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National Uepubliran
LAK6BBT CITICIBCULIXMHI
Official Organ of the 0. S- Government.
WEDNESDAY MUiLNINtI March 11, 1865
OFFICIAL
Laws of Congress.
ratted at the Second Session of the
Fortieth Congress.
[Public —No. 12]
Ah Act to establish and declare the railroads
and bridges of the Netr Orleans, Mobile
and Chattanooga ltailrosd Company, as
hereafter constructed, a post road, and for
other purposes. .
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled, That the
New Orleans, Mobile, and Chattanooga Rail
rood Com pan j in hereby authorised and cm*
powered to construct, build, and maintain
bridges over aud across the navigable waters
of the United States on the route of said rail
road between New Orleans and Mobile, for
the use of said company and the passage of
its engines, cars,-ana trains of cars, passen
gers, mails, and merchandise
said railroad and its bridges aforesaid, when
constructed, completed, and in use, in acord
snee with this net and the laws of the several
States through whose territory the same shall
pass, shall be deemed, recognized, and knowu
as lawful structures and a post road, and are
hereby declared as such. Ibotided hoicecer ,
That the said company, in the construction
of its bridges over and across the waters
known as the East Pascagoula river, and the
bay of Biloxi, and the bay ol St. Louis, sha 1
construct and maintain draw-bridges in the
channels thereof, which, when open, shall give
a clear space for the passage of vessels ot not
less than eighty feet in the channels of the
East Pascagoula, and of the bay of Biloxi,
and of the bay of St. Louis, and of not less
than one hundred feet in the channel of the
Great Rigolet; and said company shall at all
limes open the said draw-bridges, and shall
provide reasonable and necessary facilities
tor the passage of all vessels requiring the
same, except luriug and for ten minutes
prior to and after the time of the passage ol
the mail and passenger trains of said Com
pany.
Sec. 2. And be it farther enacted, That the
right to alter or amend this act, so as to pre
vent or remove all material obstructions to
the navigation of said bridges, is hereby ex
pressly reserved.
Approved, March 2, 1566.
[Public — No. 13.]
An Aci extending the time for the comple
tion ot the Dubuque and Sioux City Rail
road.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled. That the
time for completion of a line of railroad from
Dubuque to Sioux City, in the State of lowa,
for the construction of which lands were
granted in alternate sections of said Stale
by act entitled “An act making a grant ol
lands to the State of lowa in alternate sec
tions to aid in the construction ol railroads
in said State,” approved May fifteenth,
eighteen hundred and fifty-six, be, aud the
same is, extended until the first day of Jan
uary, eighteen hundred and seventy-two,
subject to the reverter mentioned in said act
at the expiration of the time herein limited :
Provided, [That] said road shall be con
structed on the most practical route by way
of Webster City and Fort Dodge to Sioux
city, which route shall be at all points within
the limits of said land grunt, and the same
shall be completed to Fort Dodge on or
before the first day of July, eighteen hundred
and sixty-nine, aud thereafter at the rate ol
not less than forty miles each year; and the
said road shall be constructed, operated, and
maintained as one continuous and unbroken
line of road from Dubuqne to Sioux City ;
and no lands shall be disposed of, or pat
euted, or certified for said purposes more
than forty miles in advance of the point to
which said road may be constructed from
time to time.
Approved, March 2, 1868.
[Public—No. 14.]
Au Act in relation to islands in the Great
Miami river.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America iu Congress assembled, That in the
case of such islands in the Great Miami
river, in the State ot Ohio, as are undisposed
of, or any vacant public lands adjacent there
to, which are in the actual .and exclusive
occupancy of any persons who have mads
improvements thereon, or ol their heirs or
assigns, such occupants thereof shall have
the preference right to enter the same at two
dollars and fifty cents per acre, on making
proof of the facts to the satisfaction ol the
Commissioner of the General Land Office,
and paying for the land within twelve
mouths from the passage oft this act, and
patents shall issue for the tracts so entered
as usual in entrierf of public lands.
Approved, March 2, 18G8.
[Public—No. 15.]
An Act authorizing the sale of an unoccu
pied military site at Waterford, Pennsyl
vania.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled. That the
Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is here
by authorized in his discretion to sell to the
highest aud best bidder the military site of
three acres of land at Waterford, Erie coun
ty, Pennsylvania, belonging to the United
States, and pay the proceeds into the treasury
of the United States.
Approved, Mareh 4, 18G8.
