Newspaper Page Text
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THE URGEST CIRCILATION.
AUGUSTA, » A..:
FRIDAY MORNING March 23,1586
Job I’rinliiiH
In Plain and Fancy Colors, neatly,
cheaply ami promply executed at this
Office. Having fast power presses, the best
material, and skilled workmen, enables us
to do Job Work at the lowest figures aud
best manner. •
Letter from Dixie.
Dear Press :—For my double dis
course of to-day, I have only one text—
The Dead.
Day after day, week after week, I have
seen notices of Tableaux, Concerts,
Sabbath School resolutions, meetings of
Committees; all for the purpose of rear
ing a monument to the dead who have
died for us.
What kind of a monument ? Will it
be one to please or benefit the dead ?
They who walk in spirit the happy
hunting- grounds of the Hereafter, or
who—
“ Summer high iu Heaven
Upon the hills of God,”
have probably seen grander and more
glorious things among the stars than
will ever be reared iu our City of the
Dead ?
Will it be to the living who
mourn husbands, brothers or lovers,
gone lo the other shore? Alas! the
blended dews ot Calvary and of Lethe
can alone cause flowers to grow again
where hopes have withered; and the
God who gave and took away can only
heal the scars ol memory.
Should it be to benefit the children of
the dead? Yes.
Let Georgia adopt the orphans of her
dead; let every father seek to supply the
place of those whose strong arms nnd
true hearts mingle with the dust of all
the fields of glory. Let every mother
look for, and care for the fatherless little
ones, w hose mothers gave husbands for
the South; whose clothes are old and
poor; whose feet are bare ; whose hearts
are chilling as the cold wind blows, and
no father's love gives shelter; whose
souls are pure, but will not stay so, if
assailed by the temptations of hunger
poverty and poor clothes.
That little boy, who lost his sire at
Petersburg or Malvern Hill, might have j
made a good man or a great one; is it
too late ? That little beggar girl might 1
have become a lady: what will she be?
If there were a Congress of the dead
in your City Hall to-morrow, what sort
of a monument would they vote them
selves ? Not a marble shaft, noratablet
for their names, but each brother would
vote to build a home for his little brother
or sister, or those of his comrade in
arms; and each father would want an
Asylum for his orphans, if they were
poor, or hungry, or naked, or cold, or
ignorant.
Let the women of Georgia ami the
men, build two orphan asylums. One for
girls in Augusta; one for buys in At
lanta. Not mere pens into which a few
hundred frightened children are t) he
put, and given coarse clothes and poor
food, and with fools or brutes for teach,
ers, who will whip them when they cry
for the heroic dead, or grow stupid over
the lesson a father could have taught so
easily! There are enough child purga
tories that pretend to be homes—build
asylums.
Give the boys a chance to he some
thing better than street vagabonds; or
even apprentices. Let the girls hope
for a future beyond house-maid or hu
man sewing-machine. Keep the already"
bad from making the only ignorant so.
The ignorant from the better bred; but
improve all.
Christ took little children in his arms
and blessed them—and the little brats
may have been as ragged and dirty and
freckled as the scores who exist in the
by-lanes and hovels of every Southern
city.
Georgia! old Empire State! Will
you take a few and bless them ?
Macon talks of sixty thousand dollars
for an opera house. Will she give that
for a home for the children of her dead
defenders? Will Augusta? Will Sa.
vannah ? WilljjAtlanta ?
Build your monuments, but if you
want the wings of the holy dead to fan
its summit; if you want hero eyes to
turn from the face of God to behold your
work; if you want the martyrs of the
Revolution to bless each stone with a
prayer for you, aud crown the holy labor
with a benediction on the builders; then
fill it with their children 1 Put therosy
boys and girls, or the pale and ragged
ones of the dead, inside ; and if spirits
can come back, you may listen for a rush
of angel wings, and hear a chant iu the
midnight air—
“ Sweet as the hallowed anthem sent to hail
Bethlehem's shepherds iu the lonely vale;
When Jordan hushed his waves aud mid
night still,
Watched ou the holy towers of Zion’s bill.”
I see that those blessed little girls,-the
Queen Bisters, have given a concert to
help the Sisters of Charity. If Miss
Laura and Miss Fanny sang the song
they sing so w 11—“Charity"—it was
worth a dollar to every one who went.
