Daily press. (Augusta, Ga.) 1866-1867, January 24, 1867, Image 4
»i hr patlj) 4»rrss.
City Printer—Official Paper
LARGEST CITY CIRCULATION
TUUHSDAY MORNING Jan. 24. 1867
DREAMTIME.
'Alone I watch the dying day,
iNwn 1U tint* of orange railing;
And just beyond the ruffled bay.
* (4r»y mitts or purple bills ere Telling.
Upon the r<-of weird finger# play*.
And all the windt are fall or wailing.
Life's open l»ook berore me li*».
And a* I turn it* learre hack, faintly
The picture# of the part ariec,
Strange forml go by apparelled
quaintly;
Sweet roice# whisper, and dear eve#
Shine a# of eid—divine and faintly.
Once more I benr the gentle rhyme
Where felling leaves atill waters dimple ;
The woods low roarmir aud the chime
Os silvery streamlet# as they whiniple,
And live again the golden time
Os ehildiiood'* joy—so pure and simple.
What pretty pebbles paved the crock,
The dear old creek hr mulberries shaded!
There the sfcv frogs plsjol hide-anil seek
Through lilies—wiih sweet spiers laded :
And our wee shadow seem to speak *
From whispering wavelets, as we waded.
What leagues of tteelar wooed the bees
To buekwbe.it hilts and fields of clover!
What tw’tterirg bird# on blooming trees
Cooed tenderly, ami played the lover j
Whl*e Time, with odorous breath of c&so,
Told the delicious idol over.
We reckoned then each year again :
Now, they are counted wi'h our losses ;
Sharp thorns and thistles give us pain,
Where thou wo trod Spring's velvet
mosses;
Then of our flowery garlands vain,
And how aweary with our crosses.
I gathered wild flowers yesterday,
Cut somehow flowers have lost their
sweetness;
Some quail were startled —oven they
Seem to have lost their old discreetnoss,
And only hopped beside tho way,
A* if they had no need of flcoincss.
But when I see tho children meet.
Flower laden, from their plays returning ;
Care trampled by their heedless feet,
Their trustful souls nil shadow spurning :
Their hearts wild with impatient heat,
Aud hope’s bright fires within them
burning.
I know life blooms the same, but X
Shall breathe its old time fragrance—
never!
The dreary now—the dear gone-by, ,
The bridgeles# floods of sorrow sovor.
Ah, me ! how wistfully I sigh
For dreamtime lost—and lost for ever !
[New York Correspondence of the Chicago
lie) üblican.]
A Sentimental Episode—The Loves
of Greenwood, and how they end
—A Glance at Every Day Life.
My bachelor friend, who has seen a
good deni of the world, and of that
peculiar portion known as women, told
tne one of his sentimental experiences
the other day while we were lounging in
Greenwood.
‘‘Five years ago about this time.” he
said, “I was sitting near this spot with
a very pretty and entirely romantic girl,
who had long declared she loved me,
and who, though blessed with a wealthy
father, would have married me and my
poverty, and defied all her relatives, if
I had permitted her to make such a
sacrifice. "
“I was quite fond of her, as men of
sensibility and gallantry usually are o!
women who love them devotedly, and
the fact that I could not make her my
wife rendered our relation more poetic
than it would have been had we been
encaged. She was rather delicate, and
her friends feared she had a pulmonary
: Ifection. She thought she would not
live long, and the day we sat together
ere she looked pals and more lovely
than ever. The autumn leaves were
Jailing around us, and with her head
leaning on my breast, she said, with
tears in her eyes: ‘I feel, darling, that
lam dying. I believe that the next
year’s leaves wilj strew my grave. Dot
I shall'rest sweetly if I can dream in
Heaven that you still love me, dearest.’