[Public —No. 16. |
An Act restoring lands to market along the
line of she Pacific railroads and branches.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled, That no
thing in the act approved July first, eighteen
hundred and sixty-two, entitled “An act to
nid in the construction of a railroad and
telegraph line from the Missouri river to the
Pacific ocean, and to secure to the govern
ment the use of the same for postal, mili
tary, aud other purposes,” and authorize the
withdrawal or exclusion from settlement and
entry, under the provisions of the pre
emption or homestead laws, the ever
numbered sections along the routes of the
several roads therein mentioned which have
been or may be hereafter located : Provided,
That such sections shall be rated at two dol’
lars and fifty cents per acre, and subject only
to entry under those laws; and the Hncro
tary of the Interior be, and is hereby author
ized and directed to restore to homestead
settlement, preemption, or entry, accoiding
to existing laws, all the even-numbered
sections of land belonging to the govern
ment, and now withdrawn from market, on
both sides of the Pacific railroad and
branches, wherever said road and branches
have been definitely located.
Approved, March C, 1868.
[Public—No. 17.]
An .Act for the relief of settlers on the late
Sioux Indian reservation, in the State of
Minnesota.
Be it enacted by the Seriate and House of
Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled, That all
actual Mttlcrs, who have duly filed their
daolototory .tateoiouU under t(ia preemption
law* with the remitter of the proper local
laud office, upon the unsold lands now inclu
ded within the limits of the late Sjoux In
dian reservation, in the State of Minnesota,
shall bo allowed two years from and after
the paas.igo of this act within which to make
nroot and payment far their claims, in accor
dance with the provisions of the second aud
third sections of the act approved March
third, eighteen hundred and sixty-three,
providing for the disposal of said reserva
’tion.
Approved, March (1, 1808.
Official.
Headquarters 3d Miutarv Dist., )
{Dept, Georgia, Florid* and Alabama.) • l
Atlanta, Ga., February 26, 1868. )
General Orders, No. 30.
1. The Board of Officers of which Brevet
Colonol Maurice Maloney, Lieutenant Col
onel 16th U. S. Infantry, is President, and
which assomblod at Savannah, Georgia,, on
the Ist instant, pursuant to Special Orders
No. 22, current sories, from these Head
quarters, for the purpose of investigating
certain charges of maladministration pre
ferred against the Mayor and other Muni
cipal officers of that city, has rendered tho
following
opinion' :
“ Tho Board, in conclusion, would state
that it has thoroughly investigated the
matters laid before it, contained in the ac
companying petition, and has discovered
nothing sustaining the charge of mal-feas
ance in office prefeared against the Mayor
and municipal authorities of Savannah, and
does therefore recommend that the prayer
ot the petitioners, asking for tho removal of
the same, be not granted.”
2. The proceedings and opinion of tho
Board arc approved, and no further action
will be taken on the aforesaid charges.
By order of Major General. Meade :
R. C. Drom,
Assistant Adjutant General.
Official:
mhl—lOt
lleadq’s Third Military District, 1
(Dep'l Georgia, Ala , anil Florida,) l
Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 21, 1868. J
General Orders, No. 26.
1. Before a Military Commission, which
convened at Atlanta, Georgia, February
10, 1868, pursuant to Special Orders No.
27. Headquarters Third Military District,
dated Atlanta Georgia, February 3. 1868,
and of which Brevet Brigadier General
Rufus Saxton, Quartermaster U. S. Army,
is President, was arraigned and tried :
Berry T. Digby. Sheriff of Jasper-county.
State of Georgia.
Charge I.—Wilful neglect of duty as
Slierilf of Jasper county, Statu ot Georgia.
Specification—ln this : That Berry T.
Digby, being Sheriff of Jasper county, in
the State of Georgia, and having been no
tified that one Maria Brown, who was
living ou the premises of said Berry T.
Digby, had been murdered upon his prem
ises ns aforesaid; and having himself
viewed the dead body of the said Maria
Blown, within five minutes after the mur
der ; and having been then and there in
formed by John Brown, tho husband
of Maria Brown aioresaid, and by others
who wero present, that Homer Barnes, a
citizen of Jasper county, Georgia, had
feloniously and with malice aforethought
committed the murder upon the persi n
ol the said Maria Brown; and the said Ho
mer Barnes being thee aud there present,
and on the premises of the said Berry T.