“Meek and lowly, pure and holy,
Chief among the blessed three;
Turning sadness into gladness—
Heaven-born art thpu, Churity.
I’ity roigneth in thy bosom,
Kindness reigneth o'er thy heart,
Gentle thoughts alone can sway thee,
Judgment hath in thee no part.
“Hoping ever, failing never,
Though deceived, believing still;
Long abiding, all confiding,
To thy heavenly Fathor’s will.
Never weary of well doing,
Never fearful es the end ;
Claiming all mankind us brothers,
Thou dost all mankind befriend.”
The Sisters need more money, and
need a much larger house. They want
a Convent to malch that big line Catho
lic Church. *
I have got a little girl in the care of
those same Sisters, and if they are as
kind from charity as they are from pay,
the little poor girls they take have a
good time. They don’t whip children,
and Christ did not either 1 I expect
the Legislature gave Governor Jenkins
some funds for the children. Get the
ladies and the Monument and him to.
gether. Press.
But I have been talking of the chil
dren-of the dead ; aud sometimes even
children die.
It is bad to see a soldier die ; for a
sword on the wall, and a name on a
plank on the battle field, is not half so
nice as the live man would be, with
kind eyes, and beard just in the way of
kisses.
When a good woman or an old man
dies, we miss the long familiar tone, and
weep from that hunger of the heart,
that bread cqn not satisfy. But chil
dren die 1 Thank God, that the dead
“die not for ever," but bloom again iu
God's great flower garden and bloom
for ever !
A late letter tells a sad tale in a few
disjointed words ;
“Ida H. Ould, youngest daughter of
our friend, Samuel Thomas Britton, so
long known to all who travelled to our
1 sister State, Carolina, born July loth,
j 1847, died Jan. 18lit>, Sunday, 7
A. M.,” and I never heard of it til! yes-
I terday.
The child of religion but not profess
ing it ; one of the five hundred who
sang of Jesus at St. James'; and one of
the many from there who have since
seen Jesus and heard the angels sing.
Every once and a while I see a nanio
J know on a head-stone, or get a letter
that tells me of a sweet face and loved
voice gone for ever. Yet not for ever,
for the great bouquet of God has many a
flower I know, and the cool drops of th e
water of life will keep the blossoms
fresh till 1 come. I am not so good a
boy as'so old a one should be ; but if
all the children 1 know up there (and
one of them is mine),were to tell God they
wanted to see me, 1 reckon He would
let me in. May be they will some day.
I think I should know Ida there, and ex
pect I would find lots of friends, from
nineteen years old to three or four.
Little friends refuse to stay little, and
sometimes turn angels. Hope we all
will some day. where
“Beyond these voices there is peace.”
Press, you never heard an angel sing,
did you? Well, Tom Moore came
pretty near it once, when he came across
that little heathen or Mahometan angel
—his Peri.
Tlou and I had best get up such a
tableau as he described ; it will be better
for us when the “boatman pale” comes
to ferry us over the “silent river.”
“ Behold him kneeling there,
By tbo child’s side, in humble prayer,
While the same sunbeams shines upon
The guilty and the guiltless one,
And hymns ot joy proclaim thro’ Heaven,
The triumph of a Soul forgiven.”
But I am forgetting the Peri sonw;
“Farewell, ye odors of earth that die,
Passing away like a lover's sigh ;
My feast is now on the Tooba Tree,
Whose breath is tbo breath of Eternity.”
“Farewell, ye vanishing flowers, that shone
In my fairy wreath so bright aud brief;
Oh ! what ore the brightest that ever have
blown,
To the Lote-tree, springing by Alla’s
throne,
Whose flowers have a soul [in every leaf.”
Perhaps the lair girl we knew now
sings in heaven the closing words of that
immortal song :
“Joy, joy for ever! —my task is done—
The Gates are passed, and Heaven is won !”
Novissimus.
A. I) PICQUET, ESQ., WILL
be supported for COUNTY' JUDGE
at the election on the second Wednesday in
May next, by
mh2"—td MANY VOTERS.
New Advertisements.
Is. G. FILLETTE,
JJILLINEEY
AND
Groocls,
No. 213 BROAD STREET,
AUGUSTA, GA.
CONSISTING IN PAItT OP
Ladies’, Misses’ and Children’s HATS
and BONNETS in Straw, Silk, Crape
and Lace.
