Newspaper Page Text
m llrtss.
[—Official Paper
PCIBCtLATIpy.
WVIToA.
urrao a»*. i«. is*#
ertlasementx.
: ee House—R. A. liar.
)u<»aß.
, Thomas & Sehnub.
>, etc.—D. L. Fuller
atraat.
Thermometer.
irtY Pite*k Office,)
August 15, 1850. J
, 3 p.m. 6 />.*.
•4° 89°
(St". J —The important an
|»eQn made that anew
has been decided upon
rana. Its cut, shape,
! up are not known to*
lie is being mnnufac
j scale, and will soon
pee.
te-fra/n to some pur
indicates, is hidden or
f front and on both
tg gored train ending
jng the shape of what
|>e tails” of their dress
id maintains the trains
tind, where, with the
it raises one’s skirts
ivements. It also pre'
falling in or twisting
ier’s legs when they
t.p offer ladies an arm
ns.
JPERS —The first case
itico lately adopted by
ivent the introduction
laudered and Diseased
s,” came up before his
bertson, yesterday.
Catkins, a gentleman
try, was the person
"’.’■blaring this Ordin.- .
» Mr. IV. pb-a-1 ign"
stern ,»! said <)r.i : -
Be.! ii.Mrir.cl by the
• •. tvi. l:.c *
k in the columns of tire
Jt; U defendant said he
■ < -A the papers.
‘ u forks alike should
ii! them is coatain-d
ii:‘ i-.
tipi »V, HKe so, he would to-day
Ky-six dollars and fifty
t .*> *s f ‘ i.'Hfe— The folio \ rug rases
Bp tins Court vest..;- lav:
tiSviMja-Bto T.ilkii: lare-tiv, V.
Ntueei'P, biißfcs. Reilly A Felder lor
icftd and W. Miles 01.n,
»• , o Hbighes— l .ii euy tr .;i
fb# pfl/Sidc of guilty. John
P, fk’JJ;.. 5 IF- rflE), (ieorge T. Barnes,
fSkpte «• ferjß 11 oar- -simp!- lar-
SteSv- “.-clfe. Bet. -simp!- !are- -.y.
HBi.i I). Reilly, an i A.
ii, Pk-cfilet t•. A. Snead,
Sfato.»y;lfo«ifwfayl«r —lari -ns from
®.fteilly,for the State.
G. A. Saeswi* for
Si ei. us, Sts. Hblkcr—larceny front
I’liii^^Klilty.
... I. ,|Bh on i as— receiving
guilty, ffohn li.
Reilly, and A, fKjflneqnet, for the State,
i : .. ■■mice.
Ths t» k ftJSbn’KKss. — It will he
.kafccil with by the friends of
4Vds ooWtjrmc at the instance of
ft sort lor: of Us who have
std with the condition
of ii* affairs, '■'.■fcunetinn has been
granted Ageiiist-wfe Company by the
tsupte.-jit: LtHud. (yS T ew York. Would
is not Lisse • .feJßtter for the impa
ir,f-> fiiVvhJ'd.'Spfcp have waitedJJa
rvfcjjf. Um-es '? The’ institution lias but
and perfec
foi: not be expect'd ol it at
. -Qiptlemeii who at
'.i a»d who reside
■ 6 lower part of this County, inform
Hl.sj|hr Savannah and
s-i,;;..A0- -ri.r,, l»j. wretched condi
f .lTurpin’s needs ut
*>tver Butler's Creek
crossing.
JMpjcst us to invite
■Rond Commission
. . ■if it be possible,
in reference to
jaffjatcly removed.
|K|oo:ls sold every
.bo,.- ; ,v M Ocn.un. fjJS} Broad street, ex
pp market. Boots,
■plies and everything
tr. ibiJ g.- : . Pbeap. Also, a large
Hpats, caps, etc., to
«tu«aiMt
The Planters' Hotel.—By the fol
lowing article, which wo clip from the
Columbia South Carolinian of August
lGth, it will be observed that the Plan
ters' Hotel of this city is about to under
go a change of management, and will, at
theopening of the business season, pass
into the hands of Alderman T. S. Nick
ereon, an experienced hotel keeper of
Columbia and Charleston. We do not
know what Mr. Robbins, the present
lessee of thei Planters’ Hotel, intends to
do; hut we extend him our good wishes,
and welcome the new proprietor. The
Carolinian says:
What can an d Ex
ample Worth Imitating. —There are
probably few men in the South who, un
iler adverse circumstances, have achieved
greater success or conquered more diffi*
oulties than our townsman, Alderman T.