Digby, lie, the said Berry T. Digby, Sheriff
as aiore-aid, did wilfully and unlawfully fail
and neglect to arrest, or make any effort to
arrest, the said Ilomer Barne3, and well
knowing that the said Homer Barnes was
endeavoring to escape, and was likely to
make his escape before a warrant could be
issued for his arrest, did wilfully and unlaw
fully permit tho said Homer Barnes to make
his escape, without pursuit or effort to arrest
him. This in the county of Jasper, State of
Georgia, on or about the 10th day of Janu
ary, 1868.
To which charge aud specification the.
accused pleaded, ‘‘Not Guilty.”
Finding.—Ol the charge and specification,
“Not Guilty.”
And the Court does therefore acquit him.
H. The proceedings and findings in the
case of Berry T. Digby, Sheriff of Jasper
county, Georgia, are approved. Mr. Digby,
having been acquitted by the Commission,
will ho released, from arrest.
111. The Military Commission, of which
Brevet Brigadier General llufus Saxon,
Quartermaster U. S. Army, is President, is
hereby dissolved.
By -order of Major General Meade :
It. C. Drom,
marl-10t Assistant Adjutant General.
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TERMS OF SENATORS.
Benjamin F Wade, ol Ohio, Freaidont.
John W Forney, of Pennsylvania, Secretary.
OHIO Term Ex
Benj F Wade 1860
John Sherman..., 1873
INDIANA
Thos A Hendricks. .1860
Oliver P M0rt0n..1873
ILLINOIS
Richard Yates 1871
Lyman Trumbull.. 1873
MICHIGAN
Zacli Chandler.... 1869
Jaoob M Howard. .1871
WISCONSIN
Jas R Doolittle 1809
Timothy O Howe.. 1873
MINNESOTA
Alex Ramsoy 1869
David 8 Norton .... 1871
IOWA
Jas W Grimes 1871
Jas Harlan 1873
MISSOURI
J B Henderson.... 1869
Chas D Drake 1873
KANSAS
Edmund G Ross. ..1871
Sara’lD Pomeroy. .1873
NEBRASKA
Thos W Tipton.... 1809
John M Thayer... .1871
NEVADA
Wm M Stewart.... 1809
Jas W Nye 1873
CALIFORNIA
John Conness 1869
Cornelius C01e.... 1873
OREGON
Geo II Williams...lß7l
Iloury W Corbett. .1873
main I Term Ex.
Lot M Morrill 1869
Win P Fessenden. .1871
NEW HAMDSIIIHE
Aaron 11 Cragln. ...1871
Jas W Patterson . .1878
VERMONT
Geo F Edmunds...lß69
Justin 8 M0rri11...1878
MASSACHUSETTS
Chas Sumner 1869
Henry Wilson 1871
RHODE ISLAND
Wm Sprague 1869
Henry B Anthony. 1871
CONNECTICUT
dames Dixon 1869
Orris S Ferry 1878
NEW YORK
Edwin D Morgan. .1869
lloscoe Conkilng. .1873
NEW JERSEY
F TFrftUnghuvsoulß69
Alex G Cattell... .1871
PENNSYLVANIA
Chas E Buckalew . .1869
Simon Cameron... 1873
DELAWARE
Jas S Bayard 1869
Willard Saulsbury. 1871
MARYLAND
Rcvcnlu Johnson ... ISO 9
Philip F Thomas... 1873
WEST VIRGINIA
EG Van Winkle... 18CU
WaitmauT Willey. 1871
KENTUCKY
James Guthrie 1871
Garret Danis. 1873
TENNESSEE
David T Tattcrson .1869
Joseph S Fowler.. 1871
RECAPITULATION
Republicans 42 | Oppositions (In Italics) 13
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
Schuyler Colfax, ol Indiana, Speaker,
Edward McPherson, of Pennsylvania, Clerk.
