Daily press. (Augusta, Ga.) 1866-1867, September 02, 1866, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

nil] stcss. ■jblish.’r & ?ro;>r : “tor. mil. ) /'/: i IgSttsL, *« fry :HJ, es. ./■> Igll . rut,re I IH. •/>.■ ... , c:nri ! i ■r-7 "' * t/<~' BTarina. ■£~<k-r«er •<! tt- > I % ep},„ - /‘...1 '. ; < ... Krellers. /':• §YOUR SIGHT Xtf Bttrornt pf Gold, Silver, Bacm-'s "i ■& iirri.'":-:,-. in.. Had S|.> 1 ; ■-■- ; OTHp(fariol. et<3., fit % FRONTAL:rs .Sicivi: ttsaJry Establishment, Broad Street, i stf LStelow Augusta Hotel. tic e '' •f * i. ’ • bouse ill til" ' II U ** tlB. RUSS FIX, Broad Street. -v. . 1> Stairs. l*‘i' W Shoes” sft - _ stmi Bfeeived. k; P--MD STJREET, GwSD , A ASSi Hi I’M l.\T '/v ; : ;-f Shoes! . . ‘fiS’jJf' have is rHpfut assortment of .«> tons p % ’ ! - , • and RIBBONS, " - Bp and please the taste i,-1- HpaY LOW. * . (Clegtns 1 .‘jp NX¥s% ifftLINERY *'*•## &H% RfKteTABT.TSHMENT, ?f4. tJ& <BpitNK STREKT, * Towor.) ‘ ■ ’Hir.I.AS, of every iie *lßY HOODS, Til IM • %'"*vS Si ';" . M'CORSETS. etc., oon ;■;• .■-■■-■. P?_ au 2.1—1 m Mia Stewart, V DRESS-MAKING Hument ' M ¥Mi BrosWmrecl. Pp Stairs, Hr a, qa. im Halers. ■ I Ice ! -■ ' . >, WRNTSUING ICE IN * *> i? Up the *. Hfe HOUSE, BIBs Hall, at two :i pound retail : two («4 4*J}s4 {J«.r fifty pound? and - wWssS®. '<»«*»ijHphe country pmuipt i k DODD. mi^feXHXOSaBIEET lee Souse SS? OFFICE) W IS STILL OPEN, ♦jtteeent. two and a half .*>. ’,jr’*’-o • 1 HB. For silty pound? « Harper a co. : r.a ,«. > : ■ ■ftloss, .Sdianou:.. (la. & Sons, f S ' If AVGUSTA, HA. ‘‘ ‘Fancy hoods. Keen eopstantly m band a fio . •. Hkttry promptly ■ nKman Kbtkings. Her A Schmidt's, : Hlnos. Bens. | SNoi NPoHCCcC Si AbENTS I . V •■.:■■.•■- jamly celebrated | Bps the Mine £ I0"V l**ens now in 1 , Wfa not corode, Jjj ‘ lagtoiher Pen now | - I2RA SONS, | Iff Broad Street. 1 : .^fctdStre.et. . Rbir 1 v\ ; " “ iadvantahi: if . kStOCK at I • Bp.’s, j a.; is.sksiiC; HpDS daily. ..Ebert"! f , ' Bbetail BfTORE. IP Ipad utreet. Daily Press. AUGUSTA, GAY. SUNDAY MORNING, SEPT. 2, 1866. VOL, I, Snuff A Tobacco. -rw-o-J— r *' T. HAKSBER6EB. & CO. CORNER BROAD A McINTOSH STS. (Oppoaite Post Office.) WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS AND •!* ** ’ IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS ON HAVANA AND DOMESTIC SEGARS CHEWING AND SMOKING TO23iVC QOA EVERT BRAND A Vs BEAUTIFUL PIPES, OF ALL KINDS. JgP-LorilUrd’s Fsppee, Mecahoy and Scotoh SNUFFS, ete. . sal I—ly AUGUSTUS BOKNE, QOn BROAD STREET, (Opposite Piss ten' Hotel' Has always on hand a large assortment of IMPORTED A DOMESTIC SEGARS Chewing and Smoking TOBACCO Lorillard’i SNUFF SKM ‘IM3 'A Fine Meerschaum PIPES AND CIGAR HOLDERS, genuine and imitation Rubber, Briarj llosewtAi.'Suwd k Clay PIPES, PIPE STEMS, SNI]FE BONES, Eto.~- g- AT THK T.OWEST NtW TO|K PRICEf^ THE TRADE SUPPhIEJp ON LIBERAL au4-ly] TEEMS. ' 1 x piNE CUT TOBACCO AND SNUFF. 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 INTO FINE CUT CHEWING TOBACCO By my oven 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 durable and substantial Cbcw, with all the natural aromatic flavor of tbo Virginia Plug, different altogether from the Western Fine Cut. JAS. M. VENABLE, PETERSBURG, VA. ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED BY BLAIR, SMITH & CO., AUGUSTA, GA. For sale by all the principal Tobacco Deaiors. jyd—2m Lumber and Fire Wood! Having made arrangements with one of the best Saw Mills In the State, the subscriber is prepared to supply any and all kinds of T LUMBER AT SHORT NOTICE. Also, at the Wood-yard of Augusta and Savannah Rail Road Depot, OAK, HICK ORY and DRY PINE FIRE WOOD, in any quantity. Orders left with Pollard, Cox A Co s, 287 Broad Street; Both well A Whitehead, cor ner of Broad and Washington Streets, Oaat the Yard, will meet with prompt attention. Prices reasonable. Orders solicited. au2s-3m» D. T. CASTLEBERRY. Notice of Election. Clerk or Cockcil’s Office, 1 Augusta, Ga., Aug. 21, 1866. j AN ELECTION WILL BE HELD AT the next Regular Monthly Meeting of Council, FRIDAY, September 7th, 1866, for Teacher of the Houghton Institute, as follows: A Principal of the Boys’ Department. A Principal of the Girls’ Department. An Assistant in each Department. Candidates must hand in their applica tions at this Office, by 12 o’clock M., of THURSDAY preceding the day of eleotion. By order of Council. L. T. BLOME, _L_ au2fl— t<l Clerk of Conncii. ADIES’ AND MISSES’ HATS AT MRS. PUGHE’S, 100 Broad Street. s|{ failij |tfS3. City Printer—Official Paper LARGEST CITTcIRCULATION. SUNDAY MORNING ......Sept. 2, 1866 scUssorsT Table Rock, at Niagara, ia aaid to I s — b«en appointed French Consul at Frankfort. —Hon. Daniel G. Burnett has been elected U. S. Senator from Texas. —Ah engineering puzzle—When is a crab not a crab ? When it's a hoiater. —Cincinnatians are rejoiejpg over the rapid abatement ofdhotera. —Rothermel will be paid $50,009 sos (painting the battle of Gettysburg. —Napoleon has sent to Algeria for his fighting Marshal, McMahon. ' ' —iLizzje Waßtou Davenport has joined vUe church. —Newark makes 25,000 hides into ptiteiS leather aanugllj. f I I i —The Irish csops ‘a|e proniisiig, es pecially tlie potato. * —Two ladies fought a duel in Texas raceotlj., . —■'Two hundred Johnson men have been appointed in the New York Custom ■House. , —Cholera has broken out among the negroes at Mobile, but not iu aa epi’ demic form. i —Craider, a Revolutionary giddier, is just dead iu Meadville, Miss., aged 108 years. —A residence for Gen. Lee, and a chapel for the college, are both to be built at Lexington, Va. —The hog crop of Otsego county, N. Y., is estimated at 3,000,000 pouuds, worth $960,000. —A Yankee at Sheffield, Eng., has forwarded one hundred and forty gross of knives and forks to Portland. —They have a horse with five legs in Texas, but the fifth is “of no great use o the animal." —Don’t argue with a man who has been in the penitentiary. Ho- is past Conviction. —The bells of the engine houses in St. Louis were rung by electricity during a thunder storm a few nights since. —A young lady out West was charged with “putting on airs,” because she re fused to go to a ball barefoot. —Queen Emma made, with her own royal hands, one hundred percussion caps, during her visit to the ordinance room of the Washington Navy Yard. —Santa Anna is said to have ten millions of dollars in gold deposited in Great Britain. How did you get it, Sauta ? —Major Gee has returned to his home in Quincy, Fla., and has resumed the practice of medicine—his old pro-' session. —The gold receipts from customs for the first two months of the present fiscal year amount, it is estimated, to be over $29,000,000. —Upward of $600,000 in National Bank currency was issued by the Treas ury during the past week, making the total issued to date about $289,000,000. —Three boys were poisoned, recently, at Louisville, by eating what they sup. posed to be mushrooms. One has died and th t e others are in a very precarious situation. —Mademoiselle Movito, a young girl, is creating some sensation in Paris. She replies to questions in eighteen lan guages; and comes'birt strong iu orthog raphy. . •; . - ST/,:' : . —The Richmond Examiner says that the seamstresses of that city get only twenty-five cents for making a pair of pants, and seventy-fiVe cents for making a coat. —At the National Convention, of Spiritualists in Providence, the Christian Religion, Sunday