S. Nickerson. Away heck in JBs.'!, the
traveling community remember him as
the enterprising head of the Mills House,
in Charleston, then and since one of the
most popular hotels in the Southern
puuutry. Remaining there andaccumu
'lating a handsome fortune until the
breaking out of the war, his good judg
ment and knowledge of the courses of
truvel pointed out Columbia as a profit
able scene of labor, and with that prompt,
ness which characterises every act of
the man, he visited the city and pur
chased what was then known as Hunt’s
Hotel. He refitted and gave it his own
name. Nickerson’s Hotel became as
well known as the Spotswood, at Rich
mond, or the Astor, at New York.
Travelers crowded, purse filled, and he
enlarged, and enlarged, until finally well
nigh the entire square, of which he was
originally hut the owner of a corner, be
came his by purchase. In that evil
hour, we all remember, Gen. Sherman
arrived, and one night saw swept away
from the face of the earth house, furni
ture, wines, and the hard-earned accu
mulations of previous years of struggle.
Undismayed by misfortune, Mr. Nicker
son recommenced at once the work of re
cuperation. The State Convention of
South Carolina was about to assemble,
and the question was whether they should
go to Charleston for accommodation or
take their chancel iu the Capital of the
State.
The ever active hotel proprietor
solved the problem by a word. The
Methodist Female Seminary was quick
ly leased and putt in order. Mr. N.
proceeded to New York and purchased
an entire outfit, and here to day he still
holds forth as the chief of one of the
first hotels in the South. Not content
with this display of enterprise—and
that, too, under circumstances which to
ordinary men promised no profit—Mr.
Nickerson has recently purchased the
well-known Flanters’ Hotel, of Augusta,
Ga., and, in less than sixty days, say by
the first of October, he will open an es
tablishment second to none iu the South.
That house has been closed for the
present, but when it opens under the
new management, with its re-arranged
and re-furnished apartments, and an
entirely re-rnodeled system of direction,
we opine that it will scarcely be recog
nized by its old patrons.
Nickerson’s Hotel in Columbia will
be still continued under the manage
ment of its proprietor, and in due time
the handsome site ot the old caravan
sary will be covered by him with a
building that will be an ornament to
our city; so that while Mr. Nickerson
divides his time between the Capitals of
two States, Columbia will always claim
him as her own.
Such currente calamo is a history of
one of the reconstructed men ot the
South. We wish we bad more of them.
Tney not only afford example and im
part energy, but thev restore confidence
and circulate money through the com
munity in which they live. In Colum
bia, Mr. Nickerson lias hosts of warm
friends, who have often given testimony
of their regard ter the man, and we are
sure that the entire travelling commu
nity will be glad that he “still lives’’ to
make happy the hearts and stomachs of
all who “come this way.”
Patronize Home Productions.—
The Savannah News & Herald, in ac.
knowledging the receipt of a sample
sack of flour, manufactured by Captain
Thomas P. Stovall, at his Excelsior
Mills in this city, says :
After several days’ use we have de
cided it to be the best flour we have
used for a year, for general household
use, and we recommend a trial to all
housekeepers. Professor Blat, who
writes able magazine nrticles on cook
ing, recommends that all flour be pur
chased and kept in sacks, but the mere
fact that this flour is in sacks is its
smallest recommendation. For biscuit,
raised bread, pastry, or any cooking
purpose, it is a a great credit to the
State.
Tns following unique valentine was
received a by lady:
sofie is the doun on the butterflies wing
It is so soft ami meek
softe is the voise that my tru luv dus sing
lint softer yet is her crimson cheek.
The following is the lady’s reply :
Soft is taturs all smashed up,
As soft as mash can be;
But softer yet is the silly swain
Who wrote that verse to me !
The London Punch completed its 50lh
volume and 25th year a few days since,
and the event was duly celebrated in
London by a dinner, at which the pro
prietors, artists and contributors pre
sented a ilver “loving cup” to Mr.
Mark Lemon, who, for the past quarter
of a century, has edited this sprightly
periodical. How natural it seems for
Lemon to be editor of Punch.
Severai. Houses are advertised for
rent in another column. Apply to L.
C. Dogas.
Ladies Waists in Amkihoa. — The
unnatural length and ridiculous small
ness of their waists hafiles description.