MAINE
1 John Lynch
3 Sidney Pcrham
3 Jas G Blaine
4 John A Peters
5 Frederick A Pike
NEW- It AMI'S HI",
1 Jacob II Ela
3 Aaron F Stevens
3 Jacob Benton
VERMONT
1 Fred E Woodbridge
jJ Luke P Poland
3 W C Smith
MASSACHUSETTS
1 Thos D Eliot
3 Oakes Ames
3 Ginery Twitcbcll
4 Sam’l Hooper
5 Benj F Butler
(1 Nat P Banks
7 Geo S Boutwell
8 John D Baldwin
9 Wm B Washburne ’
Henry L Dawes t
unoDB ISLAND
1 Thos A Jenckes
3 Nathan F Dixon
CONNECTICUT
t Rich'd D Hubbard
3 Julius Hotchkiss
3 HQ Starkweather
4 Wm H Hamum
NEW YORK
I Stephen Taber
3 Demos Bi nes
3 I' Robinson
4 John Fox
5 John Morrissey
6 Thos E Stewart
7 John IV Chanlcr
8 Jas Brooks
9 Fernando TT’ooci
10 Wm H Robertson
11 C II Van Wyck
13 John II Ketcham
13 Thos Cornell
14 John V L Pruyn
15 John A Grisswold
16 Orange Ferris
17 Calvin T Hulbard
18 Jas M Marvin
19 Wm C Fields
20 Addison H Laflin
31 Alex II Bailey
33 John C Churehill
33 Dennis McCarthy
34 Theo M Pomeroy
35 Wm H Kelsey
30 Win S Lincoln
37 Hamilton Ward
38 Lewis Sclyc
39 Burt Van llorn
30 J M Humphreys
31 H Van Aeruam
NEW JERSEY
1 Wm Moore
3 Chas Haight
3 Chas Sitgrcaves
4 John Hill
5 Geo A Halsey
PENNSYLVANIA
1 Suin'! 7 Randall
3 Chas O’Neill
3 Lcnard Myers
4 Wm D Kelley
5 Caleb N Taylor
0 Benj M Boyer
7 John M Bromail
8 .7 iMwrcncc Getz
9 Tbaddeus Stevens
10 Henry L Cake
II D M Van Auken
1 'l-Geo TV Woodward
13 Ulysses Mercer
14 George F Miller
15 AdamJ Grossbrmner
16 Wm H Koontz
17 Dan’l J Morrill
18 Stephen S Wilson
10 Glcnni W Schofield
30 Darwin A Finney
31 John Covode
33 Jas K Moorehcad
33 Thos Williams
34 Geo V Lawrence
DELAWARE
1 John A Nicholson
MARYLAND
1 Ilirarn McCullough
2 Stephenson Archer
3 Chas E Phelps
4 Francis Thomas
5 Frederick. Stone
WEST VIRGINIA
1 Chester I) Hubbard
2 Benj M Kitchen
3 Dan’l Polslcy
KENTUCKY
1 Lawrence S Trimble
2 John Young Broum
3 7 S S Oollaily
4 7 Proctor C Knott
5 Asa P Grover
6 Thos L Jones
7 Jas B Beck
8 Geo M Adams
9 John D Young
TENNESSEE
1 Roderick R Butler
2 Horace Maynard
3 Wm B Stokes
4 Jas Mullins
5 John Trimble
0 Sam’l M Aruell
7 Issac R Hawkins
8 David A Nunn
OHIO
1 Benj Eggleston
2 Sam’l F Cary
3 Robt C Schcnck
4 Wm Lawrence
5 IV//1 Mungen
0 Reader W Clarke
7 Sam’l Shallabarger
8 C S Hamilton
9 Ralph P Bueklaud
10 Jas M Ashley
11 John T Wilson
13 Philip Van Trump
13 Geo TV Morgan
14 Martin Welker
,15 Tobias A Plants
16 John A Bingham
! 17 Ephraim R Eekley
18 Rufus P Spaulding
19 Jas A Garfield
INDIANA
1 TVm E Niblack
2 Michael C Kcer
3 Morton C Hunter
4 TVm 8 Holman
5 Geo W Julian
6 John Coburn
7 II D Washburn
8 Godlovc S Orth
9 Schuyler Colfax
10 Wm Williams
11 John P C Shauks
ILLINOIS
At Large, Jno A Logan
1 Norman B Judd
2 John F Farnsworth
3 Elibu B Washburn
4 Abner C Harding
5 Ebon C lugersoll
6 Burton C Cook
7 11 P H Bromwcll
8 Shelby M Cullom
0 Lewis TVitos*
10 Albert G Burr
11 Sam'l S Marshall
12 Jehu Baker
13 Green B ltauin
MICHIGAN
1 Fernando C Beaman
3 Chas Upson
3 Austin Blair
4 Thos W Ferry
5 R E Trowbridge
0 John F Driggs
WISCONSIN
1 Halbert C Paine
2 Benj F Hopkins
3 Amasa Cobb
4 Chas A Eldridge
5 Philetus Sawyer
GOO Washburne
MINNESOTA
1 Win Windom
2 Ignatius Donnelly
IOWA
1 James F Wilson
3 Hiram Price
1 3 Wm B Allison
I 4 Wm Loughbridgc
5 Grenville M Dodge
0 Isabel W Hubbard
MISSOURI
1 Wm A Pile
3 Carman A Newcomb
3 Jas B McCormick
4 John J Gravelly
5 Jos W McClurge
0 Robt T Van Horn
7 Benj F Loan
8 John F Benjamin
j 0 Geo W Anderson
KANSAS
; 1 Sidney Clarke
NEBRASKA
1 JolmTaifc
NEVADA
1 Delos R Ashley
CALIFORNIA
1 Sam'l Axtcll
” Win Iligby
o Jas A Johnson
OREGON
1 Rufus Mallory
DELEGATES
ARIZONA
Coles Baslitord
DAKOTA
Walter A Burleigh
IDAHO
KJ) HoUhrock
MONTANAg
Jas 31 Cavanaugh
NEW MEXICO
C P Clever (doubtful)
UTAH
Wm 11 Hoop n'
WASHINGTON
Alvin Flanders
WYONING
Jas S Casement
RECAPITULATION
Republicans 144 | Opposition (In Italics) 49
PROSPECTUS
OP
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Rev. A. J. RIAN, Editor.
