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23 24 26 26 27 28 29 15 16 17 16 19 20 21
M»y 30 22 23 24 26 26 27 28
... 1 2 3 4 6 6 29 30 31 ...
7 8 91C 11 12 It Nov 12 3 4
(4 16 16 17 18 19 20 5 6 7 6 9 10 11
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26 29 30 31 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
J’ue ... 1 2 3 20 27 28 29 30
4 6 6 7 8 9 10 Dec 1 2
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Notice.
Columbus, Ga , April 4th, 1865.
. In accordance with instructions from Maj. Gon.
i\ llowell Cobb, it is hereby directed that all Light
\ Duty Comciipts, detailed under the Bth s ction of
\ the act to organiza fotc.s to serve for the war, np
* proved 17ill February, 1864, (in Departments
whatsoever), in this District, appear at those
Ileadquarters for re-examination, within teu (10)
days from the 15th of April, 1835. Those foiling
to comj ly w ill be Bent to Camp Cooper for dispo
sition. The medical board of this District will bo
1 at this Post on the above date and remain for lb 3
time named. WM. S. DAVIS,
C«pt and Inspector, 3i Cong. Dist. Ga.
Ap. il 4, 1855 12t
Orvim Post Q’a. 7th Cox.i. Dim,. An., ;
Opelika, Ala., March 1,1666. j
Captain Joseph Farley having boon relieved (at
his own request,) I, in accordance with order*
from the Controlling Quartermaster, “Tax in
Kind,” State of Alabumu, take charge of “Tax in
Kind,” 7th Congressional District, Ala.
J. M. PEii.it V,
Capt. & Post Q’r.7th Cong. Dist Ala.
March 1,1*06 ts
Wanted to Purchase lor iho
State of Georgia.
11E following list of articles in large or small
1 quantities:
BACON,
PORK,
MOLASS&S,
SUGAR,
BERK,
FLOUR,
(JOHN in SACKS,
FODDER in BALES, and
other articles of produce.
Will pay cash, or exchange Factory Yarn, 6ls*
naburgs, Sait and Iron, at Birch A sJaidoi’a old
stand, a fe»v doors from Columbus Bank;
J. L. WINTER,
Put chasing Commissary.
feb2 Cm
BLAME BOOKS!
% A KKW
Two, Three, Four, Five s»uu
S'x-quirc
JOURNALS,
Blotters,
AND
SlNULiii AND DOUBLE ■ ENTRY
LEDGERS!
for s&lo ut the
SUN OFFICE.
ALSO,
french’NOTE-PAPER,
11Y TUB QUIRE, OK BEAM.
SUPERIOR ENVELOPES,
BY THE THOUSAND 0B I'ACK.
Writing Ink.,
A VJSKY SUPERIOR ARTICLE, in »ny quantity
t) a gallon. _
Wanted to Hire
-4 or 5 Able-bodied Negroes I
good wages given.
Apply ui oar Govor anient Works.
JOHN D GRAY A CO.
oc 28 .
Family Groceries.
Irish' POTATOES. PICKLED PORK, BICE,
SYRUP BACON, SALT, COFFEE, STABOH,
„.IBD GARDEN SEEDS, dHEWING’and SMO
KING TOBACCO, ALLSPICE,ONION SETTS, and
receiving daily from the Country, freih EGGS
and BUTTER. RAVESSOEOP r & CO'S.,
At 91 Broad street.
ap2 12tpd
For Sale. .
nriHE RESIDENCE, with grouuda attached,
T formefly c«upie<i by Hon. Jamee Johu.on
located one mile went of Columbus, la Ruse i
lt in one of (he meet Leaßhy to
calitios in the vicinity of (be city-
Apply ttt the SUN OFFICE.
apl If .
W 11. H. PHELPS. J . A - WHITESIDE
PHELPS & WHITESIDE, ,
dealers in
sss
S?s, bS SODA. PEPPER, ALLSPICE
VINEGAR, &0., Ac. jjivadsheet.
mhl6 3in - ~ *
< ;- w - R - s - £T ,r, uXiawhos, v. a. Wilkins.
e W '7oTm% LiUHOXJi €O.,
AUC T 1 O d BT Ea. B S
Commission Merchants,
131 BROAD STREET,
Oolu 3;rl^>u9 ’ Gra *
mbs ts --r
“GLUE! GLUE! GLUE!
rOItKOWSKI & cu.,
(Successor to A. Zorkowsky.)
ARK NOW MANUFACTURING A
kIPKUIOU ARTICLE OF OLUfe,
1 (EQUAL TO ENGLISH)
/ v which they ofter
jfOH SALE DY THE QUANTITY!
AdJre9S ZOHKO'fVSKI & CO
Box 300,
Columbus, O*.
yihilti - *
GRINDSTONES
For Sale by
L HAIMAM Sc BBOTHEH.
.ep’ai 1 1
For Sale.
memorandum books.
at the
SUN OF F I C E
' For Sale or Bent.
aSSHkSHV.
woods. g B fONHREN,
Apply to of A „ MoOßniL*.
WHOLESALE AXD RETAIL
kirocer and Commission Merchant,
No. 128 Broad Street,
COLUMBUS, GEORGIA.
11 ——tz iipbtor i and Creditors.
Notice to to WILLIAM F. KELLY,
.LL ptW* l niafbtoJto " * , reqaoat-
A ~&3SSZ#SS&- folding
* IS *■“ pr “ 9Ct tl “ m
trl , »u,b»uuc c^d.RLE3 WOMACK, Sr Aam-r.
80,,,. Vista-, 0» , March W. Wd *
THE DAILY HUN.
VOl,. X.!
TIIEDATLYSIJN
From Yesterday's Eve.vi.vo Edition.
THOB. DB WOW. Trios. GILBERT.
Tlioii. G 1 LBERT & GO.,
PROPRIETORS.
SutiscHpilou and Advertising Kates.
CHANGE OF RATES.
In conseqnuco of tlio increased price of paper,
labor, Ac., onr iates, will Loreafler, until further
notice, be as follows :
Daily Son—one month ,srj 09
“ “ throe month:: so 00
Wisii.l-Sds—tbrcomonUis, 110; 6 m0»..20 00
Single copies (f (ho Daily awl Weekly Sun 50
onts.
CAUDAL DAILY ADVSHTISING KATAS:
AdvertisemoDtA insortod slice—fs per square.