Spring and Summer RIBBONS
Ladies’ Black Silk CIRCULARS
Ladies' Black Silk BASQUES
Ladies’ Zephyr Wool CLOAKS
Ladies’ Zephyr Wool SHAWLS
Ladies' Angola SHAWLS
Ladies’ Point Lace COLLARS and
CUFFS
Ladies’ Val. Lace COLLARS and
CUFFS
Thread Lace COLLARS and CUFFS
Cambric COLLARS and CUFFS
Embroidered L.C. HANDKERCHIEFS
11. S. 1.. C. HANDKERCHIEFS
Tape Border HANDKERCHIEFS
Swiss INSERTING and EDGING
Cambric INSERTING and EDGING
Vallencienne and Thread Lace
INSERTING and EDGING
Cotton Cambric and Jaconet INSERT
ING and EDGING
Checked and Striped NAINSOOK
Checked and Striped Swiss MUSLIN
Plain and Figured Swiss MUSLIN
Fine White FRENCH LAWN
Fine White FRENCH MUSLIN
BYADENE SWISS MUSLIN
PUFFED JACONET for Spensers
BALMORAL STRIPES
FLUTED FRILLING for Balmorals
Swiss and Lace SPENSER WAISTS
Black DRESS SILKS
Black SILK GRENADENE
Black BAREGE GRENADENE
Black CRAPE MARETZ
Black TAMARTINE
Black TAM IRE
Black and white SILK GRENADENE
Black and Purple GRENADENE
Black French CAMBRIC
Black French LAWN
Black LACE VEILS
Black LOVE VEILS
Black CRAPE VEILS
Black, Brown, Blue, Purple aud Green
CAUSE VEILS
Colored VEIL BAREGES
Black and Col’rd BUGLE TRIMMING
DRESS and MANTILLA SETS, iu
black and colors
Black and Fancy DRESS BUTTON’S
Ladies’ FANCY NECK TIES
Large lot White BRILLIANTS
Ladies’ White COTTON HOSE
BRIDAL ILLUSIONS
BRIDAL WREATHS.
AI.HO
Pina, Needles, Hair Pins, Spool Cotton,
Hooks and Eyes, and many other
desirable and necessary
articles not enu
merated.
JB*3“Thfi attention of the Ladies is
invited to tin: new goods, which will be
sold low for cash. mh23—lm
BaUer, Cheese, Fruit.
Q CHURCHILL,
CORNER Mcixrnsil A ,Y/> RE YXOI. RE
STREETS,
HAS JUST RECEIVED
1C firkins choice GOSIIEN' BUTTER
12 large fine Factory CHEESE
30 buxea fresh ORANGES
10 barrels' APPLES in fine order
TO barrels Planting aud Bating POTATOES
i> barrels pure old CIDER VINEGAR I
ALSO
A fine assortment offresh GARDEN SEED,
together with many other article* for sale
lew. t mu 23—Ot
IS. CAl’i'l.Y,
M3 BROAD STREET,
Wishes to dispose of his stock, consisting of
301) COFFINS, Mahogany, Poplar, Covered,
and Pine. Also, OLD FURNITURE,
LUMBER, ttc. mh 23-1 »
For Sale.
\ PLANTATION, WITH ALL
Li. the appliances for making a crop,
for sale low ; or will he exchanged for mer
chandize, etc. For particulars apply at the
Daily Press office. mh23— l2t«
Sew Goods! Latest Styles!
■yy HITE GOODS
DRY GOODS
DRESS GOODS
LADIES’ AND MISSES’ HATS
LADIES’ BONNETS
MANTILLAS
HOOP SKIRTS
SUNDOWNS
ALL KINDS OU
BRAIDS, TINSEL CORDS,
HAT and DRESS ORNAMENTS
And every article required by Ladies in
their Wearing Apparel. For sale at very
moderate prices, by
MRS. PUGHE,
190 Broad street.
FOR CHIARI.ESTOIS
ypA SAVANNAH.
The new and elegant fast Steamer,
“Z. R. VANCE."
J. J. GUTHRIE, Commander,
Will have quick dispatch for the above
Ports.
For Freight or Passage, having elegant
State Room accommodation, apply to
H. EDMONDSTON <fc CO..
mb"l ts Agents, Jackson street.
New Advertisements.
Kew Sprint? nnd Summer
Goods.
T AM NOW RECEIVING, AT THE
J old stand of MILLER & WARREN.
the largest, must carefully selected, aud
cheapest stock of
SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS
That I have had the pleasure of showing
my friends and customers for some timo.