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“ Send mo five boxe3 of your Pills.”
“Let me havo three boxes of your Salvo by
return mail.”
For at! Diseases of tho KIDNEYS, RETEN
TION OF URINE, otc., Maggiel’s Pills are a
perfect cure. One dose will satisfy any one.
FOR FEMALE DISEASES, NERVOUS
PROSTRATION, WEAKNESS, GENERAL
LASSITUDE, WANT OF APPETITE, Mag
giel’s Pills will be found an effectual remedy.
MAGGIEL’S PILLS AND SALVE aro almost
universal in their effects, and a cure can be
almost always guaranteed.
EACH BOX CONTAINS TWELVE PILLS
‘OREPILL ISA DOSE.
Sold by all respectable Dealers in Medicine
throughout the United Statos and Canadas, at
25 cents per box.
COUNTERFEITS! COUNTERFEITS !
All roadors of this paper aro warned no to
purohaso MAGGIEL’S PILLS or SALVE unless
tho name of J. Haydock, l’ropriotor, in addition
to the name of Dr. J. Maggicl, is on the engraved
slip surrounding each box or pot.
J. H. 4EILIN A CO.,
Maoon, Ga.
oet-2;ily,tw Agents for State of Georgia,
Furniture and Piano Hauling.
JJJAVING A NEW AND LIGHT
SPRING DRAY,
I am prepared to haul Furniture, Pianos, and
anything else, without scratching or bruising,
ns is too often the case.
Orders left at my store, on Eills stroet,botween
Washington and Monument, will be promptly
attended to, at reasunanlo Tates.
Particular oare given to moving Furnituro and
Pianos.
WM. HALE (Colored),
Dtnlor in Family Groceries*
aul— tf
R. R. R.
90
OUT OF
100
OF DEATHS, that annually
occur, are caused by Prevent
able Diseases, and the greater
portion of those complaints
would, if Radway’s Ready Re*
lief or Pills, (as the case may
require,) were administered
when pain or uneasiness or
slight sickness is experienced,
be exterminated from the sys
tem in a few hours. PAIN, no
matter from what cause, is
almost instantly cured by the
Ready Relief. In cases of Cho
lera, Diarrhoea, Cramps, Spasms
Bilious Cholic, in fact all Pains,
Aches and Infirmities either in
the Stomach, Bowels, Bladder,
Kidneys, or the Joints, Muscles,
Legs, Arms, Rheumatism, Neu
ralgia, Fever and Ague, Head
ache, Toothache, &c., will in a
FEW MINUTES yield to the
soothing influence of the Ready
Relief.
Sudden Colds, Coughs, Influenza, Dlp
theria, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Chills, Fever
and Ague, Mercurial Pains, Scarlet Fever,
&c,, &c., take from four to six of Radway’i
Pills, and also take a teaspoonful of the
Ready Relief in a glass of warm water, sweet
ened with sugar or honey ; bathe the throat,
head and chest with Ready Relief, (if Ague
or Intermittent Fever, bathe the spine also,)
in the morning you will bA cured.