KEflntAß DAILY ADVItUIISINO EATiS:
First Week—s 4 per equate for each insertion.
Second Week—fa per equnro for each insertion
Third Week—s 2 per square for each insertion.
Fourth Week— U 1 or square for each insoi lion.
Second Month—slo per square.
Third Month —s2s per square.
£37- Marriage and Death notice charged •f a
ns other advertiser! cuts,
Wo hear a groat many sickening sto
ries from Montgomery. They may be
false—we sincerely hope they are—but
general notoriety is a source of belief.
The fact is, there tvas (00 much whisky
in the vicinity of our sister city. Num
bers will avail nothing when not proper*,
ly drilled and disciplined, aud when king
Alcohol is the presiding deity in official
circles. Nothing wilt so effectually tie*
moralize a military organization and
(iedruy its efficiency aa drunkenness.
Men will not tight when they have good
reason to suspect the sanity of their com
manders. A drunken man is necessarily
an insane man for tho time being. Only
think of a body of men being led into
action by officers who arc raving mani
acs! Why should men place their lives
in the hands of such officials? Most
men are willing lo die in defence of (heir
homes, iiueb a dealh is honorhble, and
all honorable men prefer honorable
dealh to an ignoble lease of life. But
when men hazard their lives in battle
they want to know that they will not
be wantonly aud uselessly sacrificed
by drunken officials. When a man foels
that he dies in discharge of a well known
duty, and that his lifo has been judi
ciously expended for tho ransom of an
enslaved country and family, he oxpirc3
without a foeliug of regret. But how
must he feel when he knows ho is being
uselessly sacrificed by a drunken officer?
The people of certain sections of tho
Confederacy have recently manifested
unmistakable signs of flagging. Our
arms-bearing population appear to be in
a stale of lethargy. There must bo
3cmo cause for this. What ia it ? I3 it
because Southern men are Icsj honorable
in 18G5 than they wore in 1861? We
don’t believe it. It is because they have
become disgusted with the gross negli
gence and bad management of officials
—men to whom they look for an exam
ple of earnest patriotism and efficient
action in time of danger. Let there be
a reform in official circles—let tho wiiis*
ky bottle be banished from the council
table—let officers set an example wqythy
of emulation, and the old spirit will
revive.
Visit to Gereual Lee’s Army’—Spir
it of the Troops. —The editor of the
Milton Chronicle gives an interesting re
port of a recent visit to the lotfi Regi
ment North Carolina Troops, stationed
on the front lines at Petersburg. H-j
says that ho found the “boys” ia com
sortable quarters, good spirits and ready
for the fight whenever the enemy choos
es to attack. They feel confident of
victory. There had been some desertions
from the Brigade, a few only from the
13tb ( less, indeed, than from any other
regiment in tho army. These desertions
are attributed to home influences—prin
cipally to croaking letters. “We heard
no croaking in the army—-no complaints
—no despondency. It was a healthy at
mosphere ; we breathed easy while in it,
and felt all over like a ‘new man.’ ”
For several days before we left wc
heard of no new desertions, and it was
hoped that the army had been purged ot
alt cowards. Desertion is a bad business,
and about tho meanest thing a man can
be guilty of. Yankees who desert and
come.over to our lines express, much as
tonishment at Southern men deserting
their colors; they say that we have ev
erything worth living for to fight for,
while they (the Yankees) have-no such
inducement. They say our men that gjy,
over are well treated lor tha- flrsf~iew
days, so as to get them to write home and
telWabaat their good treatment; but af
ter that they are despued and treated
worse than dogs.
The liberty of enlisting in the army
on the frontier is allowed them, or go into
the prisoners lock up if they refuse. The
Yankees have the greatest contempt for a
rebel deserter, and put no confidence in
him whatever. Roger A. I‘ryor, who
w»3 recently exchanged, says that at
Fortress Monroe, while ho stood talking
to some Yankee officers of high rank, a
rebel lieutenant (a deserter) came up to
the party aud joined iu eonversation,
when one of the officers quickly shut his
mouth with a look of great contempt and
the remark, “\ r ou and i deserting
scoundrel! have you the impudence to
open your mouth where gentlemen are
talking ?” The follow sneaked off, look*
ing worse than a sheep thief.
Stop tite Distilleries. —The Olrar
lotto Bulletin, of the 4;h inst., says:
An exchange paper very properly sug
gests, that while the demand is so urgent
for bread for our armies, it would be well
to stop the Government whiskey distille
ries. It is a shamo that the precious
grain should be turned into whiskey
when our soldiers, army horses and thou
sands of women and children are suffer
ing for it. Enough whiskey has already
been made, if only used for medicinal
purposes among ouistujldiers, to last for
several years.
While our patriotic Governor and the
people are making extraordinary efforts
to feed Gen. Lee’s army, it is an ever
lasting shame to allow a distillery to be
run, consuming corn.
The Esglish House of Loans.—The
English House of Peers at present con-.
Bists of one prince, two royal dukes,
three archbishops, twenty-tour dukee,
thirty-one mai guises, one hundred and
fifty-eight earls, thiny-one viecouute,
twenty eight bishops, and one hundred
fifty eight barons Asthe Bishop of Bath
and Wells sits also as Baron of Auck
land, the total numher of peers is four
hundred and thirty-lire.
COLUMBUS, GA., SATUKIiAY MORNING, APRIL 1 3, 1867
t'.om tho Macon Tomograph.
la (Ut i'KKNCIMSS NEAR PETERSBURG, 1
Va , March 28ih, 1865. |
IbiAii (.'Arrant; lb. Coro this letter
roadie i you, you will no doubt have
heard of die idoody ordeal your old
regiment passed through on the 25th
iiisi And knowing ihat you fee! a'deep
interest in our welfare I will give you
a ahcii history of the J n: i laleii by the,
45!h Ga ,cu that day,.
t)u "the evening* of the 2tdi, wu received
ordi r.i to bo ready to move at a moment's
warning. At 10 o’clock p. m., Lane’s
and Thomas’ Brigades were on the plank
road doading towards the leadworks.
We arrived in rear of Gordon’s command
abitit‘B o’clock that n’ght. We were
then placed in a ravine, and remained
there as reserves until Gordon captured
the worhfi, and rc'.urnc i to his old lines
I don’t th’Jik this move paid, r.s our loss
was very'mthvy in falling back, which
was about il' xVtfldek rv nr. We then re
cei cd tYvb.rs uv march bank lo ourquar
irrs, and arrived there about 10 o’clock.