A waist that could he spanned is an
English metaphorical expression, used
in a novel; hut it is an American fact,
■ and so ulurmqig does it appear to an
Englishman, that my first sentiment on
view-jag the phenomenon' was one of
pUy 1 for the unfortunatelieing who might
possible break off in the middle, like
flowers from the stalk, before flie evening.
Net less extraordinary is the'size of
the ladies’ arms. I saw- many which
were scarcely larger than moderate sized
walking sticks. Yet, strange to say,
when these ladies pass the age of forty,
they frequently attain an enormous size.
The whole enemy of their structure is
then reversed,<h|ir yvaists and afml be
coming the thickest parts of their body.
lle#fc is a subject worthy the contem
platiou of the ethnologist. How comes
it to pass that the English type—which,
I presume; has not hi every case been sd
affected by the admixture of others as to
loose its own identity—how conics it to
pass, I Say, that the English type is so
strangely altered ill a fuw generations ?
I have heard various hypotheses, among
others, the habits of the people, the dry
climate. The effect of the latter on a
Europeon constitution would have ap
peared to he sufficient to account for
the singular confirmation, if I had not
been persuaded by natives of the coun
try that the small waist is mainly owing
to tight lacing. This practice, it is said,
is persevered in to an alarming extent;
and, if report he true, it is to he* feared
that the effects will be felt. by . future
generations to a greater degree than
they are at present.— BtMheO.
Returned. —Mr. Fox returned to the
city, yesterday afternoon, having in his
charge Whitmore and Mitchell, who, it
will he remembered, hired a horse and
buggy from Mr. Dehoney, Proprietor of
the Palace Stables, some weeks ago,and
fled with the property from tire city.
Mr. Fox overtook the thieves at or
near Maybington, twenty, miles above
Newbery, S. C. They were at the time
contracting for the sale of the horse.
The prisoners were committed to jail
to await trial.
Revitai.. — The Gainsvillc Air Line
Eagle says that during the past week
quite an interesting revival has been
going on in that town. Services have
been held both day and night, and-the
Baptist Church has been crowded with
a deeply interested congregation. Rev.
J. E. Rieves has been the laboring min
ister, and he has been a zegdogs, untir
ing laborer. Were the same zeal and
determination displayed by ministers
everywhere as has been manifested by
Mr. Rieves, the friends of religion could
discover the star of cheer rising above
their cause.
Newspaper Anniversary. The
Charleston Daily News, an able and
interesting Southern journal, completed
its first year of publication on Tuesday,
the lfith inst.; and enters into a review
of political occurrences during that
period. We wish our Charleston co
temporary unbounded success, and any
number of successful anniversaries.
Read This, Ladies. —ln these hard
times I. Kahn & Cos. are giving a ticket
to every lady who purchases $5 worth
of goods, said ticket entitles the holder
to a chance in a silk dress pattern
valued at $75. When a hundred tickets
have thus been given away, the dress
will be raffled. Call and see at 262
Broad street. t
Mayoralty. —Messrs. Tweedy and
Ramsey both decline to allow their
names to he used in connection with the
Mayoralty. Judge A. P. Robinson, iu
another place, states his position in re
gard to the proposed Street Railroad, in
reply toacommunicatioii signed “An Old
Citizen,” in yesterday’s paper.
Southern Refinement is indicated
to no small extent by a proper appre
ciatiation of the merits of reputable
toilet preparations. Messrs. Stevenson
& Shelton, No. 288 Broad Street, in
vite attention to a beautiful selection of
specialties admirably adapted to the
toilet and boudoir. 3f
Ice.—-The Mclntosh Street Ice House
is still in operation, and is selling Ice
at two and a half (24) cents per pound
at retail, and two (2) cents per pound
for fifty pounds pr more.
Wanted. —Hickory, white oak, or
water oak hoop poles are wanted by
Mosher, Thomas & Sehaub. See adver
tisement.
Augusta Market.
Augusta, Oa., August 15, 1866.
GOLD—Buying, 1.48; selling, 1.50.
SlLVEß.—Buying, 1.38; selling, I^l®-
COTTON—The Market opened with ft
better feeliDg, but on account of discour
aging news from New l r ork, the market
closes dull at the same figures as yesterday,
viz : Middling 26a27; Strict Middling
| 27a2S ; Good Middling 29.