schools, animal food, and Andrew Johnson, were rescued against. , J l —A niece of Clement L. Vallandig-. ham was married at Louisville, Ky„ to Mr. S. Holsclaw, of Lawrenceville, Ky., who, during the war, was on the staff of General Magruder. , ■ —lt is estimated that the amount of force expended by the human body in breathing, during twenty-tout hours, is equivalent to lifting one hundred pounds to the height of seven hundred and three feet. —Three hundred and thirty-two thousand sacks of new wheaf and one hundred And sixty-seven thousand quar ter sacks of flour have been exported from San Francisco since June 9th. Dry Goods, Millinery, Etc. “gifjKttM. 1866—A UT U M N—1866. LATHROP, LUDINGTON & CO., 1 326’, ,328, airt) 330 Broadway, NEW YORK. TNVTTR TfiE ATTENTION OF ALL A first-dus Boyars to their stock of DRY GOODS It wiKAhe feund unsurpassed for all Btfatfcenu3Merohants. All departments of eiiF business have been much enlarged, es pecially that for DRESS GOODS, Where we are boastintly opening all the novelties of. the season, to which we now ask the partteuU# ntantion of both Jabbers and Retailers. -;j qR* STOCK CONSISTS OF “ DRE9JI „GOO US ", BSAWLB and CLGAKS PRINTS BLEACHED SHIRTINGS BROWN SHIRTtNGS FLANNELS and BLANKETS WOOLLEN GOODS YANKEE NOTIONS WHITE GOODS EMBROIDERIES HOSIERY Gents’ FURNISHING GOODS MILLINERY GOODS Etc,, Etc., Etc., Etc. All of which we offer at the Lowest Mar ket Prices, by the Package or Piece. au27—cod2m i NEW GOODS! _ J) R. WEIfIHI i, CO. j <ARE ifoW CPBNING A large and complete Stock OF FANCY AND STAPLE Dry G-oods, Adapted to the present and approaching season, embracing all descriptions of Goods in their line, and very ATTRACTIVE in all respects to BUYERS OF DRY GOODS, "Either at Wholesale er Retail, .»”d they respectfully invite examination ut Hoods, and a comparison of prices. au24—lm Fall and Winter Importation, 1866. BBONS, MILLINERY, AXD STRAW GOODS. ARMSTRONG, - CATOR & CO., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF RIBBONS, BONNET SILKS & SATINS, VELVETS, RUCHES, FLOWERS, FEATHERS STRAW BONNETS LADIES’ HATS—trimmed and untrimmed SHAKER HOODS. No. 237 and Lofl oj 239 Baltimore St., BALTIMORE, MD, Offer a stock unsurpassed in the United States IN VARIETY AND CHEAPNESS. ORDERS SOLICITED AND PROMPT ATTENTION GIVEN Terms Cash. au26—2m* " EDGINGS, LACES, Etc. JUST RECEIVED— AND WILL BE SOLD CHEAP— Real Valenciennes LACES and EDGINGS Imitation Valenciennes LAC H Sand EDGINGS Smyrna LACES and EDGINGS Saxony Thread LACES and EDGINGS Jaconot INSERTIONS and EDGINGS. ALSO, SMITH’S celebrated FIRST QUALITY NEEDLES. J. D. A. MURPHY & CO., au2s—tf 314 Broad Street. mT “3“ I. Kahn. & Cos. GREAT BARGAINS! SELLING OFF AT COST! Call and see their new supply of| PEINTS . i AND BLEACHED GOODS! i ' Which are offered at NEW YORK PRICES! Store to be thoroughly REPAIRED and ENLARGED for tho FALL TRADE! I. KAHN it CO., jyß—tf 262 Broad Street. NO. 208. Dry Goods. 190 BBOAD STREET 190 DRY GOODS Os Every Dctcription, • i»Fgy Hoop Skirts. EMPRESS J|||§ COLORED HOOP SKIRTS Dress Goods, In all Material used therefor. LADIES’ HATS AND BONNETS, WHITE GOODS SHEETINGS AND SHIRTINGS BRAIDS, TINSEL * PLAIN CORD RIBBONS, COLLARS AND CUFFS MANTILLAS AND CLOAKS HOSIERY, GLOVES, FINS AND NEEDLEB, FANCY SOAPS, PERFUMERY And every other Article anally found in a Pint Clan Dry Geode Store. ■gjg-CALL AND EXAMINE OOODS^ IMPORTANT rj<o THE TRADING PUBLIC! GREAT BARGAINS IN DRY GOODS I “SELLING OFF AT UNPRECEDENTEDLY LOW PRICES! To make room for a LARGE FALL STOCK! MERCK ANTS’PLANTERS and OTHERS Desirous of Purchasing DRY GOODS AT EXTREMELY LOW PRICES, FOR CASH! WILL FIND IT VASTLY TO TIIEIR INTEREST TO CALL AND EXAMINE OUR STOCK BEFORE PURCHASING