The in en had Hard ly taken off iheir ac
coutrements before we woro ordered to
fail in’, arid march to do right whole
the enemy were Waking rorae demonstra
tions. We marched half ,a mile, halted,
and were ordered hack to camps; anil
arrived just in time to get on our houte
tops aud witness a fight that was going
on in our immediate front. Cos!. Sim
mons who had stopped a moment to see
Gen. Thomas, came dashing up and or
-ilwfdtHWfifU’in immedihtsdy.
Wo weie boon in line nud marching »l
a douhlitquick tojoin in the conflict.
The 45th and l'J;h Georgia regiments
being nearer the works than the 35th
and ldtli, were the first upon the field
The enemy had.captured tho works oc
cupied by cur pickets, in a raviuo about
three quarters of a mile in advance of our
main works. We were ordered by Gen.
Lane to take them with our two regi*
meats, Cot. dimraons commanding the
two. Lt. Col. Gouti commanding ths
45th. -Wo found our line, of battle on the
brow of the hill, about two hundred and
fifty yards from our rifle pits, now oceu
pied by the enemy. The skirmitliers
were soon sent forward and wo com
inenceil the advance. As we passed the
crest of the hilt, we saw the hali-ft* sue
on forbidden ground. With ayell from
cue end of our liue lo Ihc other that made
the “jv.ri.'iic, riii", ’ -wu wei-eup And at
them like a “thousand of bricks.” Our
lice was good, our yell frightful, our Cro
murderous, and our viclory complete.
The enemy in confusion fled, falling at
every step. The gallant Lt. Col. Conn
fell here, his last words were, “Forward
boys, forward.” Oa our extreme left,
far in advance of our lines, there was a
regiment of Yankees about two hundred
and iifiy iu number, doing some exeem
lion for us, and eight of our sharpshoot
ers charged and drove them back to their
old lino.
Col. Simmons, Lt. Colonel Conn, and
Major Gibson, acted most gallantly.—
1 am unable to state the loss of the ene
my, but their loss in killed and wounded
was far greater than ours. Thus far all
things worked well; but now comes the
unpleasant part of tho story. In going
into a fight, wo should always have one
way to go in, and two to como out—but
this was not our fortune. We had none
to go in and none to come out. General
Thomas and Col. Simmons were both op
posed to the move, but theorder was giv
en, and their duty was to obey.
After we held the lines two hour3 or
more, the army formed a line of battle,
consisting of four brigades and two regi
ments of another. The hill was blue as
far as wo'e6ulch,sc*JiiQth to the right and
left. Oar two regiments, numbering in
all about four hundred guns, foughtthem
until they were within fifty yards of our
front or works, they had nearly surround
ed us, they having five thousand, we four
hundred ! Our ammunition was about
this time completely expended, and Col.
Simmons gave us orders (0 fall back.—
We had a hill of two hundred and fifty
yards to run up, tho enemy firing into
us both right and left. We knew if we
escaped it would be a miracle, but we
thought we Would try it. Some did not
hear ilie command, -and remained in the
pit and gave the Yankees the benefit of
the butts of their guns. Wo fell back
re-formed iu our mala works —having
ninety-eight all told in the 45th Ga., and
about one hundred in the 40th. Those
that remained behind were captured.—
Our gaba.it brigade commander. waß
struck by a spent ball, but did not leave
the field. On ..Sunday and Sunday night;
ytc remained quiet.
On Monday morning Lane’s brigade,
wi'h' sharpshooters of Thomas’ and
Scales’ brigades, atfackid the enemy’s
picket line, drove (herein, and wo estab
lished our lines on the hill in our front,
where it should have been placed atjirst.
We sent in a flig oftruce then torccovcr
the bodies of our men, which was grant
ed. Ml'jur ||r«LW.nf flgtt..
U. J*. MjtUkdUntsere?is on Gen. Wright’s
sal tiff‘of the U. S. A., was bearer of Ihc
flag of truce, lie said lie never savr men
fight as we did bn Saturday. He gave
us the credit of being the most gallant,
if not the most desperate lighters he ever
or r&ilidP that ever iiis coau*
mand.
When wo wove ordered to tho right,
Caps. Bush wa3 0:1 picket from our reg
iment wi’h thirty-seven men, and the
Y'ankoes charged ihe pickets of our en
tire brigade, and were repulsed three
different !ime3 by our picket force alone.
Tho fourth charge was with two lines of
battle, and 1 ur men were compelled to
surrender, i send you a list ot the cas
ualties in our regiment, which please
have published. Bnsign Bydiehas been
dropped from the roll, and is now wait
ing lor the report to carry to Georgia.
I have written ia great haste, ho is wait
ing only ou me.
Yours, truly,
J;;o. llakdkjian,
Capt. Cos. F, 45th. Ga.
After Editors.— TLa Charlotte (N.
C.) Bulletin, of the 4th. instant, says:
Southern editors appear to be partic
ularly obnoxious to the Yankees. We
are informed by a soldier who was in
Fayetteville when Sherman occupied that
town, that the Yankees offered a reward
of SIO,OOO for the body of E. J. Hale,
senior editor of the Observer. And in
Columbia, we learn, they made a strict
search and inquiry for the editors. If
editors do not eare about visiting North
ern prisons, they must keep out of the
way of Mr. Sherman.
The editor of ’be Wesiboro ArgU3 was
captured by Kilpatrick’s cavalry when
they pasEe i through Anson county, and
pretty roughly trea’ed. But fortunately
he escaped near Fayetteville.
Asicdob or Madams EotßScmiD —Old Mad
ame Kcthi.hiid, mother of the mighty oapitaUete,
att lined the age of ninety-eight ; her wit, which
w>9 rental table, and her iote.lectoal faculties,
which wo-e of no common order, were preserved
tt> the ond. Io her last illnese, when surrounded
by her family', her physician being present, the
said, in a snpptfaut tone, to the latter, “Dear Doc
tor, tty to do something for me.” “Madame wn»t
can Ido ? I can’t make you young again ”
doctor, I don’t want to. be young again*
i want to continue to grow old,”
The UU’hiHoiid Knqulrcr on Ken
Hood’s Report.
