Daily press. (Augusta, Ga.) 1866-1867, July 17, 1866, Image 1

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|j;t Bailg sttss, ■PUQHE, Publisher S' THbToATL Y PRESS~!s 1)IS' Gnitnitomly every mornimj, except ■», throughout lie retire City, thereby K the LAUGUST CIRCULATION. ■jiveri iMfitienlH Inserted ■iberal Term*. K OFFICE—Corner of Bread and Ki StrceU, of polite Poet' Office, Up. I Drui Making. M IseT BEGINS™ Bench millinery E AMD Ks MAKING ESTABLISHMENT ■ m GREENS STREET, « (New Bell Tower.) ■kss, MANTILLAS jgT OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, ■B. T. TAILOR’S system and finishod mauner. GOODS, TRIMMINGS, Hh CORSETS, etc., constantly on !§■ my 1 2—3 m Attorneys. ■ Garland A. Snead, AT LAW Si and ■ OTASY PUBLIC, ssMDMMISSIONER for tho States of l FLORIDA AND TEXAS. over linker &■ Caswell’s old Street, Augusta, Go. ■ Wright & Gibson, ■>RNEYS AT LAW, Chronicle <f Sentinel Building, Street, Augusta, Ga. ■Bk resumed the practice of LAW, 9H|nd promptly to ail husinoss in any in ltiohmoud, Columbia, War- Jefferson, Washington, Emanuel, and Johnson also, in the Supreme Court at and in the Un ; ted States Savannah. Td -A. R. WRIGHT, WM. GIBSON. ff|. Hoofing. ■OK TO YOUR ROOFS. IBng SECURED THE STATE’ t RIGHT OF TnE Btent mica roofing, prepared to supply it in any to appiv it to Roofs. ROOFING is adapted tohuild- description, and can be ap- or Flat-Roofs, or over old without removing the shin- recommend its ueb on Factories, Store Houses, Cotton Sheds, u* Depots and upon all buildings is used, and a Fire Proof re costs about one-half the prico of IjHheap, durable, and is easily and The upper surface of tho ; |M| protected f roln (U action of the its covering of Ground Mica, into the water proof com- a hard surface of stone, appearance, and a sure protec ; ■jst fire. £SI also keep constantly on hand a if;p«RUBBER ROOFING PAINT, best coating that can be used Leaky Tin Roofs can be so as to last many years, oost, which would in many expense of anew Roof. for applying, and prices, RIGHTS FOR SALE. gIELD, WILLIAMS & CO., Jackson and Ellis Streets. Bssolution, Etc. partnership Notice. THIS DAY OPENED A yßof our Charleston Wholesale f'‘i at .(•■233 Broad Street, Opposite Masonic Hall, Ht«nd have associated with us pg A. JONES, under tho name I? KtS, COVERT k CO., •>:< of conducting the Whnie j|ji Hat, Cap, Straw and Milli- UILLIAMS A COVERT, H Charleston. S. C. HoRGE a. JONES, Augusta, Ga. ■SAMS, HENRY C. COVERT. Sag & Gilding. Br BROWNE, j Being glass A»D iV" 1 FRAME MAKER, UAMES RE-GILT, ”1. ’ m&QUAL 10 NEW, B PAINTINGS «Y CLEANED, LINED ’ ' l AMI) - ■arnished. BrK WARRANTED, KlllllwB: AMD ■fcEAPLY ■AS AT THE NORTH. WkOAD STREET, &&&&& Augusta, Ga. K”gLAZING, Etc. ’ , , Kwßuccted wRh the above fjHSmptly executed in the reasonable terms. -4 S' S JACKSON STREET, !< Be Bell Tower. :mm PAINT used, and Bp sire* (obtainable) iHIIiIII order. 