Mithrnal Affection. —Men talk
of the silver cord of friendship — of the
silken lies which bind young lovers to
gether—of the pure affection of husband
aud wife, as if it wene durable as adamant
and as pure as the love of angels. But M
hasty word, a thoughtless action, or a
misconstrued expression, may break the
first; a slight neglect, Some
or a trifling favor denied, may sunder
the second; add even : tho last
troyed,ifor the green-eyed monster may
find entrance, and blight tlqt (aipe-ti
flowers jof this sweetest earthly paradise.
But there is a love which neglect cannot
weaken—which injury cannot''destroy—
and even jealousy cannot extinguish.
It is as gentle as the breeze of ovehlngj
firm as the oak, and ceases only when
life's last gleam goes out indfehth.’During
all the vicissitudes of this changing
world, iu sickness or iu sorrow—in life
or in death—in childhood’s halcyon days
—in youths. Untroubled hour —or in
inanhood’s vigorous prime— the mother
clings with the sariie unwearied 'affec
tions to her child. Its the same amid the
snow and frosts ot Siberia, the temperate
and joyous regions ol our fair land, and
among the arid sands of Africa. The
anxious cares and tender attentions,
and oft repeated words of a mother’s,
love, are not without their happy in
fluence upon the lives and characters
oftheirsons. The stern rebuke of a justly
offended father inav check, for a season,
the rising and struggling passions of
youth, hut the sacred lessons learned
from a mother’s lips are engraven on
the heart, and retain their power through
life; in virtue’s paths and even in the
career of vice, they are continually re
curring to our mind, and bring with
them, as farther incitements to good, all
the hallowed scenes of childhood and
innocence. Hard is the heart that will
not melt at the recollection of a mother’s
prayers ; and more obdurate still, the
heartofhim who, by a course of vice,can
wittingly wring her soul with anguish,
and bring down her gray hairs with sor
row to the gs-ave.
Hark, Y'y Girls!— lt is high time
that somebody told yon a little plain
truth. You have been watched for a long
time, a certain class of you; and it is plain
enough you are laying plans to cheat
somebody. Y'ou intend to sell chaff for
wheat, find there is danger that some of
the foolish “gudgeons” will be sadly
taken in.
It may not be your fault that yon be
long to the “one idea party”—that the
single idea of getting a husband is the
only one which engrosses much of your
time or attention. Your venerable mother
of Eden memory w.as oalled “help for man,
and you are looking for a man to help
you; to help you to live the half idle,half
silly way,in which you have commenced.
Men who are worth having want women
for wives. A bundle of gew-gaws with a
string of flats and quavers,sprinkled with
cologne aud set in a carmine sauce))—
this is no help for a man who expects
to raise, a family o( boys and girls find
veritable bread and meat.
The piano and the lace frame are well
in their places, and so are ribbons and
frills and tinsels—hut you can’t make a
dinner of the former, nor a bed blanket
of the Matter. And, awful as the idea may
seem to you.both dinner and bed-blanket
are uecessAry 1 t 6 domestic enjoyment.
Life has Vts realities as well as its fancies,
but you make, it all a matter of decoration,
remembering the tassels and curtains,
forgetting the bedstead. Suppose a young
man of good sense, and of course ofgood
prospects) to be looking for a wife, what
chance have you to be chosen? Y r oum,ay
cap him, or trap him, to catch him, but
how much better to make it an object
for him to catch you.! Render yourself
worth clutching, and you will need no
shrewd mother or managing brothers to
help you to find a market.
Consignees per Central Railroad.
—P Fleming, D B Morris, W C McM
& Cos, Fleming & R, D W Flagler, J
Sullivan, O'Dowd & M, C A W & Cos,
/ McC, J G Bailie & Bro, C H Warner,
J P II Brown, Plumb & L, C & M )
[II] S, C A liobbe, Blair S & Cos, G R
Crump & Cos, J C Schreiner & Son,
K, J F Miller, J Sibley & Son, J W
Bacon, Levy & J, F 0 Boyd Phillips &
Cos, H McLea, J C Galvin, J M C i
Son, A [A] TANARUS, G <!’ J Rap
pold, Bill Hale, D Stellings, Wyman &
M, Eli Mustin, G R R, Dawson & Cos, J
0 Mathewson, Pollard C & Cos, J Nelson
& Son, Capt Watson, Clark & D, [G K
& B], II Schneider, Bones B & Cos, J
Danforth, Aug G L Cos, B F Tutt, D R
Wright & Cos, M M Markey, W II Tutt,
H S & Cos, W H Warren & Cos, W A
Ramsey, Ramey & TANARUS, H F Russell,
W Thomas, C Myers & Cos, [O D],
E O’D. l _
Peach Orchard Coafl,
NOW BEING DELIVERED PROM
Kail Road to customers. Raving had
long experience in the business, thh sub
scriber is enabled to make the best selec
tions from the different Mines for this mar
ket. G. S. HOOKEY.
au4—lm
[communicated.