[From tbs Kieli. Enquirer, Administration Oigauj
The report of Gen. Hood of the opera
tions of the Army of Tennecseo, while
commanded by hint, having been ordered
by the House of Representatives to be
printed, becomes mailer of public dis
cussion, iu upile of those prudential
considerations which should have with
held ils publication at this lime.
Gen. Hood’s position before the
country is one of no little embarrass
ment; he is literally before the grand
inquest of his countrymen, charged with
the responsibility of great disasters and
ou (rial by publio opinion for tho calami
ties which now imperil tho liberties of
his country. It is not suprising that ho
should 6eek lo divide his responsibility
with Gen. Johnston. To do this, in “a
report of the operations of tho Army of
Tennessee while commanded by me (him)
from Ju'y 18111, 1804, lo January 231,
1805” 110 begins With the “Oth of May,
1864 ” lie assumed oommandat Atlanta,
but his report opens with operations ai
Dalton. Thus a period of throe months
and adi.itance of tw» hundred-utiles are
impressed into his service to make a
point against iris predecessor as the best
means of shielding himcclf. Having
thus deliberately opened afreoh tbo un
happy controversy us to Gen. Johnston’s
removal, ho cannot complain if his
countrymen look more to justice than
to mercy.
Gen. llood sups: “The results of a
campaign do not always show Low the
General in command has discharged his
duty, The inquiry should be, not what
he has done, but what lie should Lave
accomplished with the means under his
control. To appreciate the operations of
the Army of Tennessee, it is necessary
to look at the history during the three
(3) months which preceded the day on
which 1 was ordered to its command.”
Why it wii3 necessary to begin with Iho
three months which preceded him rather
than the tliroo years, he doos not say :
but as those threo mouths embrace Gen.
Johnston’s command, aud Iho throe
years would have included Gen. Bragg
also, it was necessary to select a date
which exculpating the latter, would fix
responsibility solely upon vhe former.
Whether this unfortunate paragraph was
the suggestion of a hitler eueifly, or tho
prompting of a foolish friend we cannot
say, since it might very well Lave ema
nate 1 from either. It launched Gen.
llood into events for which he had no
responsibility, and which in a report of
operations “from July 18. h, 1801, to
January, 23d, 1805’, could only be in
troduced for the purpose of damaging
the military reputation of a brother sol •
dier —no very worthy motive for a chiv
alrous gentleman.
When Gen. Hood became military critic
and undertook to roview the military
operations of his superior officer and
predecessor, lie should himself havo been
certain that he himself was not liablo to
criticism. He should have been able at
least to have shown a success to contrast
with the failure ho criticised. But in
stead of success,., the remnant of that
splendid army, turned over to him by
Gen. Johnston, is all that remains. Not
one victory, not one acre of captured
territory can ho point to. If Johnston
gave up Georgia to Atlanta, Hood yield
ed up the Stale to Savannah, aud lost the
army that should have protected Georgia
and the Carolinas. Sherman’s present
position is the result of Hood’s strategy.
Gen. Hood says that Qcn. Johnston
turned over to him “48,750, total ef
fective.” Ho says: “Tho official record
will show that my losses, including pris
ftners, during the entire campaign, do
not exceed ten thousand (10,000) men.”
This would leave 38,750 meuwith tho
army of Tennessee when turned over to
Gen. Taylor. At present it ia not pru
dent to say how many of these men Gen.
Taylor has, but tho country would great
ly rejoice if it could believe that the
Army of Tcnnossoe, now, after three
month’s recruiting, numbers 58,000 men.
It is said that Gen llood protested against Ibo
removal of Gon. Jobnston, and we Lellove that to
be true. When 110 protested against the remo
val General Hood could not have regarded Gen
eral Jobnston as demoralizing the army by bis
policy of digging in the day and retreating iu the
night. Gen. Hood could not have believed, as Iris
report now alleges, that Uen. Johnston was destroy
ing the morale an 1 spirit of tho army when lie
protested against his removal. Having protejtod
against tbo removal of Usu. Johnston, bow can be
now charge that the General whom he -desired
should remain iu tbo command of tiro army was at
tliattimo demoralizing and destroying it! How con
be rec incite h : s prt sent ci iticism with bis previous
protest ? It Gon. llood can reconcile these things,
, 1t is more (ban bis coun’rvmen can do.
n uvii- irouu-s losses ror tr;o "wlioto cam
paign” be sets down at 10 000
His loss up to the 20th Eept. be states
His loss at Franklin be puts down ut. .4,500
Total 9747
Batanco for loss at Naibville 263
’This unprecedented small loss of men in two
dsys’ battle was tecompanied with (be loss of fifty
four pieces of artillery. It is true that the enomy
claimed twelvo thousand prisoners captured at
Nashville, but as Gen. Hood’s report is made up of
-official figures, the eeuntryTTrustromaiu ssttttted
that the enemy did not slate tbo truth.
We confess to no small drgreeof increduily as to
the loss of only 253 man at Nashville, and wo are
inclined to bolieve that lieu. Hood will haio to ex
ert tbo same ingenuity be expended 0:1 General
J elms ton’s report to recoacile these figures. If lie
made up bis‘'7o,ooo effective men nt and near Dal
ton” from the sumo Official data that shows bis loss
ibr the wuolu campaign to have been only 10.000,
lie must not be surprised ifiris countrymen, not
withstanding the official character of Ihe Hgurrs,
are still inclined to believe that there was error
somewhor-o. We publish this report at tire request
of Gen. If od’s friends. Wo fear it will do him
more barm thru his campaign did.
Government Orders to Carry Into
Effect the Act Arming the Slaves.
On the 221 March ffle Adjutant and
Inspector General published the follow
ing general order No. 14. Wo have al
ready published the act which it is in
tended to carry out, and which is made
the Ist paragraph of these orders. Wo
therefore omit it here :
11. The recruiting service under this
act will bo coudifStflAitll-der the super
vioi»»-..<tfliji3r<A<ijutaiit and Inspector
Geheral, according to the regulations for
the recruiting service of the regular
army, in so far as they are applicable,
and except when special directions may
be given by the War Department.