*’My heart was touched as it never
was before,” my friend added “I fan
cied at that moment that I loved her
iwotedly. 1 was tempted to say, ‘Be
mine, darling, before the world. If we
love each other, we shall have wealth
enough, and cuntentmout that fortune
pan not buy.’ But I remembered the
day would come when neither of us
would feel so; that no passion, however
ardent, can survive meagre breakfasts,
and cold potatoes for dinner. So I
kissed her tenderly ; dried the dew of
her tears on the lbseleaves of my lips (I
was sentimental then) ; and told her
she would be some man's lovely wife
when I was at supper after Polonius'
f ibhion.
“She looked a sad rebuke at this, and
shed more tears, which I kissed away
again, and we wandered into less lugu
brious themes.
“We retained our sentimental nt'ach
roent until the war broke out. 1 went
to the field, and after a few letters our
correspondence ceased.
“When the struggle was over, I came
home and one of the first carriages that
I noticed n the Park contained my
quondam inamorata, a middled aged
man, rather vulgar, though very pros
perous looking, and two bouncing chil
dren in charge of a French Irish bonne.
One giante told me the whole story. I
perceived that the sentimental drama
had ended as a comedy, with marriage;
and I laughed, as I had often done b -
fore under similar circumstances, at the
prose denouement of the rose colored
episode. I learned a few days after that
my sweet Saloma had accepted a hus
band, of her parent’s selection, who had
made a fortune by a government con
tract, and who did not know whether
Dante was a Dane or a Dutchman, and
certainly did not care.
I was glad she had done so well, and
gladder I had not been unwise enough
to make her matrimonially miserable. 1
drank a glass ol wine at dinner every
day for a week to her connubial happi
ness —it was barely necessary to toast
her health then—and, meeting her at
the opera a fortnight Bfter, she remem
bered iny face but had forgotten rny
name—the name of the man she hud
vowed she had loved better than her
own self, and who was all this world lo
her, aud something more.
“Women are fine rhetoricians,” re
marked my Irientl, “but 1 think they
place a small estimate upon tbe world
and tbeir own souls.”
The London Telegraph publishes an
official statement of its daily circulation,
which, it sunns, fools up the handsome
figure 1d5,704. This is iar ahead of the
London Times, which does not circulate
more than Go,oou copies. The Times,
however, is still regarded ns the great
English authority, because it speaks for
the governing clashes, while the ie .
graph is only one of the organs of the
non voting millions. 1
Costar’s Exterminators.
- jjjll
‘•18 yearn c’tafeUihed in N. Y. City.'*
** Only infallible remedy known.’*
u Free from Poison*."
“Not dangerous in tbe Human Family.**
“ Kats come out of their boles to die."
a Cos tar’s” Rat, Rdacli, Etc.*
EXTERMINATORS
I# a paste—used for Halt, Mice, Honcho,
11 lock and Hcd Ault, etc, etc.
•‘C'osinr's” Wed-Bug
Exterminator
la a liquid or wash— lo destroy, and
also a preventive lor lled-pHtje, etc.
1 Klcolric Powder
FOR INSECTS,
Is for Moth*, MoMqttitoe*, FUa*. lied- Day*,
Jmccte cu Plant*, /dir/*, Animal*, etc.
! ! ! Uewaro ! ! ! of all worthless imi
tations.
See that “COTTAR’S" nomc is on each
Box, Bottle, and Flask, before j ou buy.
Address,
MIAMI Y K, COSTAR»
45.4 Broadway, N. Y.
Bold in Augusta, Ga., by
CLUMB k LEITNER,
212 Broad street, Augusta, ua.
BARNES, WARD & CO., 24 iMagaaino
street, N. 0., V/holesaio Agents for tho Soutbcrn
States, and all Druggists and Retailers every
where.
66 Costar’s 55
CELEBRATED
BUCKTHORN SALVE,
For Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Wounds, Boils
Cancers, Broken Breasts, Sore Nipples, Bleed
ing, Blind and Painful Piles; Scrofulous.
Putrid and 111-conditioned Soros; Ulcers
Glandular Swellings, Kruptions, Cutaneous Af
fections, Ringworm, Itch, Corns, Bunions, Chil
blains, etc.; Chapped Hands, Lips, etc.; Bites ol
Spiders, Insects, Animals, etc., etc.