My GOODS were bought for cash, when at
their lowest figure, and I intend selling
them
AS LOW AS THE LOWEST.
All I ask ot my friends and the public
generally is to give me a call, see and price
for themselves. Don’t charge anything
for showing GOODS.
My stock consists of all the latest styles of
DRESS GOODS,
Plain GRENADINES
Brocade GRENADINES
POULT DE SOU IE
TWISTED SILKS
ROBES ALEXANDRA
BAREGE D’ANGLIEIt
BAREGE HERNANM
Black Iron BAREGE, plain and second
mourning
Crepe MERtTZ, Printed LAWNS
ORGANDIES and MUSLINS, of every
description
A largo stock of
WHITE GOODS.
IRISH LINENS, LINEN SHEETING
PILLOW CASE LINEN,
Blea and Brn SHEETING
10-4 and 11-4 LINEN DAMASK
And Bleached GOODS of every style at
LOW PRICES
My stock of
COVERINGS
Cannot be surpassed. Amongst them can he
found
SHAWLS, LACE POINTS, SILK SAQUES
LACE ROTUNDS, something entirely new,
Barege and Linen SAQUES and DUSTERS
of every style.
FOR GENT’S AND BOYS’ WEAR
I have a very large stock of
FRENCH CASSIMERES
LINEN DRILLS
LINEN DUCK
FANCY LINENS
White Linen DRILLS,
COTTONADES,
And everything to he found in a first-class
DRY GOODS HOUSE,
All of which I intend selling at a very
SMALL PROFIT.
I shall he pleased to see all my old friends
and former customers.
COUNTRY MERCHANTS
Will find it to their interest to examine my
stock before purchasing elsewhere, as I shall
offer great inducements to
WHOLESALE BUYERS.
DUTCH BOLTING CLOTHS
Os every number.
.VNotes of Georgia Railroad ,fc Bank
ing Company. Central Kail Road, and City
Council of Augusta, will be received at par.
JAMES MILLER,
mh23— lm Opposite Globe Hotel.
Gold ! Gold !! Gold !!!
F IS Iv
GILDS FINE SIGNS,
FANCY GLASS CARDS
Or anything else—“so called”
PAINTS
FURNITURE, SIGNS,
FANCY ARTICLES,
TIN WARE, and
LETTERS TRUNKS, UMBRELLAS,
Etc., F.te.,
(OPPOSITE POST OFFICE)
Mclntosh St. AUGUSTA, GA.
in tn-22—ts
l udei'Hootl’s Cans.
‘tLAMS, QUAIL, TURKEY’, CHICKEN
AND MUTTON.
FRESH FIGS, Half Barrels BEEF, and
LABRADORE HERRING.
mh22—3t MAUDE A WRIGHT.
J. J. BROWNE,
WILDER,
LOOKING GLASS
A XI)
PICTURE FRAME MAKER.
OLD FRAMES RE-GILT,
TO LOOK EQUAL TO NEW,
OLD 1 AWTI 70S
CAREFULLY CLEANED, LINED
AND
VARNISHED.
ALL WORK WARRANTED,
AND
DONE AS CHEAPLY
AS AT THE NORTH.
1.17 BROAD STREET,
rnhlG-fim Acgvsta, Ga. I
Want*.
WANTED.
JMGHT PER CENT.
CONFEDERATE BONDS,
Wanted by
BRANCH, SONS k CO.
mh2o-6
HOARDERS WANTED.
Fifty boarders
CAN BE ACCOMMODATED,
With or without Lodging, at the
BLENNERIIASSETT RESTAURANT
Corner Campbell and Walker streets,
OPPOSITE GEORGIA R. R. DEPOT.
The terms are the most favorable of any
House in the city, when the character of
the fare is considered.
ISAIAH DAVXS, Proprietor.
THE BLENNERIIASSETT SALOON
Is still conducted by the old proprietor, who
takes pleasure in commending Mr. Davis to
his friends and the public generally.
rahlO— ts E. B. PURCELL.
Southern Medical & Surgical
Third series—
EDITED BY
JOSEPH JONES, M. D.
Professor of Medical Chemistry in the Medical
College of Georgia, at Augusta; and
formerly Surgeon- in the
Provisional Army of t/ie Confederate States.