111. There will be assigned or ap
pointed for each State, an officer who
will be charged with the collection, cn
rollmenl and disposition of all the re
cruits that may be obtained under the
first section of this act. Oae or more
general depots will be established in
each State and announced in order.*, and
a suitable number of officers will be de
tailed for duty in the Staff Departments
at the depots. There will be assigned at
each general depot a quartermaster,
commissary and surgeon, and the bead
quarters cf the superintendent will be at
the principal depot in the Slate. The
proper officers to aid the superintendent
in enlisting, mustering and organizing
the recruits will be assigned by orders
from this office, or by the General-in-
Chief
IV. The enlistment of colored persons
under this act will be mide upon print
ed form-, to be furnished for the pur
pose, similar to those established for the
regular service. They will be executed
in duplicate, one copy to be roturned to
this offioo for file. • No slave will be ac
cepted as a recruit unless with his own
er's consent, and with the approbation of
his master by a written instrument con
ferring, as far as ho may, the rights of
a freed man, and which shall be filed
with the superintendent. The enlists
incuts wilt be made for tho war, and (ho
elfcot of (he enlist meat will be to place
tho slave iu the military service con«
formably to this act. The rcoruits will
be organized at the camps in squads and
companies, and will bo subject (0 (he
order of the General-in-Chief under iho
eeoond section of (his act.
V. Tho Superintendents in each State
will cause a report to lie maJo on (ho
first Monday of every mouth, showing
the expenses of tho previous month ; Ihc
number of recruits at the various depots
in iho State, the number that have been
Bent away, and iho destine.l.iou of each.
llis report will show the names of all
slaves recruilr-d, with their descrip
tion and the names of tlicie masters.
Onocrpy will be sem to (lies General in-
Chics, and one to lire Adjutant and in
spool or Genera!.
VI. 'J'ho nppcintinMit of officers lo
tho companies to be formed of Ihc re
cruits afore:.aid, will be male by ilio
President.
VII. To facilitate tho raising of volun*
leer companies, officers rccruiling iherc
for are authorized lo muster iheir meti
into service as enrolled. As soou aa
enrolled and uiustired, the meu will be.
seulwith descriptive lists,.to this depots
of rendezvous, at which they will be in
structed uutil assigned for service.
When Ihe organization of any company
remains incomplete at the expiration of
the time specified for its organization,
the companies, or detachment already
mustered into aei-vice wiil bo assigned to
other organiz nions at the discretion of
the General-in-Chief. •
VIII. It ii not tlio iutontlou ut tiro Ft; Bificul. to
grant any autlnnity fur raising rag'nin-nlB or lni.(
alien. Tire only organizations to Do neifoctod at
tiro diqiots or camps of inslrnolt: 11 ftru thovo ot
companion, and in exceptional carer, where tile
slaves are of one estate, of Dattnlicnv, cousfsling of
four companies, an.l lira only {minorities to Do i.s
siied will be for Hie railing of companies or Ibo
aforesaid special battalions of fair cotnpaniiw. A l l
larger organizations will Do left f. r I'nim-o action,
as expaiience may determine.
JX. All officers who 111.lv lie milployoil i" Hie ro
erniling Service, under ID» provirams 01 (ills H- I,
or Who may bo H|ip dub and Iu I lit! rumimilrt i I 1 1 <
troops raised lunmi- ii, or who bold any slnii -i|.-
polulinfillt in coliui u!i ;n willl llioiil, are 01 J In* and
lu a provident, c.,nriiKia!o no I lunmiiiii uilr.ilioii
to whatever eouceiiiH l ins Ii onl I It, i.ulrne’hm aud
discipline of these truope, m and Iu il.e iiiiifoi-m ob
servance of kindness, f0r0.,-11 alien and indnlgoi.ee
in their treatment el' them, and (-specially tlmt
they will prolect them f mn injustice and oppres
sion.
By ontor.
(S’gKOd) fb roOPZB.
Adj’cand Insp. Uouoral.
Thrilling Affair im Roiif.sou County
—A Lady uses a llei'datei: v/itii Fear
ful Effect. —On Tuesday morning,
about 1 o’clock, a bind of deserters and
escaped Yaukeo prisoners 15 in number,
and led by a Yankee naval officer, at
tacked iho house of Mrs. Dr. McNair, in
Robeson counly, aud after, spending
nearly an hour iu Ihc atferopt, forced au
entrance by breaking down tho front
door. Mr. Wm. Hiauton, of this oounty,
was bUyiug at fills. McNair's uutho nignt
iu question, aud being call'd by that
lady to her assistance soou after ihe at
tack commcnocd, promptly “reporte 1 for
duty.” An exciting oontesc followed,
Mrs. McNair and Jlr. Stanton both be
ing provided with a Colt’s repeater and
a rifle, which they used wilh fatal effect ;
one of the attacking party being killed
and another wounded in Ihe breasti We
regret lo 'earn that Mrs. McNair was
badly burned and otherwise injured by
fragments of glass aud powder. Air.
Stanton was also slightly wounded.
Mra. McNair and Air. Stanton having
cxlmuste 1 their ammunition, tlie latter,
attheurgeut solicitation of Mrs. McNair
(who feared the dosperudous would
wreak vengeance on him for Iho death of
their comrado,) retired, and luo remain
ed alone lo bravo their fury. On np
proaohiagher, the Yankeeoilicor in com
mand, was bo struck wilh her bold and
determined mien, that, inoloid of harm
ing her, 110 congratulated her warmly
on her heroic conduct, slating diet she
was the Ihe HrM, man or woman, who
had cffjred any resistance to hie band.
They carried off nearly all the valua
bles lley could find, including silver
ware aud jewelry, $6,000 dollars in Con
federate notes, and two breastpins, con
taining (be pictures of Mra. McNair’s
husband and Bon ; the lalter of -whom
fell in defense of his country on one of
the battle fields of Virginia. The conr
nga anil GeLormin.'l! ion of this noble Wo
man savors more of romance liian reali
ty, buttlie ineidentH given in this arti
c’.e are luernJly (roc. It carries one back
to the days 01' the Revolution, when the
fearlets women o*l ho Colonies perform
ed so >n my feats of wonderful daring.—
Theexamp'e id - A'.. -. AioNairis worthy to
be inii'aii'J bv m iry --i the nude sox
whose kiiei s i re .together, like
-H-efchawvn V, No t . uny 1 - attacked by
deserters ami 01 iiO'* rovi»- * despera Joes.
—Fayetteville (-V C j Ti’b'jr.r/u
Spies Abroad -1 Mt-bo mr citi
zens to be on tlicit fuvJ ••g-ilt:A--.nUeo
■pies dressed in ‘bn jd.v uoifnrmfr.