JfiS' Boxes, 25 cents. 511 cents, and $1 sizes.
,*s3“Sold by all Druggists evervwhere.
jE-3* And by IIENRY It. COSTAR, Depot
454 Broadway, N. Y.
fcS. And by PLUMB A LEITNER,
212 Broad street, Augusta, Ha.
JZB' BARNES, WARD A CO., 24 Mag
azine street, N. 0., Wholesale Ageuts for the
Southern States.
“ Costar’s 55
UNIVERSAL
CORN SOLVENT,
For Corns, Dun ions, Warts, etc.
J- Boxes, 25 cents, 50 cents, and $1 sizes.
JZ-if* Sold by all everywhere.
jp®* And by IIENRY R. COSTAK, Depot
48 ! broad way, N. Y.
And by PLUMB k LEITNER,
212 Broad street, Augusta, Ga.
JOtP BARNES, WARD & CO., 24 Mag
azine street, N. 0., Wholesale Agents for the
Southern States.
(t C ostar’s”,
PREPARATION OF
BIMMJE SLOSH
FOR
Beautifying the Complexion.
Used to Soften and Beautify tho Skin, re
move Freckles, Pimples, Eruptions, > to.
Radies are now using it in preference to all
others.
Jtfr Bottles, sl.
Sold by all Druggists everywhere.
jZS&'And by IIENRY R. COSTAR, Depot
484 Broadway, N. Y.
And by PLUMB A LEITNER,
212 Broad street Augusta, Ga.
J3S- BARNES, WARD A- CO., 24 Maga
zine street, N. 0., Wholesale Agents for the
Southern States.
“Costar’s”
PECTORAL
COUGH REMEDY,
For Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Sore Throat,
Croup, Whooping Cough, Influenza, Asthma,
Consumption, Bronchial Affections, and all
Diseases of the Throat and Lungs.
IS®. Bottles, 25 cents, 50 cents, and $1 sizes.
7P&F- Soid by all Druggists everywhere.
USB-And by HENRY R. COSTAR, Depot
454 Broadway, N. Y.
And by PLUMB A LEITNER,
212 P.rond street, Augusta, Ga.
BARNEB, WARD A CO., 24 Maga
zine street, N. 0., Wholesale Agents for the
Southern .States.
Costar’s ”
CELEBRATED
BISHOP PILLS,
A Universal Dinner Pill,
For Nervous itml Sick Headache, Costiveness,
indication, byspvpsiii, Biliousness, Constipa
tion, Piarrho-a, Colics, (.'bills, Fevers. and gen
oral derangement of the Digestive Organa.
S&af Boxes, lb els., pO els., and $1 sizes.
BK-Y" Sold livnli Drwjjjfists everywhere.
BKr And liy HENRY It. COTTAR, 484
Broadway, N. Y.
fife/" Ami by PLUMB & LEITNEIt,
212 llroad street, Augusta. oa.
BARNES, WARD A. CO., 24 Magazine afreet,
New Orleans, La., Wkolosalc£Ag(-nt« for the
Southern Stotts. no I tb- 3m
ART AND REAL ESTATE ASSOCIATION,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Tins association has been formed rroN the following plan i
There will he issued to members Certificates f..r 2,600 Shares, at TEN DOLLARS
each, numbering from 1 to 2,500 inelnsive, which entitle the holder to admission to a
Grand Musical Entertainment
' TO BE GIVEN AT
conch: kt haILL,
In this City, and a Share in tbe award of Premiums.