1 . DAL l'.'HV. Daily Press. VOL. 1. AUGUSTA, GA.. TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 17, 1866. Furniture. Furniture of All Descriptions. PLATT BROTHERS, C. A. PLATT A CO. 214 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. Have now the best assortment of FURNI TURE on band that has ever been in this market, and constantly receiving—consist ing of Rosewood, Mahogany and Walnut PARLOR SETTS, CHAMBER SETTS, COTTAGE SETTS, BEDSTEADS, CHAIRS, SOFAS, TETE-A-TETES, CEN TRE TABLES, BUREAUS, etc., etc. im orn UPHOLSTERING DEPARTMENT We have SHADES, Lace and Damask CUR TAINS, CORDS, TASSELS, GIMPS, LOOPS, CORNICES, BANDS, and all ne ceseary articles required. OUR MANUFACTURING DEPARTMENT is still in operation. Special Orders promptly attended to. Repairing done in all branches of the husinoss. in oun UNDERTAKERS’ DEPARTMENT we keep constantly on hand, COFFINS of every quality and size. METALLIC CASES uud CASKETS of the moat im proved styles. Undertakers can he supplied with all kinds of TRIMMINGS. my2—tf NOTICE. TnE UNDERSIGNED HAS OPENED a store at No. 350 Broad Street, near the Upper Market, for the purpose of RE PAIRING OLD FURNITURE; also, MAKING NEW FURNITURE, He is prepared to furnish COFFINS, neatly made. He has lived in Augusta eighteen years, and was in the Third Geor gia Regiment during the war. Thoso wishing to have work well done will please give him a call. ALBERT WALLEN, my24—ly 850 Broadwftreet. FURNITURE. STHE UNDERSIGNED HAVE on hand, and are receiving, a fine assortment of Furniture, Which they offer at very low figures. Also, are prepared to make to order and repair any thing in our line of business at abort notioe. Cane-Bottom Chairs re-seated at a living price, at 137 Broad, opposite Monument street. ap24—3m WEST A MAY. FURNITURE! FURNITURE! ! WHOLESALE AMD RETAIL. DEGRAAF & TAYLOR, 87 and 89 BOWERY AMD 65 CHRISTIE STREETS NEW YORK, have tho best assorted stock of Parlor, Dining Room and Bod-Room FURNITURE! SPRING BEDS and BEDDING IN THE CITY. CANOPY and HIGH POST BEDSTEADS, Expressly for Southorn trade. STEAMERS AND HOTELS FURNISHED A T WHOLESALE PRICES. KNOCK DOWN CANE WORK AND TURNED POST BEDSTEADS, in oases. ALL WORK GUARANTEED AS REPRESENTED. Oor Facilities for manufacturing defy competition. myl—ly JNO. C. SCHREINER * SONS, Macon, Ga. j NO. 0. SCHREINER a sons, Savannah, Ga. J. C. Schreiner & Sons, NO. 199 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. BOOKS, STATIONERY, MUSIC, and FANCY GOODS. Keep constantly on band a choice selec tion of the above articles, Alt orders from the Country promptly attended to. THE BEST OF ITALIAN VIOLIN and GUITAR STRINGS. AGENTS FOR Stainway & Sons’, Soebbeler & Schmidt’s, and Gale <fc Co.’s • CELEBRATED PIANOS. fs4—ly Bress Goods. STYLES OF dress goods, AiLL KINDS, VERY CHEAP, ot I. KAHN & CO.’S, ' ju!7—6m 262 Broad Street. Boots & Shoes. NEW G00B8! NEW G00BS! ts) WE HAVE RE _ a large and well se lected Stock of BOOTS, SHOES, and SLIPPERS From the best New York and Philadelphia Manufactories, which we are selling at re markably low prices. Call and examine onr Stock and Prices, as we are determined to»Sell Goods at prices to suit the times. W. <f- C. H. CLARENDON. 314 Broad Street. Augusta. Branch of our New York Store, jyll—2m Just Received, J KAHN A CO. 262 BROAD STREET, HAVE JUST BECEIVED A NICE ASSORTMENT OF Ladies 5 Shoes! They have a beautiful assortment of DRESS CORDS, BUTTONS, and RIBBONS, Which attract the eye and please the taste GOODS VERY LOW. jcl7—6m Hotels. Restaurants. Mansion House, Broad stp.eet, CHARLESTON, S. C. MADAME T. M. RUTJES, Is now prepared to receive PERMANENT AND TRANSIENT BOARDERS At Reasonable Rates. jyls—6 Central Hotel, GEORGIA. My friends and the travelling public gen erally are notified that I have taken anew lease on this House, and will be glad to serve them to the best of my