The Mayoralty—The Street kail
Hoad.
Mr. Editor: —Having noticed a commu
nication in your coftimna, over the signa
ture of “An Old Citizen,” enquiring the
position of the candidates for the Mayor
alty in *tho construction of the
proposed Street Rfcil Iload, I respectfully
beg leave to stkte that I have raised no ob
jection to the construction of that Road*
dqdJhavc none. Nor do I know of any
Member of. pj£stt\L Council being op
posed to: the enterprise. The subject is in
the bands of the ltail Road Committee of
Council, who have as yet made no formal
report on the subject, the Chairman having
mado only a verbal one of wbat he had
.donq.in regard to it. I learn that that
Committee baa’ been recently in conference
with Col. Cojty the President of the|lpt»(f;
but Wliat progress they have
not learnddr Respectfally, etc.p
A.' P. ROBERTSON,
ii Aifguita, Go., August 15, 1866.
[COMSfU!fICATB».]
R?\ugusta, <(*£o., Aug. 15, ISG6.
Mr. H. 11. Fuairis :
Sir :—Please say to your readers that I
am not a candidate for Mayor against my
friend A. P. Robinson.
iVours, respectfully, W. A. R\msbv.
BROAD STREET. JQO
Mrs. E. H. I?ughe^
HAS NOW OX , jfcTlpri
A Fine Stock
New Goods
Etc., Etc.,
CONSISTING OF-
AiJ MOURNING GOODS:
GRENADINE BAREGE
CREPE MERETZ
CHALLIES
DsLAINES
BOMBAZINES
LAWNS—Black andPlain
LAWNS—Figured
LAWNS—PIaid
ALPACA
POPLINS—BIack amVJWhite
GINGHAMS
CALICOES, Etc.
190 Broad Street,
Mbs. E. H. PUGHE’S.
ELECTION FOR MAYOR.
An election for mayor of tiie
City of Augusta, to fill the vacancy
occasioned by the resignation of Hon. Jas.
T. Gardiner, will be held in the several
Wards of the City, on SATURDAY, August
18th, 1866, at the places hereinafter desig
nated :
WARD NO* 1. At the Scale House, un
der the management of J. B. Bishop, J. I. 0 ;
H-T. Poay, and Tbos. 11. Ilolleyman, or
cither two of them.
WARD NO. 2. At the Clerk of Council’s
Office, City Hall, under the management of
W. Milo Olin, J. I\; Thos. U. Rhodes, and
W. J. Owens, or cither two of them.
WAKD NO. 3. At the Central Hotel,
under the management of R. M. Phinizy, J.
P.; F. Lamback, aud D. B. Plumb, or either
two of them.
WARD NO. 4. At the Planters’ Hotel,
under the management of Matt, J.
P.j Cbas. T. Butler, and Wm. V. Keener, or
either two of them.
The Polls will be opened from 8 o’clock,
A. M., to 2 o’clock M.
The Managers at each Poll will appoint
three Clferks to assist them in conducting
the election.
After the vote in the several wards has
been counted, the Managers will repair to
the City Hall, and cohsoiidato the vote for
Mayor, declaring the person having the
highest number of vt>te3 for that office duly
elected Mayor.
By order of Council.
ABNEII P. ROBERTSON,
ou9 —td Mayor, pro. tcm.
REMOVED.
The office of stovall’s excel-
SIOR MILLS fs removed to the
Mills. Orders for FLOUR can be left at
the store of Messrs. John I). Butt & Bro.,
which will meet with the same prompt atten
tion as heretofore.
a-ul2-—1 w _ THOS. P. STOVALL.
The Augusta Wholesale & Retail
Emporium.
262 I ' KA ‘ INAC0 > 262
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS In
Foreign and Domestic
DRY GOODS
FANCY GOODS
NOTIONS
BOOTS
SHOES
HATS
AND
Straw goods
262 BROiW) STREET.
jul7—6m
Light Cassimeres
CLOTHS—
For Gents’ and Boys’ Wear
Are selling at Reduced Prices, at
1. KAHN & CO.’S,
ju!7—6m 292 Broad Street.