First Premium, Lot No. 04, of 7 S9 100 acres of Land, comprising the Beautiful
Grounds and Commodious Dwelling, with eleven outbuildings, adjoining this
City, in Harrisimville, the property of Thomas P. Stovall, and valued at SIO,OOO
And each of the following Lota, adjoining tho sama, lying on tbo Turknett Spring
and Carne# Hoads and the Georgia Railroad, not far removed from tbe pro
posed route of the City Railroad :
Second Premium, Lot No. 60, containing 3 57-100 Acres, valued at 1,200
Third Premium, Lot No. 61, valued at i into
Fourth Premium, Lot No. 02, valued at 1,0(10
Fifth Premium, Lot No. 63, valued Bt Loot)
Twelve Premiums, Lots No. 1 to 12, valued at $30(1 each 3,000
Twenty Premiums, Lots No. 14 to S3, valued at S2OO each Lotto
Seventeen Premiums, Lots No. 34 to 43, 57 and 50, value 2 too
$25,000
Persons to whom these Premiums may be awarded will receive at tho office of
Hon. HENRY W. HILLIARD, conveyances in fee of an unencumbered title, on the day
subsequent to tbe award.
Due notice will ho given, through tho public press, of tbo time of bolding the Gran 1
Musical Entertainment, immediately after which the Premiums will be awarded by th#
gentlemen named below.
Details of the Award of Premiums:
Tbe Subscription Books, on being closed, will bo placed in the hands of the fallowing
gentlemen, who bavo kindly consented to act as a Committee to conduct the Award of
Premiums:
Hon. Robert 11. May, cx-Mayor. Edward Thomas, Esq , formerly President
Gen. A. R. Wright. of the Union Bank.
F. 0. Barber, fcsq., Broker. Hon. J. T. Both well, Judge of the In
ilon. John Foster, Mayor. ferior Court.
These gentlemen will have the sole management of tho Awards.
In ordering Certificates, send in payment therefor Drafts, Postoffice Money Orders,
or Currency, with tho address of the Town, County and State, as every Certificate will bo
fully registered, and tho money held by Messrs. BRANCH, SONS A CO., Baukcrs, of
this City, until the Premiums shall have been awarded.
A Remittance from one person for 20 Certificates, will
entitle liim to one Extra Certificate.
All communications or orders should bo addressed to
THOMAS P. STOVALL, or
BRANCH, SONS & CO., Bankers,
d®27—tf Augusta, Ga.
Charter Oak
COOKING
i^^^p^STOVE.
TniS CELEBRATED STOVE, SO FAVORABLY KNOWN IN MOBILE
New Orleans, St. Louis, and Hither Southern cities, is now being offered to the
citizens of Augusta, as one of the best and cheapest first-class Cooking Stoves in the
market—its baking qualities are unsurpassed, which is acknowledged by all who have
used it.
The draught flues arc so constructed as to ensure a perfect draught, while a hot air flu*
which surrounds the oven insure tbe baking and roasting of bread and meats, to entire
satisfaction. We warrant tbe perfect baking of every Stove we sell.
In our stock will be found TOILET SETS, CHURNS, TUBS, COFFEE MILLS,
SCOURING BRICKS, TEA TRAYS, SAD IRONS, CAKE CUTTERS, JELLY CAKK
PANS, etc.
A full assortment of Ilousefurnishing Goods always on hand. We are, also, pre
pared to do HOOFING, and all manner of work in tbe Tinners’ line of business,
j »{)—ltn D. L. FULLERTON, 186 Broad street.
TO SHIPPERS.
_JfE||p&gp
THE SPLENDID AND FAST A NO. 1
IRON STEAMER
c Two Boys, 55
ITT ILL COMMENCE HER REGULAR
V V wr ekl ytrips on TIIES DAYnex t, J an.
M.
Tbe Rates of Freight will be as low as can
be effected, and persons desirous of ship
ping Cotton, Produce, etc., to Savannah and
Northern ports will find it to their interest
to patronize this Lino.
Parties in the interior shipping to Savan
nah can do so, free of charge for forwarding,
by consigning to us.
All goods for parties in tho interior, ship
ped by this Line, will also be forwarded free
of charge.
STOVALL £ EDMONDSTON.
Agents, No. 2 Warren Block,
Jackson street,
janl—lino Augusta, Ga.
SCOTT’S
MONTHLY MAGAZINE
SECOND YEAR.