We have hnd accounts «: • -r'y ' ■ e
or four very suspiciousinters : Fowl
ing about in Confederate olo’.boa, n ’/ail
ed onfiac horses and riding at "'id <
the country. One of ui. c.i zct... met
two men, two or three miles from tow ,
a few days wince ; one officer with
Confederate stripes, and the other a pri--
vi’c in uniform carrying a gun; boh
mounted on good homes They turn . 1
off the road oil it'll eg him, and am
going a slio-d. Jis sane • ”ir ■od back, inn .
birn and inquired if ho had heard of any
Yankees down (bis Way. All such Chir
ac tti a ought to be nircnled wherever
found. We hav ■ nof.-Ihe o!’gh!er,t doubt
but that they are Yafikeo Hpies. It is a.
notorious fuel .that they travelled ail
through Georgia in thing plots of tins
towns and maps of ' the road.', v-'i’b ’ho
name nod rcsidt nr;e of every man in ’ho
couutry accurately Tiunlioncd and cor
rcctly looa cl. And tluse were all pre
cursors of the raids ts .’ '.fierw aids took
place. —Eufaula Spirit.
In the debate on the Or* /n Bill, in
1804, Daniel Webster said : ‘‘l under
stand that one-half the people who Fet
tled in Illinois arc people, of descend
ant3 of people, who came from the
Southern Stales. Aud 1 suppose that
one third of the people of Ohio arc those,
or descendants of those, who emigrated
from the South.” We dare say that a
largo proportion of the people of other
Northwestern States are, in like manner,
Southern citizens, or men of Southern
descent. •
The most formidable armie- we have
encountered in this war arc mat!a up of
Northwestern men and Kentuckians aud
Tennesseeans. It is the hands of her
own children that have given the South
more trouble than all the Puritan, Euro
pean and African troops combined.
Parchment.
\ I'KW largo sheet J of superior PARCHMENT
suitablo for llettlo Prutim or JJ*: j Heads for
“apUt at thti BON OFFICE.
{NO. «Ki
A Moiiitstlc Idle.
One day laut month, there arrived in
Paris a young girl of great beauty, high
rank, aud groat fort tines, bearing one of
the highest uamss in the aristocracy of
England, (says the Paris correspondent
of the Court Journal,) ami thus cnniiu
ucs tho narrative:
“Lilic was ace mipauied by a numerous
suite, and traveled with all ibo slate aud
ceremony which Her high birth and great
wealth would justify. Sbowas, however,
so plainly and simply attired, so elosoly
veiled, and so modest in her demeanor,
that tlioso who beheld her stepping into
her cu.rriagoat Ihe Grand Hotel, wlicro
sho had alighted, woro inclined to mis
take her for Iho humble traveling com
panion, Biarling forth to execute com
missions for her inislreßß. .Tho young
lady staid but two days to rest, and then
proceeded on to Rome, whither she was
hurrying lo lake ihe veil, and bury her
self lorovov in a Roman convent. Her
story is most itucicsting, and created iho
moil Y«iemus exoitemont. while slio was
hero—iho keen susceptibilities of Iho
Flench enabling them to feel more acute
ly tho value of self-sacrifice, wholher for
love, religion or duty, li seems that the
heroine of our lulo had bicn engaged
from curliest youth to marry her cousin,
solo heir to one of the largest fortunes
among tho Catholic familiet of Ihe United
Kingdom ; and allhough possessing but
a small dowry herself, had always look
ed upon htrile-uiny as fixed, and fcless
el God each day (hat it was so ; for Ihe
niuti who had been chosen for her liiis
baud was the very man to whom her
heart and bcul had been most freely
given.
But tlio young nutn, on his side, had
boon early impressed with the vainly of
all things hero below, and in npilo of
himself felt lured by the promise of peaco
and happiness held out by reliremeut
from the world, llis ins’.ea aud desires
all pointed to tho seclusion of a monas
tery. Till) thought of hin fair, young
cousin, by which he was cu much be
loved, alone restrained him, aud he gave
up his wiil aud cuuseuted lo Iho uuiou
which was in tiring such eat isftii I ion li)
both families.
I'll-viuuaD. tho Wal.ill -K il lial 1 Ilf r.’ id 111 It
I Du in n|. i.Di l: 3IIOIIW miunil a ax i'll 'll IDul.u.D-
I miat ill Hill North 1 i.gDii.il, 11-vj the
Vlltir couple S|;eut mm ti liluelu u-i-li ••*liuia mi
i i.-ti, a, ,1 uali-elil i. lutlll.ll i In a iliiii atmu im I'm
liai t ut the luiilegroom, while luiu ou ihat ul tho
Dride uliuoht nnionuuil to adoration. But the
nearer ho behold the awful vertex of the world
ink) which lie felt be was nbour. to plunge, the
more In-ribln ili,l Ilia sacrifice apuear. Roimpi-s
--siblo diillio find it to ilissemhlo iiis ilrriul tint ho
at length thought it best to throw l.iuiuelf upon
the mercy ut' tho young lady, and own that Im
profi-l-roil tlio servico cl'llod to thn life of pleasure
mi l Hatisfie-i love and ambition ho should so
surely lead with her. It was a moment of awful
despair, and Ihe poor young girl was loDgiu recov
ering frinn the shock. Meanwhile tlio cousin had
retired to Rome and entered one nf the convents
there as a Hludont, to prepare himself for the most
arduous duties ts the Catholic priesthood. It was
not for some months after that, the news arrived
that before taking tlio vows ho liad made over the
whole of hie f.r-tune to the younglady of wlwiho
misery ho had been tlio involuntarily cause. Willi
tho announcement of transfer, camo a letter full of
holy thoughts ami sweet consolation, lie hoped
that who would find a worthier match—a more
fitting companion for lift than ho could ever be
come—hut added in conclmiun ; “No earthly liaii
plttesa can possibly equal the devotion of a whole
life to God aud tho Virgin, uml you, dear ,
will one dav boos the same opinion ”
11 booms that llu-so latler woi ds weighed deeply
on tbo young lady’s mind ; she look to studying
lii n question of a religious life; film nJ'Cted every
ofl.r of marriage which wus made to hor, lor bur
beauty and wealth bcc.tmo a source of attraction
throughout the whole of Catholic England. She
pondered ovir Ihe various chances or happiness
still left; and finally tosolvod to follow tho exam
ple of orio who was still dearer (ban all Podda to
heart, and seek repose avlurc lie had found lt.