ability on all occasions and at all times. N. B Believe no reports from any quar ter whatever that I have given up tho Hotel, or that I intend doing so. My cal culation is to be permanently located, and my friends may rely upon finding me at home, and pleased to see and serve them. _ jyl-S—3m WM. M, THOMAS. B. X. JOSES, I WM. A. WEIGHT. AUGUSTA HOTEL, A UGUSTA, GEORGIA. -TV Tiila popular Hotel has been rtntW rated, painted, and pnt in complete order, and opened on Juno 20th, 1866, with a de termination on the part of the present Pro prietors to make it a FIRST CLASS HOUSE. Mr. WM. A. WRIGHT has chief control, and will be recollected by our Southern friends as the former Proprietor of the American Hotel, during the war, in Richmond, Va., and will be glad to see his old friends, promising them a “Virginia welcome.’’ Every effort will be made to givo entire satisfaction. A call is solicited. “Terms, reasonable.” WM. A. WRIGHT & CO., felS—ly Proprietors. Notice. Thankful for the patronage conferred on the St. CHARLES, I will over be ready to wait upon my guests ; and having employed one of the best bar keepers, I hopo to give entiro satisfaction to the public. Any number of day boarders will be accommodated with day boarding at $lO per week. And a few with good rooms well furnished, at the low price of sls per week. Day Board $2.50 per day. ap!2-tf SAM’L P. BRADFORD. SCREVEN HOUSE, gAVANNAII, 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, mh 16—6 m CLOSING CUT. TO CHANGE LINE OF BUSINESS by the first of October next, M. lIYAMS & CO., CORNER BROAD AND M’iNTOSH STREETS, Offer tho following Goods, UNDER NEW YORK COST, at Wholesale and Retail. Call and examine for yourselves. BOOTS AND SHOES: Men’s, Misses', Ladies and Boys’ SHOES and BOOTS—a large assortment of all de scriptions, at 20 per cent, less than can be bought in this city. HATS: Men’s and Boys’ English, French, and American HATS—-all Colors and Fashions, very low. GROCERIES: MACKEREL—BarreIs, Half and Quarter Barrels and Kits, No. 1,2, and 3. Soap, Starch, Candles, Lard, Pepper, Mustard, Ginger, Spice, Tea, Biscuits and Crackers of all kinds, Oysters, Lobsters, Peaches, l'ine Apples, Sardines, Olives, many other articles. LIQUORS: 50 cases French BRANDIES —direct importation 20ca8es Holland GIN 40 eases WHISKEY 20 cases CHAMPAGNE 10 cases BRANDY PEACHES HARDWARE: 46 oases S. W. Collins’ AXES. 200 dozen assorted HOES and SIEVES jy6—lm "PARASOLS, FANS AND SUN SHADES A NEW STYLES, at l MRS. I’UGHE'S, 190 Broad Street. Jailj City Printer—Official Paper LARGEST CITY CIRCULATION. TUESDAY MORNING July 17, 1866 S CIS S OKS . —A cargo of nearly 1,000 negro slaves wa« recently landed in Cuba. —A New York thief opened a store to sell the jewelry he had stolen. —The Princess of Prussia owns a pearl necklace valued at $160,000. —The New York State Annual Ger man Festival takes place at Erie City in August. —Three suicides and two prize fights in New Orleans in one day. —Everything is warm in this weather. Not even a cool reception is chronicled, —The Assistant Quartermasters re ceive no quarter at the hands of the War Department Forty or fifty are to be mustered out forthwith. —Government once had a woodpile in West Nashville which contained 15,000 cords. Not a stick left—all stolen. —Baron Rothschild long since re moved all the valuables from his chateau across the Rhine, and