ELSEWHERE. As 'we have a regular Assorted Stock of FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC «» 22RY GOODS FANCY GOODS NOTIONS Etc., Etc., Etc., Wo will not attempt an enumeration of the many articles now in store. J. D. A. MURPHY & CO., 314 BROAD STREET, Nearly opposite Planters' Hotel. Augusta, Ga. ju24—tf Selling Off at Very Low Prices! THE ENTIRE STOCK OF DRY GOODS, FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, LADIES’ AND GENffS’ FURNISHING GOODS, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes, Trunks, Valises, Segars, etc., etc. To make room for Goods constantly arriving at THE FANCY BAZAAR, No. 253 Broad street. A FINE ASSORTMENT OF LADIES’ WHITE GOODS SILK BASQUES AND JACKETS, HOSIERY AND DRESS GOODS Just received, and for sale at a bargain, in THE FANCY BAZAAR, No. 253 Broad street. THE LATEST and BEST STYLES OF SPRING AND SUMMER CLOTHING AHD GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS At lowest prices, at THE FANCY BAZAAR, No. 253 Broad street. Conntry Merchants Will find it to their advantage before pur chasing elsewhere to call at THE FANCY BAZAAR, julO—3m No. 253 Broad street. gailg fr tsSs B 0 0 bYe INTIHG OF EVERY DESCRIPTION ■XECUTED IN THE BEST MANNER. The Fastest Pouter Presses, and Best of Workmen enables us to do Superior JOB WORK at Cheaper Rates than elsewhere. Charter Oak COOKING STOVE! This celebrated stove, so favorably known in Mobile, New Or leans, St. Louis, and other Southern cities, is now being offered to the citixens of Au gusta, as one of the best and cheapest first class Cooking Stoves in the market—ite baking qualities are unsurpassed, which is acknowledged by all who have nsed it. The draught flues are so constructed as to ensure a perfect draught, while a/iot air flue which surrounds tho oven insures the baking and roasting of bread and meats, to entire satisfaction. We warrant the perfect baking of every Stove we sell. In our etook will be found TOILET SETS, CRUBNS, TUBS, COFFEE MILLS, SCOURING BRICKS, TEA TRAYS, SAD IRONS, CAKE CUTTERS, JELLY CAKE PANS, ete. D. L. FULLERTON, 159 Broad st., corner Washington. auß—lm Brokers and Merchants. C. E. Claooobn, W. F. Herring, Philadelphia, Pa. Augusta, Ga. CLAGHORN & HERRING, JJAVING RE-RENTED THE COMMODIOUS STORE KNOWN AS No. 7 WARREN BLOCK, WITH WAREHOUSE IN REAR, AUGUSTA, GEO., Will oontinue to give their personal atten tion to CONSIGNMENTS TO THEM, EITHER AT AUGUSTA, GA., OR PHILADELPHIA, PA. Particular attention given to the STORAGE, SALE AND PURCHASE OF Cotton, Yarns, AND DOMESTICS. Consignments and Orders Solicited. Liberal CASH ADVANCES made on Consignments. NORTHERN EXCHANGE FOR SALE AT MARKET RATES. On Ist October Mr. A. M. JACKSON will be admitted as a partner and the firm will be changed to JLAGHORN, HERRING A CO. aul9—6w JAMES T. GARDINER, AREHOUSE AND COMMISSION MERCHANT, Mclntosh Street, Augusta, Ga. Will give his personal attention to the STORAGE AND SALE OF COTTON And such other Produce as may be sent him. Cash advances made on Produce in Store, aull —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, my4—ly Foreign and Domestie. PETER DAVEZAO WILL PAY THE HIGHEST PRICES for Cotton Rags, Waste, Old Bagging, Rope. Also, Copper, Brass, and Lead. Wagons to eall at any part of the City, Office and Warehouse, Northeast Corner of Fenwick and Washington streets, Angusta. Georgia. jyß—3m* Dress Goods. STYLES OF DRESS GOODS, ALL KINDS, VERY CHEAP, at 1. KAHN & CO.’S, jul7—6m 262 Broad Street. Peach Orchard Coal, NOW BEING DELIVERED FROM Rail Road to onstomar*. Having had long experience in the business, the nib eeriber is enabled to make the best selec tions from the different Mines for this mar ket. G. S. HOOKEY. au4—lm r