TIIE OLDEST AND LARGEST
Magazine in the South
Tut proprietor of this popu
lar Monthly will publish an edition
of several thousand copies in January next,
to meet the increasing demand for it in all
portions of the South and West. Its Corps
».*f Contributors is already large , and w ill
be strengthened by the addition of several
Excellent Male and Female Writers
Besides the usual variety of Original and
Selected Prose and Poetry, will be
contained the admirable History of the
War, entitled
“FIELD AND CAMP”
BY AN OFFICER.
ALSO,
HIE SECRET MARRIAGE .
By Mrs. Warfield, of Kentucky.
A LSO,
The Tropes and Metaphors of the Bible ,
As Illustrated by Science,
By A. Means, D.D. LL,D.
Also, a series of articles ou
LIFE IN THE EAST,
By Rev. R. A. Holland, of Kentucky, now
on a tour in Egypt and Palestine.
It will be elegantly embellished with Steel
Plates, Lithographs, and Wood Cuts, pre
pared expressly for this publication, con
sisting of superb likenesses of Leo, Davis,
Joe Johnson, Polk, Forrest., etc.
Jls quantity of reading mutter will also
be increased, so that it will contain ncurly
iwice the amount of either (lodcy or
i'eterson.
We shall also introduce a department of
Wit and llimiur, and occasional Wcod Cut
tilustrulioos ot Southern and Western
Scenery.
It will be perceived that this plan involves
much additional expense, and we invite the
lovers ot a sound and elevated literature to
rally to this enterprise. It has already
received the highest encomiums of the
press ; let it now have material aid, and wo
promise a Magazine equal to any ever
before the .American public.
TERM?—Single subscribers, $5; eleven
copies, S2O; twenty-two, copies, $100; and
at the saint) rates for and six months. Cler
gymen ts all denmoinatious, and Presidents
and Profossors of Colleges will receive it at
$4.
The person who will send us the largest
club of subscribers, not less thau twenty
five, previous to March Ist, shall receive a
premium of Fifty Dollars.
Address, W. J. SCOTT,
jiilO— Jm Atlanta, Ha.
Gifts Bor
CHRISTMAS & NEW YEARS.
GREAT WATCH SALE! -
ON THE POPULAR ONE PRICE TLAN !
Giving to every Patron a Handsome and
reliable Watch for the Lo.v Price of Tea
Dollars !
WITHOUT REGARD TO VALUE!
AND NOT TO BE PAID FOR UNLESS
PERFECTLY SATISFACTORY!
“Have seen their Watches, know them,
and can testify that they arc excellent
timekeepers, aud as g o 1 in every respect
as represented, and no humbug."— Sentinel.
Waterford, iV. “Business is conducted
in this establishment upon strictly honor
able principles, and purchasers get the
worth of their money.’’— Herald , Peru, ///.
“This Company is no bogus affair, and is
prompt in business and perfectly reliable.”
Courier. Handout, N. V. “Thf Company
is known throughout the Union to be re
liable for anything it proposes to do.’
Independent, Monti cello, ill. “They are
honorable in their dealings, and satisty the
just expectations of iheir customers.'*•—
Democratic Prc%%, Lyon*, N. Y. “This
Company has a fine reputation, and tl eir
goods are of a very superior quality.*
l‘ail’/ Time 9, Rewbtrn, i •C. “There is no
humbug iu this Couipai y.’’ —Valley Senti
nel, Shippenhury, Pa. “.neir Watches arc
rnanufao ured of superior articles, and by
the best worhmeu.” —American Union, Pen
tony Md.
LIST OF ARTICLES.
100 Solid Gold Hunting Witches. ~?250 to $750
111) Magic Cased Geld Watches 250 to &u<)
100 Ladies’ Watches, Enameled 11K) to 300
200 Gold Hunting Chronometer
Watches 250 to B*o
900 Gold Hunting Kngh>h Levers.. 200 to 250
300 Gold Hunting Duplex Watches. 150 to 250
500 Gold Hunt’g American Watches. 100 to 2uu
500 Silver Hunting Levers. 50 to 150
su(» silver Hunting Duplexes 75 to 250
svo Gold Ladle** Watches 50 to 250
luUO G< Id Hunting J.cpines 50 to 75
10(’l) Miflr.ellaoeous Silver Watches.. 50 to 100
2500 Hunting Silver Watches... . .. 25 to 50
5000 Assorted Watches, all kinds*.. 10 to 75
Every patron obtains a Watch by
this arrangement, costing but $lO, while it
may be worth $750. No partiality shown.