Ice Sealers.
Ice! Ice! Ice !
CONSTANT SUPPLY OF TRIMS
NORTHERN ICE
i /. f ' ll . i i
Will jje furnished to consumers by calling
or sending tbeit ofdefg to tbe
AUGUSTA ICS HOUSE,
Opposite the PAbtfi 6arolinft Rail Read
Depot, or at the Branch House on Campbell
Street, at the present reduced advertised
rates—viz.: $2 CO pef CWT., and 3ic. RE
TAIL; and at all times as low as can be
furnished by any other dealer,
au2—tf CALEB EMERY.
Come and See TJs.
THE GEORGIA ICE HOUSE STILL
lives, and is selling ICE at as low rates
as anybody.
jy 17— lm BOYCE Sc DODD.
Ice Delivered Free
TO CUSTOMKRI-kIN ANY PART OF ft
the City, who will take TEN POUNDS
or .MORE.
Our charges are—For LESS than FIFTY
•POUNDS', TWO AND A HALF CENTS
per pound. Fo? FIFTY POUNDS and
OVER. TWO CENTS.
Ice House, near the Bell Tower, one door
South of Greene Street.
.Watermelons and cantelopes
ON ICE—Cheap.
my29—3m PORTER A SEGO.
Brokers and Merchants.
~~ JAMES T. GARDINER^
A R E H OUSE
AND
COMMISSION MEP.CHANT,
Mclntosh Street, Augusta, Ga.
Will give hiftpersonal attention to tbe
STORAGE AND SALE OF COTTON
And such other Produce as may bo sent
him.
Cash advances made on Produce in Store,
aul I —6m
JOHN CRAIG, ’■ • •
Banking and
EXCHANGE OFFICE,
289 BROAD STREET,
Augusta, Ga.,
BUYS AND SELLS
GOLD BULLION
GOLD and SILVER COIN
BANK NOTES
BONDS,- STOCKS
BILLS OF EXCHANGE,
myl—ly Foreign ftnd Domestic.
Painting & Gilding.
J. J. BROWNE, '
QARVEIt AND GILDER.
LOOKING GLASS And
PICTURE FRAMES,
CORNICES,
BRACKETTS,
CONSOLE TABLES
,pP'' Made to Order. -ISt®
Old PICTURE and LOOKING-GLASS
FRAMES REGILT, and OIL PAINTINGS
RESTORED, LINED and VARNISHED,
At ISS BROAD STREET,
AuflUHta, Geo.
Old CHANDELIERS made to look EQUAL
TO NEW, at a moderate prico.
aul2—tf
PAINTING.
MY PRICE FOR FINE GILDED AND
SMALTED SIGNS has been, from
1820 to the present time (with the exception
of war time), $J per foot, inclusive.
PAINTED SIGNS, without regard to
color, seventy-five cents per foot-, inclusive.
FINE JAPAN TIN. with name, $1; with
uame and business, $2.
K. P. SPELMAN,
au9—lm* 1,90 Greene Street.
FISK,
Nearly opposite the
POST-OFFICE
Is undertaking
HOUSE, SIGN, AND ORNAMENTAL
Fainting
IN ALL ITS VARIOUS BRANCHES.
7—tf
PAINTING, GLAZING, Etc.
ALL orders connected with the above
branches promptly executed in the
neatest manner, on reasonable terms.
SHOP NO. 48 JACKSON STREET,
Near the Bell Tower.
The best quality of PAINT used, and
GLASS of all sizes [obtainable)
so t to order.
__fc2o— ts WILLIAM BARROW.
To the Ladies of Augusta and
Vicinity.
YOU EVER SEE THE LIKE?
IN THESE HARD TIMES,
I. Kalin & Cos.
ARE
GIVING AWAY
SILK DRESS PATTERNS.
To all ladies purchasing $5 worth of
Goods, a TICKET or CHANCE is given in
a SILK DRESS PATTERN* valued at $75.
When a hundred Tickets are disposed of, a
box will be procured, coutaing ninety-nine
blanks and the PRIZE CARD, which will
entitle the drawer to a
HANDSOME SILK DRESS!
Call for information, and see
THE SILK DRESSES—
At 262 BROAD STREET.
aiis—tf I. KATIN A CO.
~~ Ice Cream and Sherbert!
nAND I E S
V AT
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
AT THE
FRENCH STORE.
j»10—ly 200 Broad street.