The vast fortune both havo rejected is to b; em
ployed in the construction n r n chinch at Home, as
it, is the intent ion of tin, horoino of tlio tale to enter
one of the poorer orders, and lorswo ir nil earthly
blessings, even the r. ut nnd lolsnro, solo compen
sation for the privation of family affection in n
convent life.
How the World isGovkrhed. —Tfioro
arc about one hniplroi sepcralely organ
ized governments in tbe world at tlio
present time. Nearly one half aro
monarcliies in Europe ; and of tlicso a
largo proportion are petiy Principalities
ana Dukedoms, containing altogether
about six millions of inhabitants.
Os Iho” governments of Europe, Great
Britain is a limited monarchy; Franco
is nominally couHliiul.iun.al, but iu re
ality, an absolute monarchy; Russia
and Austria ore absolute. Prutsia,
Spain, and Sardinia ate limited, with
two Chambers of Depuiics. There are
only four Republics in Europe—Swi‘z
crlaud, Sau Alarino, Montcuegtu, and
Ancora. The (Wee latler contain an
aggregate population of ant over 120,000
people. dwilzjriuuii, tacurc iu her
rnoimlniu fnotuouaem, in now, liycuinmon
consent, left unmolested. 7’fio govern
ments of Asia are all absolute despo
tisms. Thibet ins tho name of being a
hiorureliy, hut differs in no practical
souse from a despotism. In Africa, the
Barbary Stales, and all the various negro
tribes, of wLa ever name, aro ruled
despotically, except Liberia, which is re
publican, find mny be the »freni«g wedge
of civilization ou I'b.ai. continent.
The great is’ande in ifce Southern and
l’.iedie oceans nro mouily independent
and despotic, meh i-i Japan wit Ii ajpopu ■'
la'i >n of twenty i iintis, «nd Me-aiyiis.
ear, e mlaliiirig a'lO'it five iniiiioua. The
i-ini-iw-cli ami Boeieiy Isintnir' lire lititi
ei monarchies am! the otiier islands in
ih ■ >i ll ii >rn and Vacifii: oceans lielung
:n !-Uy lo the diffci cut European Powers,
a:, i are ruled according In (heir re-poo:-
ive forms of govcrntneti'. On tte Ameri
can continent, there are rwo nioDnrchien!
- >,v rnmotlH; iln: of Brasil, wliieh is
tii.r vi.-r, liberally constiiutiona, 1 , ami
i fat of Mexico Iu (he three geugraph
i i-j.of America, tin-re are
. ./ cp - i —u Mipuralc Re; iiMiee. The
Blimp, assi'UM in H.aili America
ij,.. I/ui'ed S'aicH, in tci'i'oria!
ti.( ni, aa ! '(ley enjoy a large aiuount
oi p iiii ie.a! i(•:. I'iul.
Obruikk Bom vulemck —“For (here
is no iliflereiio" (o*i.wee.‘i the Jew and
"the Greek; lor (he Memo Lord ovet
all ia rich iintu all uo'call ttpbu I>iui.”
Roto.'JO: 12.
A late arelitiislioi)' <■(' Uordeaux was
retriarkafilo for hi 'oler-itcc, and i-u
--ligbtened I eve.volvrre The ioiiowing
anecdote is illnstro ivoof ,ra '* ' n * IIS
character:
“My lord,” said » p« raett to nim one
day, “hero is a poor woman come to
ask charily; what do you wish me to do
for her?”
‘ How old is ehe?”
“Seventy.”
‘*l,l she in great distress ?’
! “She says no.”
| “She must be relieved; give her twen
! ty-five francs.” ... ... •_
‘ Twenty five francs? My lord, it >8
too much, c-peoially as she is a Jewess.
“A Jewess 7”
“Yes, my lord ”
<«0, that makes a difference. Give
her fif'y francs, then, and thank her for
coming.”
Notice.
Os HUE GRANT FACTORY, t
. HV , ,ur ill oiamlH azHiaal the OBtele
• -•. • I- «'»; i El, (Iff A NT, ill cam-1 ere hereby r »-
: id-id to tbe Grant Feet,ay.
r „ t,.| ORANX
iho Knitted Homestead.
14V PAIL li. UAV.VU. *
Rank woedH float oVr tlio blackenoJ walla,
On every hearth their fires are cold,
And thro* these bloak, dismantled tall*.
No longer rings the mirth of old;
lint the soul of a mccdy saduess
Huloj over tho die-ir domain,
Anl methiDka that a volco of ma.riuik-j
Comes down on tho driving ruin!
Tbo dock ’which told the jocund homo
1* dumb within its mouldering oasn.
And see! y n n |ia!!ul ghosln of flowers
Droop (didy o’or tlidr wilent j l up.!
On Uiebotiid whero goblets gleaming
KlntihiHl bright with tho purplo wliic,
0110 (Uwd.ito (Uiy-bnum’ri Htroaminy
Thro’ the tw.light’s dim decline.
Lo ! here a little glove, w r bono fold
Once clasped a baud ho warm nod white—
A hand whose t ondor, trembling hold
Thrilled many n heart with wild deldht!
lint Iho houseliold’n laity daughter
Pines under tho exile’s lot,
Far over the alien water,
1 14 a country that know.) her imt
Tho’ broken pain m u shuddering wintl
Moans faintly in tho shrouded room ;
Like some unbodied, viewless mind,
lt stirs the cold, funeral gloom ;
And the ghastly Shadow duikeni
In tho quivering twilight’s wane,
And clear to the soul tlmt harkous,
That Voico on the driving mini
Notico I
The Soldiors* Friend Society bus plenty of
KNITTING COTTON, and beg the ladies goner
ally, will aes’Ht them iu knitting as they
havo now several calls for thorn, and have not
onough to supply the demai di. Thread cun bo
had by application to
Mrs. JOHN D. CARTER,
Hecrot.iry Soldier*’ Friend .-ocb-ty.
Notice.
Lxthaoi” •
IICADQUARTKEH I'OHT AND PEFXIfOES, )
Columbus, On., March 27, latn>. |
Special Order )
No. 7>>. /
******
VII. All officers nt this Post, whether iu trsns
lu, ou orders or leave of absetice, or iu any oiler
manner iu the city ot Columbus over six (6) boors,
are required to report lo Post Uetulquartois, ex
hibit their papers mid sign their mimes in tbo
ofilciiil register. It is to bo bopid that all g«»(al
officers wilt cheerfully comply with tho above, h-j
tlmt the Commitndunl of Post limy be facilitated
in preventing impttoitiou, aiW iu returning cffi. ors
to duty who me improperly abaenf.
|{> c iinmand of
Ll’iuN VuN ZINKF.N,
o<d. Coind’g. Post mid Lefent *^.