Messrs. J. HICKLING k CO.’S GREAT
UNION WATCH COMPANY, MANU
FACTURERS, 149 Broadway, New York
Oily, wish to immediately dispose of the
abovo magnificent Stock. Certificates,
naming articles, lire placed in sealed en
velopes, and forwarded a# ordered. Tbe
return of any of our certificate# entitle# the
holder to the article named thereon, upon
payinont, irrespective ol it# worih, if $750,
and as no article valued less than $lO is
named on any certificates, it will at once be
seen that this is
JNo Lottery, but a straightforward
legitimate Transaction, which mag
be participated in even by the
most fastidious!
A single Certificate will be sent by mail,
post paid, upon receipt of 25 cents’, five tor
SI, eleven for $2, thirty-three and ulogant
premium for $5, sixty six and more valuublo
premium for $1(1, one hundred and most su
perb H atch lor sls. To Agcnlsor those wait
ing employment this is a tare opportunity.
It is a legitimately conducted busim s«, duly
authorized hy tho Government, and open to
the most careful scrutiny. Try us!
Address,
J. HICKLING <t- CO.,
jalO—3m 149 Broadway, N. Y.
5? otice.
All persons indebted to tiie
Estate of Wu. H. Tunt, late of Rich
mond county, deceased, are hereby notified
to rnuke immediate payment to the under
signed; aud those having claims against
said estate aro required to present them,
duly attested, within the timo prescr bed hy
law. JOHN U. M Y Eli,
jail— flw Exeutur.
DAILY PRESS
book ti job bbinting
AND
Bookbinding Establishment
ISO BROAD AND 153 ELLIS STREET,
ATJGTJSTA. GA.
E. H. PUGHE, Proprietor
HAVING MADE ADDITIONS TO OUR
§ook ant) fob Jeprtmeni
AND HAVING RECEIVED A LARGE AND FINE ASSORTMENT OF
PAPERS AND CARDS,
WE AIIE NOW PREPARED TO EXECUTE ALL KINDS OF
PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL
JOB PRIfeSTIRie
ON AS FAVORABLE TERMS AS
ANY OTHER ESTABLISHMENT IN THE SOUTH,
AND IN .AS GOOD STILE.
COLORED PRINTING
DONE IN ALL STYLES,
NOT SURPASSED BY ANY OTHER OFFICE IN TIIE SOUTH,
EITHER FOR CHEAPNESS OR NEATNESS.
PARTICULAR ATTENTION AY ILL BE GIVEN TO THE
PRINTING OF
BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS,
DRUGGISTS’ LABELS,
NOTES, DRAFTS, CHECKS,
BLANKS OF ALL KINDS, Dll AY RECEIPTS,
SHOW CARDS,
BUSINESS AND VISITING CARDS,
PAMPHLETS, BRIEFS,
ETC.. ETC., ETC.
All Ort-ers from the Country Mill be attended to
with Dispatch.
OFI ill- 190 BROAD STREET,
Opposite So . iern Express Office.
COME Am SEE
X. KAHIU tSa CO.’S
HEAVY AND WELL ASSOP.TED STOCK OF
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
DRY GOODS,
At 262 Broad Street, Augusta.
GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES.
OUH FRIENDS AND THE PUBLIC WILL FIND ft
TO THEIR ADVANTAGE TO EXAMINE OUIi
GOODS BEFORE THEY BUY ELSEWHERE.