How the Ready Relief Acts I
In a few minutes the patient will feel 8
slight tingling irritation, and the skin be
comes reddened; if there is much distress in
the stomach, the Relief will assist nature in
removing the offending cause, —a general
warmth is felt throughout the entire body,
and its diffusive stimulating properties
rapidly courses through every vein and tissue
of the system, arousing tho slothful and
partially paralyzed glands and organs to re
newed and healthy action, perspiration fol
lows, and the surface of the body feels in
creased heat. The sickness at stomach, colds,
chills, head-ache, oppressed breathing, the
soreness of the throat, and all pains, either
internally or externally, rapidly subside, and
the patient falls into a tranquil sleep, awakes
refreshed, invigorated, cured, a ‘1
It will be found that in using the Relief
externally, either on the spine or across the
kidneys, or over the stomach and bowels, that
for several days after a pleasing warmth will
bo felt, showing the lpngth of time it con
tinues its influence over the diseased parts.
Price of R. R. R. RELIEF, 60 cenU
per bottle. Sold by Druggists and Country
Merchants, Grocers, &c.
RADWAY & CO. f
87 Maiden Lane, New York.
TYPHOID FEVER.
This disease is not only cured by
Dr. Radway’s Relief and Pills, but pre
vented. If exposed to it, put one tea
spoonful of Relief in a tumbler ol
•water. Drink this before going out in
the morning, and several times during
the day. Take one of Radway’s Pills
one hour before dinner, and one on
going to bed.
If seized with Fever, take 4 to 6 ol
tho Pills every six hours, until copious
discharges from tho bowels take place;
also drink the Relief diluted with
water, and bathe the entire surface ol
the body with Relief. Soon a power
ful perspiration will take place, and
you will feel a pleasant heat through
out the system. Keep on taking Rebel
repeatedly, every four hours, also the
Pills. A cure will be sure to follow.
The relief is strengthening, stimulating,
soothing, and quieting; it is sure to
break up the Fever and to neutralize
the poison. . Let this treatment be fol
lowed, and thousands will be saved.
The same treatment in Fever and Ague,
Yellow Fever, Ship Fever, Bilious
Fever, will effect a cure in 24 hours
When the patient feels the Relief irrita
ting or heating the skin, a cure is posi
tive. In all cases where pain is felt
tho Rebef should ho used.
Rebef 50 cts.; Pills 25 cts. Sold
by all Druggists.
See Dr. Radway’s Almanac for 1868
mh4—lv.
NO “OPENINGS.”
OPEN ALL THE TIME!
Latest Styles!
TSJ E IV E W
Millinery Headquarters,
Next to the Planters’ Hotel,
Have no special “opening day,”
as tho LATEST STYLES and NOVEL
TIES arc always on hand, ready for inspection.
In all cases,
Satisfaction is Guaranteed !
RECEIVED, EVERY FRIDAY,
DIKEOT FROM
NEW YORK,
AI. I. KINDS O F
Goods in our Line.
WE SELL LADIES’ AND MISSES’
FELT and STRAW HATS
OF EVERY STYLE,
AT mom
Fifty fouls to Three Dollarx
ftaT HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR
FURS. Send for Price Lists.
WM. R. DAVIS & CO.,
Next door abovo the Famous I*l an tors’ Hotel,
I2oot-ov Xhurs Augusta, Ga.
Gumu Printing Cos::
Book & Job
PRINTING OFFICII,
190 Broad 158 Ellis Street*,
TTSGDS BiTaiByWIiST
Is Wow Supplied with the JLatest and Improved
PRESSES, TYPE, BORDERS, ORNAMENTS, ETC,,
And is ready to execute any description of
Book and Job Printing
IN A FIRST-CLASS MANNER AND ON REASONABLE TERMS
BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, BRIEFS, CHECKS,
posters, LABFLS, pamphlets,
$ ]
BILLS LADiNG, HAND BILLS, PROGRAMMES,
WEDDiNG CARDS VISITING CARDS,
BALL TICKETS, INVITATIONS,
CARDS OF ALL STYLES AND SIZES
BILLS LADING, DRAY RECEIPTS, DRAFTS,
AUCTION BILLS, STEAM BOAT BILLS,
AND, IN FACT,
EVERT DESCRIPTION OF PRINTING!!
THE BOOKBINDEBY
Os this Establishment
xtst A specialty,
And we have recently mado large additions of
NEW TOOLS AND MATERIALS 1
II Mil REPUBLIC!
A Morning’ Paper,
PUBLISHED AT FIVE DOLLARS A
<*r- "
Contains tho Latest News by Telegraph and Mail
FROM ALL PARTS O* THE COUNTRY.
Ofkiub—l9o Broad and 153 Ellis St., Augusta, &