H. Ibidoue Guii.let, A. A. U.
March 28, 1805 ts
Notice.
’1 lie pm tuerslilp of Dillard, Pi well A Cos., huv
ing boeu dissolved by the dea.’h vs K. \V. Diliurd,
ali persons holding claims ugainst tuid firm, will
lirmoat fhoin Imnuiliilely lor HuUieinent, eud
those indebted, will ul once make payment loft,
luften, Agent.
A. FRAZER,
it If. Pi)WEI L,
iiuivivuig Psi't-ne.'
(\.lmnbus, Ga., Man Ii UON Impd
Notico i■) Whippei's.
MJI'KKINI’rNIIAiNT’H
MoHcg.je ItHilroul Company, V
Go I u lob us, On., March 27,1885.)
This company will uot ba responsible for de
very of freight ut Gonovu, oftor it is urdoadoi
from our earn. Parties having freight comdg. od to
Genova mnet bo at tho depot ou the arr ival of tho
train, to recoivo their freight. Our Warehouse
being destroyed by lire, wo havo no place to store
IV. U. CLARK. 3upt-
March 28,1805 ts
Notice, Absentees anti Deserters.
Col :—Tho Major Ueneral Commanding, directs
that you will proceed without delay to Georgia,
for tho purx>oi»e of collecting and bringing on all
absoutoos aud doscrtois from this command
You will take one stafl oilicor with you, and uso
tho greatest possible energy in arresting men
improporly absent from their commando. The
Major Gonerul desires yon will engage the assist
tiuco of the Enrolling Department
JOHN pn.fc.aTON, Jr.,
Muj. aud A. I. G.
, Approved:
VVaue Hampton, Lieut. Gen.
lly commuiid of Mnj-Geu DUTLEK.
Inobcdienco to tho above order, camps of ren
dezvous havo been ostfcblishi and at Augusta, At
lanta and Columbus, Ga.
All officers and men absout from this command
will bo expected to report 1»t once. (lon. Leo’s
amnesty proclamation will bo extended for ton
days from tlio publication of Ibis order. My
Headquarters for tho present will bout Colnm
bUM ’ • V II T A M A FERRO,
Colonel lOtli Ga. Cav. Reg.
April 1, 1865 ts
Notico.
“Extract”
lIEADqUAUTEKH SUii-DISTKICT, |
Columbus, Ga., April 4, 1806. J
General Orders, l
No. 15. J
I. In case of alarm, six guns will be fired by Iho
artillery ou liroad street, in front of Post Ilcad
quurters, ttt which signal, all military organiza
tions at this Post Will immodiaUdy iissembleat
their respective londezvonk, fully armed and
equli pid, with tweuty-four hours nil ions, ready
to tulco the li*ld, and await orders from these
lltmdquai teis.
Ly (.omixjJtnd of
LEON VON ZIN KEN, Col. Comd»g.
S. IsiDOKE UUILLET, A. A. A. G
April 0, !8 )5 ts
EttIDGE NOTICE.
Georgia—Muscogco County.
riEALED PROPOBALB will bo received by the
luJerior Court lor tho buildiwg of a bridge
ucross iiml Crook, called tho Wynnton liridge,
near Gam moil’s, also a Ur idgo n cress the Upatoio
Creek, known us fc’chnmpot's JJj idgp; propoeals
will state Aithor for Lattice or Trent lo work, the
Court reserving to itself tbe right to acc.pt or
re/fect any <>r oil bids. The contractor to give
bond in terms o» the law.
r’oul.d i’np.sals will heieceivfd until the sili
int»i.
A ti no ex tract fiotu ihe miniitis, this the 4th
day Os April. 1855.
G \V ItO^EiTK,
Cloik «.C.
ii| 6 lot
(iurtvMJo Elantttijop j *oti Com
pany !
i, -A it'd EDS and oibors .. and -...•ii It • ■ ..>*«. turn
li Company-iu u«w r-i»dy »uppjy i K*. 'N tor
i*t-A Vl’ViioN PUin anv u ,u- tity
i()Olfcl*., Hi* ii. i'll VKLiih' •VVe.e'i’ wi:;*o'.o
- K.iid'i, nceiieJ lor pmutatio > "h. w:.’* i>e »ur
• dG.od. K»iui|)loH may by so-.ii at the . Factory,
Ml 1,1, r,l. AU, upon appllcalmu D. IV K kiowa.
■r »( tin* v>,nkH, Uurmitio. A,a
I lull . 11l t.u MXebanaeil <<* Furprtc
Hid I. rm a oxchuug uddr* —> or apply to
\V ii ba.’YV <. Gu a.,i, Ain.
~r .1 W VV A . It . .’iiUtviMn,
,1 . t . I
Notice.
MlliliH AMD KhTTLKS.
WK have a few FUGAK Mll.m en.t KIWTLfM
on bend for ume or osclian/n f« • p.ovisioon
N„w is t;ie timet, -send iyour omlm.h.
POIU KK, Mol LI I UN N K V A (X*
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FOR EXCHANGE DR SALE!
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iTTii B article. o( B.M’DWABK, which
aiizi* fur Fork, ))• u, . La, n Guru, W D-at,
FI ui, Ft,duel, or nliy ueff'a' lr le-ut pi-onbino.
ur for Cuufed-iato Ciirrmi.-y, riz : -
BAR-fill HOOF IRON '" >'■ --■ ”‘ ' cnitable for
'*•“ GAR MILLS AND RRTTLcff -t all sizos,
-row 30 to 120 gallon i.
I OT3. OVRNB AND SKII.ffL ■
FRY PAN'S, SPIDMIS AN If ANDIRONS.
CLUB AND BaOAD AXF.S
‘iIPIYKLS AND ; PAD! -:
TRACK CHAINS Vi
t o I.AiS-'IN <S r i nAOUtR*
WORK promptly
jnuoary 6.1663 tT pit t
Carriage Mulct*
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lance -.a ID” “’ ua,: •' " ' ‘ ’.{’jTjj OTitCi.
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