LONG CLOTHS,
SHIRTINGS AND SHEETINGS,
OSNARURGS,
LINSEYS AND KERSEYS,
COTTON FLANNELS,
APRON CHECKS, JEANS,
TICKINGS,
CELF.CIAS,
DROWN HOLLANDS,
IRISH LINENS,
DIAPERS,
TABLE DA VASKS
TOWELLING
N A J K INS
BLACK AND COLORED DRESS SILKS,
LADIES’ CLOAKS, Newest Style,
SHAWLS,
MOURNING GOODS,
ENGLISH AND AMERICAN CALICOES,
IRISH LACES, Impoited,
GLOVES, RIBBONS,
FRENCH AND ENGLISH BROADCLOTHS
CASSI,VERES,
TWEEDS, COATINGS,
MERINOES,
GENTS’ AND LADIES’ HATS
BLANKETS, FLANNELS
NOTIONS,
our V ltolesale Department we offer a carefuliv selected STOCK
of GOODS, and at the I.OY\ EST CASH I'RIC ES.
In our Retail 1 epartment, a variety inferior to no oilier House in tie
South.
...... I. KAHN & GO.
delß—6m
NOTICE TO PLANTERS.
WE-ARE RECEIVING
AND WILL KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND
PURE jSTo. 1
PERUVIAN GUANO
WHICH WE WARRANT GENUINE.
CRUMP, DAVISON & CO.,
jSTo. 209 Broad Street' Augusta, Ga.
oc4—Gm*
Coal and Firewood.
COAL! COAL!
AT
Reduced Prices!
GREAT REDUCTION IN TIIE PRICE
OF THE
FINEST QUALITY OF
COAL!
AS LOW AS THE LOWEST!
APPLY TO
G. S. HOOKEY,
dc2o- ts GAS OFFICE.
COKE FOR gALE.~
( 10KE CAN BE HAD
At the GAS WORKS
AT ALL TIMES.
Tickets eats Be procured at the Office from
9 A. M. until 2 P. M., every dav.
de4—tf G. S. HOOKKY, Sup’t.
coal 7
A CARGO OF SUPERIOR COAL TO
arrive, and will be sold on the Wbar f
by tho Ton aud upwards, to suit pur
chaseis, by A. POULLAIN.
no29—tf
WOOLLEN GOODS,
"W oollen Goods
FOR
WINTER WEAR’
LIREAKFAST SHAWLS
L> SONXAUS
CHILDREN’S SACQUES
NUBIAS
LADIES’ and CHILDREN’S HOOPS
INFANTS’ HOODS
LEGGINGS and SHOES
In groat varioty, nt
MKS. PUGHE’S,
190 Broad street,
nti27—tf Augusta, Ga.
ABBEVILLE PRESS,
LEE & WILSON Proprietors.
THE ABOVE NAMED NEWSPAPER IS
issuod weekly, at Abbeville Court
House, S. C., and offers splendid inducements
to tbo business men of Augusta, to extend
thou notices in that vicinity.
nolO—dm
Bankers and Ercktrs.
DRAFTS
QN THE ROYAL BANK OF IRELAND,
LONDON,
PARIS,
and GEP.MAXI,
In sums to suit.
C. F. PLAXK, Agent,
Southern Lxpress Company’s Office,
dc23—3m Augusta, Gs.
AUGUSTA BOBBIN WORKS,
AUGUSTA, GEO.,
H. T. NELSON, Proprietor.
des—taugo
265 265
The Cheapest Store in Town!
AND TUB
BEST bargains in
dry GOODS,Et!c.
AT
265 BROAD STEIET.
oc2l—tf
Family Sewing.
CJTITCIIING OF ALL KINDS.
Sot™? 8, ''."ADEN’S and LADIES’
CLOTH KS, made to order.
GRAIN and FLOW
»AUi.—auy quantity—made at short
notice, at 326 DROAD STlli ET.
MISS L. J. BEAD.
Agent for Grover A Baker’s celebrated
Noiseless Sewing Machines.
no2t—3m
Notice.
>FTEIi DATE. APPU
~ATI°N »»u be made to the Honorabls
the Court or Ordinary of Richmond couoty
lor leave to sell the Real Estate belonging
to the estate of Charles W. Bond, of Co
lumbia county, deceased.
GEO. P. BUTLER,
no3o—2m Administrate