wylly, Brigham. Water Works—Aldermen O’Bvrne, Lachiison, Wil liamson. Education—Aldermen Freeman, Williamson, Briir ham. .Commissioners for Ma-r!e School—Aldermen Vil’.al ouga, Gue, Freeman,Williamson. Headhuahtkss, Department of the South, Hilton Head, 8. C., Feb. 23,1865. General Orders,! No. 24. f Lieut.-Col. James F. Hall, Ist N. Y. Voi. Pr.giueers, having been, on account of receiving leave of absence, temporarily relieved as Provost Marshal General of this Department, in General Orders No. 11, current series, from these Headquarters, and having since been promoted to be Colonel of his Regiment, now serving in the Department of Virginia, will turn over all rec ords and property pertaining to the office of Provost Marshal General, which he mav have in his possession, to his successor, Lieut.-Col.’Stewart L. Woodford, 127th N. A. Vols., and proceed to the Headquarters of his Regiment. By command of T „ Major-General Q. A. GILI.MORE. >Y. I- M. Burgee, Assistant Adj’t General. TXT ANTED. ' ’ A furnished Ilonse, or three or foil) furnished rooms in a house where there are no boarders and a etna J family. Any party having the above will find It to tteir advantage to address “WATSON,” Box 6, Savannah Herald Office. mh2»—i gTATIONERY AND PERIODICALS, SAVANNAH DAILY HERALD STATIONERY AND PERIODICAL STORE, no. Hi bay nmcr. I havo just opened a Stations ako p— m[ Stork In the Savannah Daily ifaucu No. 11l Bay stzeet. where I have for aalaat WHOLESALE ®R RETAIL a lamb btook or stationery Including BILL CAP. FOOLS ?AP, LETTER PAPER. NOTE P^PHR, envelopes, BLANK BOOKS, WRITING BOOKS, INK, PENS, pencils, &o-, Ac., Ac. PERIODICALS. I have made arrangements for a regular ami fa supply of the latest New York Dally Pap**, Literary Pape**, Majjaanea, and other Periodical*. JOB PRINTING. BushAia Car*, Wedding Car*, Visitfug Bill Heads, Letter Heads, Drafts Checks, Receipts, Envelopes, At, Ac., Ac., printed In the beet style. POSTAGE AND REVENUE STAMPS. I shall endeavor to keep on hami Postage and Her cuuo Stamps, for the aoconxnodatioa of customer*. THE SAVANNAH DAILY HERALD la always for sale at my oonnter, at Wholesale or Retail. fobs H. P. RUOG. JJERALD JOB PRINTING OFFICE, No. 11l Rat Street, Savannah, Georgia. Wo respectfully call the attention of the public to the facilities which we have lor doing all kinds of Job Printing NEATLY AND PROMPTLY. We have fce BEST PRESS IN THE WORLD For doing a variety of work and doing it all well. We employ FIRST CLASS PRINTERS, Os loifg experience and tried ability. We have NEW PRINTING MATERIALS, From the beet Northern foundries, to which wc are CONSTANTLY MAKING ADDITIONS. We are prepared to caecute orders for Posters, Placards, Handbill*, Programmes, Play Bills, Circular*, Bills of Fare, Visiting Card*, Wedding Cards, Tickets, Business Cards, Letter Heads, Bill Heads, Drafts, Receipts, Checks, Passes, Labels, Constitutions, By-Laws, Pamphlets, Ballads, Legal Blanks, Caleudars. Envelopes, Or any other kind of Printing, IN ANY STYLE. We have a FINE ASSORTMENT OF INKS FOB PRINTING IN COLORS. ORDERS BY MAIL OR EXPRESS Will receive prompt and careful attention widths work will be forwarded FREE OF CHARGE FOR TRANSPORTATION. We endeavor to do all onr work well, and to givo complete satisfaction to onr customers. OUR PRICEB Are as low as the present high cost of atork. mate rial, labor and Uvln/wlll afe brtow the ncreased rates rule in ether lineS of business. 8- W. MASON & CO,, U 1 Bay street. S&v&iiii&u, Georgia. D RY GOODS. ~ LATHROP, LUDI NGTON & OG. 3 nos. 326, 328 and 330 mo Anwar, u. y., Have now on band an Extensive Stock of DRESg GOODS, CLOTHS, WOOLEN GOODS, SHAWLS, PRINTS. SHEETINGS, HOBfERY AND GLOVES. WHITE GOODS, AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, YANKEE NOTIONS, Ac., Ac. Which they ®4er by the root ou rAOH.de, AT THE LOWEST _ MARKET PRICES, mar 4-lm