this example is now being extensively followed by land lords in Prussia, Germany, Austria and Italy. —A Virginia touting party visited the head waters of the Elk and Back hannon rivers, and found men in the mountains who had never seen a wagon. Bears, deer, panther, etc., were found in abundance. —There is a cave in the mountains of Schoharie county, N. Y., which has been explored to the distance of twenty-five miles, and which has fine halls, splendid stalactites, and the usual wonders and curiosities of subterranean galleries. —An organization of counterfeiters, reaching from the St. Lawrence to the Rocky Mountains, has been disclosed by the arrest of parties in Kansas, which is said to hayejssued spurious bills ty-tbe amount of one and a quarter millions of \ s-ewr -WWH - .. - . .!> dollars.; ~, —The Portland draymen charged in some instances SIOO an hour for their services, during the raging of the fire, in the removal of goods. —Maria Stewart, young and remarka bly pretty, is now under arrest in New York, for a second time, for shoplifting. Her last offence was stealing and carry ing away, under her ample skirts, $260 worth of silk. —James Littleworth, of Tennessee, is seventy-eight years old, and has thirty one children—the oldest fifty, and the youngest four months. He is nyw living with his fourth wife, whom he married at the age of fifty-nine, she being then a little of fourteen. —The Portland newspapers, on Wed nesday morning, assured their readers that “ the display of fireworks to come off in the evening would be the most bril liant ever exhibited in Maine.” The citizens will not care to have a repetition of such fireworks. —lsaac V. Fowler, formerly postmas ter of New York, became pecuniarily in volved in 1860, and used the Govern ment funds in bis possession, which) when discovered, caused quite a sensa tion throughout the country. Mr. Fow ler has ever since been exiled from the country, and a suit has been pending against him in the United States Court. On Thursday, the Government aban doned the case, and the exiled is now privileged to return. —A young woman who was seeking evidence against her seducer, for the pur pose of placing the matter in the hands of a detective, so that he might be ar rested, visited the house of his father, at Jersey City, on Thursday, where she suc ceeded in procuring his photograph ; she was just about to leave the house, when the young man’s father, mother, sister and a male relative made an assault upon her and tried to recover the pic ture. She managed to get away, al though nearly all her clothing had been torn from her, and ran through the streets, pursued by the two males, to the police station, where her story was told, and she received protection. £. S. JAFFRAY & CO. JMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF Dry G-oods, 350 Broadway, NEW YORK. , fe27—6m NO. 167- Snuff Sc Tobacco. VIRGIHIA ■piNE CUT TOBACCO, AND SNUFF 1 . I am now prepared to FILL ORDERS FOR MY TWO BRANDS “ THE SUBLIME ” AND “ VIRGINIA ORONOKO ” FINE CUT CHEWING TOBACCO. I have succeeded in reducing the VIRGINIA LEAF IKTO FINE C.UT CHEWING TOBACCO By my own Original and Peculiar Process, I can now justly claim to present to the LOVERS OF PURE TOBACCO, THE FINEST ARTICLE EVER PRODUCED IN THIS COUNTRY. THIS TOBACCO Gives, a dmakto and {sApttngg. Wiew, with all the natural aromatic flavor of the Virginia Plug, different altogether from the Western Fine Cut. JAS. M. VENABLE, PETERSBURG, VA. ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED BV BLAIR, SMITH & CO., AUGUSTA, GA. For sale by all the principal Tobacco Dealers. jy4—2m AUGUSTUS BOHNE, QOn B r OAD STREET. ~ (Opposite Planters’Hotel' Has always on hand h large assortment of IMPORTED A. DOMESTIC SEGARS Chewing and Smoking TOBACCO Lorillard’s SNUFF Fine Meerschaum PIPES AM CIGAR HOLDERS, genuine and imitation ALSO, Rubber, Briar, Rosewood, and Clay PIPES, PIPE STEMS, SNUFF BOXES, Eto., AT THE LOWEST NEW TOJtK PRICES. THE TRADE SUPPLIED ON LIBERAL iay2-3m] TERMS. P. HANSBEB.GEK & CO., CORNER BROAD & MTNTOSH STS. (Opposite Post Office.) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN And Importers and Manufacturers of HAVANNA AND DOMESTIC SEGARS CHEWING AND SMOKING TOBACCO, Pipes and Tobacco of all kinds, Lorilllard’s, Rappee, Maccaboy, Scotch SNUFFS, ETC. m.v3-3m Excelsior Fruit Jars. 1 OH GROSS QUARTS AND lUU HALF GALLON JARS, «JTor Preserving Fruits—the best in use. For sale, at wholesale and retail, by MOSHER, THOMAS & SCIIAUB, ini 7—ts Masonic Building* Kid Gloves. QNLY ONE DOLLAR A PAIR! For the Best KID GLOVES, at I. KAHN & CO.’S, jnls—6m 262 Broad Streot. Mr. Robert Weber, (Graduate of the Conservatories of Leip6ic and Beilin), Respectfully informs the public that he gives instruction in INSTRUMENTAL and VOCAL MUSIC. Application may be left at J. C. SCHREINER & SON’S Music Store, Broad street ju3o—lm Just Opening - , COMPLETE STOCK OF SEASONABLE GOODS' AT THE WELL-KNOWN STAND OF I. KAHN & CO., jhls 262 Broad Street. failg %rtas. PRIHTIXft OP EVERY DESCRIPTION EXECUTED ;, IN THE BEST MANNER. The Faeteet Poner Preetee, and Beet •/ Workmen enablee ut to do Superior JOB WORE at Cheaper Ratee than elsewhere. Miscellaneous. M. _ 262. I. Kahn & 00. GEEAT BARGAINS! SELLING OFF AT COST! Call and see their new supply of PRINTS AND BLEACHED GOODSI Which arc offered at NEW YORK PRICES! Store to be thoroughly REPAIRED and ENLARGED for the FALL TRADEI L KAHN A COt, jyß—tf 262 Broad Street. PETER DAVEZAC WILL PAY THE HIGHEST PRICES for Cotton Rags, Waste, Old Bagging, Rope. Also, Copper, Brass, and Lead. Wagons to call at any part of the City. Office and Warehouse, Northeast Corner of Fenwick and Washington streets, Augusta, Georgia. jyß—3m* IST. 33. WE ARE RECEIVING, DAILY, IN swldition to our present Stock— THE LATEST STYLES OP CLOTHINGS! FURNISHING GOODS, HATS, Etc., FOR SUMMER WEAR CONSISTING IN PART OP BLACK CLOTH FROCK and SACK COATS fWf.’W BLACK and COLORED CASBI|*EP J SUITS • BROWN and WHITE LINEN SUITS BLACK DOESKIN—Drap D’Ete BLACK and COLORED CASSIMERE and LINEN PANTS BLACK ALFACA AND LINEN SACKS ALL LINEN AND LINEN BOSOM SHIRTS JEANS AND LINEN DRAWERS CROSS-BARRED MUSLIN UNDER SHIRTS. ALSO, THE LATEST STYLES OF BLACK AND COLORED Felt Hats, To which we call the attention of THE PUBLIC. We are prepared to sell as LOW AS ANY HOUSE IN THE STATE! W. M. D’ANTIGNAC 4 CO., Post Office Corner, ju2B—lm Augnsta, Ga. The Augusta Wholesale & Retail Emporium. 262 262 WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS In Foreign and Domestic DRY GOODS FANCY GOODS * NOTIONS BOOTS SHOES HATS AND STRAW GOODS 262 BROAD STREET. jnl7—.6m Light Cassimeres CLOTHS— Fop Gents' and Boys' Wear Are selling at Reduced Prices, at L, KAHN & CO.’S, ju!7—6m 262 Broad Street*