The SOUTHERN MEDICAL and SUR
GICAL JOURNAL, of Augusta, Georgia,
was established in 1836, by the late Professor
Milton Antony, the illustrious founder of
the Medical College of Georgia, and bus al
ways commanded the respect and patronage
of the Profession, not only as one of the
oldest and largest American Periodicals,
but chiefly by those valuable original com
inunicatio is, contributed by the most emi
nent, scientific men and practitioners of the
Southern States, which have enriched its
pages during the past thirty years. The
volumes already issued, embrace over six
teen thousand closely printed pages, con
taining more than six hundred original
communications from professional men
throughout the Southern States, besides an
immense number of valuable articles, select
ed from its ample list of American and
foreign exchanges.
During the recent"civil war, the publica
tion of the SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND
•SU RGICAL JOURNAL was necessarily sus
pended. At tbc close of a bloody and dis
astrous war, which has ended in the destruc
tion and surrender of the Southern armies,
aud iu the destruction and capture of the
archives of the Confederate Government, and
of the immense stores of medical facts nnd
observations accumulated by the Medical
Officers of the Confederate Army, under the
direction of their intelligent and efficient
Surgeon General, it is believed by medical
men of the highest standing in this section
of the Mouthy that it is important to estab
lish at this time a Medical Periodical «f
sufficient size to furnish ample room for the
publication of the valuable experience of the
Medical Officers of the late Confederate
Army.
It will be tbo earnest effort of the Editor
to sustain the former usefulness of this
Journal as a medium for the communica
tion of the discoveries and advancing doc
trines of science and of all the departments
of Medicine, and of the facts and discove
ries tending to develop the material pros
perity of the South, and especially of the
valuable Medical statistics and observations
of the recent disastrous revolution.
In view of the good accomplished in times
past by the publication of the SOUTHERN
MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL,
the Editor feels no hesitation in urging its
claims upon its former patrons and friends.
The SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND SUR
GICAL JOURNAL will be issued every
TWO MONTHS, commencing Ist of July,
]S<>6, and each number will contain ONE
HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-SIX PAGES
of printed matter, (octavo) : the yearly
publication will therefore number Odc
Thousand and Fifty-six pages, and be equal
iu size to the largest American and Euro-*
pcau Journals.
TERMS— Five Dollars Ter Annum, in
Advance.
Subscribers arc requested to send forward
their names at once, as it is important that
the Publisher should have some idea before
hand of the number of copies to be printed.
The Publisher would respectfully call the
attention of Druggists, and of the Import
ers and Manufacturers of Drugs, Chemicals
and Philosophical Apparatus, and of Book
Publishers and Sellers, and of Busiuess Men
generally, to the SOUTHERN MEDICAL
AND SURGICAL JOURNAL as the best
means of Advertising in the Southern coun
try
terms of advertising.
One Third Page, per annum S2O Oft
One Half Page, per annum 3ft 00
Whole Page, per annum JO 00
Transient advertising inserted on special
contract.
All Exchange Books for review and Com
munications relating to the Literary De
partment of the JOURNAL should be sent
free of expense, and addressed to the Editor,
Dlt. JOSEPH JONES, 117 Telfair street,
Augusta. Ga.
Communications on all Business
connected with the SOUTHERN MEDI
CAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL, must
be addressed to the Publisher.
E. H. PUGHE,
Publisher and Printer,
u Daily Press” Establishment,
mill—ts Augusta, Ga.
SCREVEN IKOVSE.
g A VANN AII, GEORGIA,
THIS FIRST CLASS HOTEL
Having been renovated and newly furnished,
is now open for the reception of the travel
ling public.
GEO. McGINLY, Proprietor.
mhl6—6m
A. J. SETZE,
OF AUGUSTA. GA., WITH
JOIINES, BERRY <fc CO.,
Importers and Jobbers of Silks and Fancy
Dry Goods, No. 527 Market street, Phila
delphia : will purchase for Southern Mer
chants, and others, all kinds of Goods,
charging the usual commission. Orders so
licited. a. J. SEIZE,
Horse Stolen.
Last night, my blind horse
was stolen from my stable. He
was a Sorrel Horse, about sixteen hands
high, with a white blaze in the face, and a
white place on his mane* A suitable reward
will be given for him.
mh22—i>t* L. ROLL.
Auction Hales*
By Bell, Wylly A Christian
AUCTIONEERS.
AI'CTIO.I SALE.
QTEAMKR AMAZON.—WILL RR
sold for cash, at public outcry, a&(Tt/>
the highest bidder, in front of the Ex>:h ln „
in the City of Savannah, at 12 o’clock
finely, on WEDNESDAY, 28th March, 18«
the Steamer “AMAZON,” as she now
in the Savannah River, about four mil„
below this city. Sold per order of Board of
Survey, on account of and for the benefit of
all concerned.
BELL, WYLLY A CHRISTIAN,
Auctioneers,
mh2o—9t Savannah, Os.
T. Savage Ileyward A. Sons
A UCTIONEERS,
iLL SELL
EVERY
MONDAY
WEDNESDAY
AND
FRIDAY
We hold ourselves RESPONSIBLE FOR
ALL GOODS ONCE IN OUR POSSES
SION—if stolen, lost, or in any way nit
forthcoming.
L/bsS BY FIRE EXCEPTED.
mhß—tf
Sale of Government Property
AT
MACON, GA.
By direction of the
SECRETARY OF WAR,
ALI, THE
BUILDING MATERIALS,
STEAM ENGINES,
MACHINERY, TOOLS.
IRON, COPPER, LUMBER,
And Stores of Various Kinds,
which were collected at Macon, Ga., by
the Confederate Government, for the
erection and permanent operation of a
large Armory, Laboratory, aud Arse
ual; and also
TOOLS, MACHINERY,
AND MATERIALS
collected from Iron Works and Armories
in the States of Alabama and Georgia,
will be sold at
PUBLIC AUCTION.
Among the articles to be sold, are:—
‘l.ftOO lbs. COPPER—pigs
42,000 lbs. COPPER—round rod
38,000 lbs. COPPER—bat
-20,000 lbs. COPPER—sheet
200,000 lbs. WROUGHT IRON-bar
and rod
500 tons PIG IRON
750 tons CAST IRON—unservice
able shells
54,000 lbs. LEAD—pigs
45,000 lbs. TlN—block and sheet
4,000 lbs. CHAlN—crane and cable
15,000 yards CLOTH—Cotton, Eng
lish Serge, oiled, and enameled
32.000 lbs. POWDER
8,000 feet BELTING —gum and
leather, assorted sizes
200 MACHINES—DriIIs, Planers,
Milling, Screw-cutting, Steam and
Trip Hammers
Besides—
Harness, Saddles, Horse Equipments,
Infantry ami Cavalry Accoutrements,
Blankets, Wayon and Gun Carriage
Irons, 35 unserviceable Cannon—irvn
and bronze, 80 broken Gun Carriages,
Laboratory Stores and Materials ,
Separate Farts (new) for Springfield
Muskets and Colt's Revolvers, and an
assortment of
Paints and Oil*.
Ihe attention of Northern buyers is
called to this sale, which is a large one,
and ot valuable property.
1’ ull printed Catalogues of the prop
erty to be sold, can be obtained from
the Chief of Ordnance at Washington,
D. C., and from the Commanding Offi
cer of the Augusta Arsenal, Georgia.
The sale will commence on
WEDNESDAY, April 4, 1866,
and- continue every day until all the
property is sold.
Terms cash, in U. S. currency.
D. W. FLAGLER,
Capt. Ord. Brev. Lt. Col.,
mh9-td Com. Augusta Arsenal.
Paper! Paper! Paper!
JHtANCIS M. STONE,
MANUFACTURER AND
WIIOLKSALE DEALER IN
WRITING PAPER,
RULED AND I'LAIX,
NEWS,
BOOK,
axd WRAPPING,
PRINTERS CARDS,
INK, BRONZE, ETC., ETC.
BLANK BOOKS,
ENVELOPES,
and STAPLE STATIONERY
141 WALNUT STREET,
CINCINNATI, OHIO.
Particular attention given to mail
orders. Paper of any size and weight mads
to order. mh2o—lra
J. F. HEUIBLER. C. H. BRADY.
Ileuislcr & Brady,
jjMJRNITURE REPAIRERS,
VARNISHERS AND POLISHERS.
PAPER HANGING
AND WALL COLORING
Reasonably and Promptly Done.
All kinds of
COACH and CARRIAGE PAINTING
Faiths ully and Cheaply Executed.
Mclntosh Street, Corner Ellis,
mlil6-6w AUGUSTA, GA.