Newspaper Page Text
8 2 00 PE 11 ANNUM.
Kipe for the Garner.
D y GEORGE n. SNYDER.
. rthe flarn-tr! H«t thou fought the
W* fight
. . nia d pursuit of fame,
..ai.no hand on high defending the right,
Llfl 0 », y desiring a name,
thy silver crown of Rgo,
A writiriin thy book of lUV,
bu t long records, on each once fair
won by dint of strife?
° f fo T hou art not ripo for the gamer !
1 th, '“ toilcd for
golu,
v r;;z 0 1^Z g O % ™ p-«
fogftlß ‘h . "
untold)
Whatever else might be lost
. jne their silver crown of age
writing in thy book of life
V, U hut the records, on each once lair page,
wealth won by ceaseless strife ?
The art not ripe for the garner 1
infertile garner 1 Hast thou raised on
the warrior’s blood-stained brand,
flirine no heed to tlune enemy’s piercing cry
When fallen under thy hand,
And wearing their silver crown oi age
After writing in thy book of life
Only dark records, on each once fair page,
Os hands imbruted in the strife .
Thou art not ripe for the garner 1
Rip, for the garner! Hast thou pandered to
thy lust,
Drowning thy soul in sense, _
Working evil, regardless of the good and just,
Glorying in every offense,
And wearing thy silver crown of age
After writing in thy book of life,
Only foul records on each once fair page
Os deeds with all vileness rife?
Thou art not ripe for the garner.
Ripe for the garner 1 Hast thou spent thy
days
Doing thy portioned work,
Recking little or naught of man’s censure or
praise,
Never desiring.to shirk
Duty, wearing thy silver crown of age,
After writing in thy book of life
Many a record, on each close-w rit page,
Os good deeds done in the strife ?
Pus« 1 thou art ripe for the garner.
Ripe for the garner 1 And, when the angel
calls,
Bidding thee lay aside
TTiine earth worn garb, and the shade of his
pinion falls
Upon thee, crossing the tide,
Thou shalt know the joys of a holier life,
In aland beyond these lowering skies,
Where sorrow may never be, nor strife,
Undying joys shall be thy prize,
For thou art ripe for the garner 1
Virginia.
The Richmond Whig grows lachrymose over
the condition of the “Mother of States.” 1 lie
Whig thinks it hard that Virginia should suffer
for the fault of Georgia, and harder that she
should be suspected of “following anybody s
example’’ and entering on a course of conduct
which would “touch her honor.”
God knows she has not followed Georgia’s
example, and therefore ought not to be pun
ished ; but Georgia will deserve the severest
punishment when she follows the example of
Virginia, and licks Beast Butler's hand.
The Whig makes the great mistake of sup
posing that abject submission to Congress,
must, perforce, win the esteem of those who
rule Congress. Never was there a more fla
grant error. We want no better proof than
Virginia’s present situation and the comment
of Forney upon it. The Washington Chroni
cle, editorially, says :
”I» it not a striking retribution, that that
State which constituted itself for four long
y»rs the bulwark of secession, should now
be compelled to cringe at the feet of a man
once so abhorred and denounced by the Rich-
B °nd press, craving the boon of a place in the
Federal Union ?”
bven Grant has turned against her, it is said,
»»d answers all the newspaper adulation with
treachery.
Frose having failed, poetry is evoked. We
® r, d this verso in the leading columns of the
Whig;
And now she stands knocking and knock
ing in vain,
At the temple she helped to prepare,
And the children she dowered, in pride and
disdain
Are deaf to her motherly prayer.’
submit the following, in answer :
F # ur knocking is vain, for a very good reason,
8 ktnplo is filthy with flies from the East:
thedoor you approach is to honor a treason,
,n °® hides but the wallow of Butler the
Beast 1
Augusta Constitutionalist.
Suppressed. —From a Washington dispatch
w ® «arn, says the Enquirer, that ‘Mr. Spin
* monthly statement was suppressed in the
. Mur y Department, aud not because it was
n *ccurate, but for the sole reason that it did
accord with Mr. Boutwell’s rose •colored
foment of the public debt,’ when the truth
jJ* e ' ear ned from the books of the T reasury
th Ftl “ ent bu(: that can not be expected while
sow and d ' Cal th ' eTeß control them—it will be
H>at, so far from Boutwell’s statements
“K true, the National debt has increased,
** constantly increasing,
he official reports are ‘lies from end to cud.’
THE GEORGIA ENTERPRISE.
From tho Now Orleans Picayune.
The Moving South.
We regret that any of our people in the South
who are nowhere overcrowded, should show a
disposition to move rather than improve, re
store, enrich and make valuable their lands.
We rejoice to see by the springing up of agri
cultural journals and by the gaining support
of established ones, that many atthc South are
learning the art of getting rich at farming,
which is to make their land rich and valuable
instead of wearing it out by a few crops, and
abandoning it and all their improvements on
it, for some other whereby they become mere
nomads.
How can they make the old fields rich ? It
has beeu proved in the very Georgia from
which so many people have emigrated, that by
a careful selection of seed, thorough and deep
cultivation and the using of such manures as
go to make cotton, more of this product car. be
made from the so-called worn out fields of the
pine woods than is made in the ordinary way
on the bottom lands of the Mississippi, and
with a net profit equal thereto. This has been
done—not by Air. Dickson alone —but by many
who have followed his advice—not once only
but repeatedly.
Nor is it by the one plan of Mr. Dickson of
Georgia, or that of Dr. Cloud of Alabama that
large crops have been made on worn or origin-,
ally poor land ; a careful and considerate course
of cultivation and manuring will almost inva
riably tend to like results, and crops suited to
the climate can thus be raised continuously on
the same farm, while in the meantime valuable
standard fruit trees and perennial shrubs and
plants can be grown and made to produco the
most valuable fruits • and permanent buildings
be erect- and, whereby others, concurring in tho
like course, and the community gathering pop
ulation from its natural increase and the im
migration of people from other and overcrowded
lands ; the acres which may now be thought
dear at from one dollar to ten, will be worth
their hundred, or if near a town possibly cre
ated by their development, their five hundred
or a thousand.
This looks merely to the money to come from
the busittevs of farming or planting, and to the
accumulation of property therefrom ; but there
is another aspect of the case which we think
far more deserving attention.
This moving from place to place and from
one State to another, even adjoining and sister
Southern States, has a tendency to dissolve
that affoc’ion for h**me and for one’s State
which is so necessary to preserve the « >irit of
patriotism in the community. It alsocariies
people away from the graves of their fathers
and mothers, of their brothers and sisters, and
weakens the tics of family and of friendship.
Then it is only iu old settled communities
that wo can expect to have good schools, well
supported churches, and indeed all the advant
ages of civilization. They g-ow up gradually
ami whore there is a feeling of stability as well
ns of progress ; of improvement on the old
foundations, and not where such are sought in
tents and upon the march, hunting a home.
Tou'-lt’Ti the lied faith of Congress and
Grant in the Georgia matter, the New York
Express says :
“The people, with all their indifferenoe to
free government, have not demanded this
wrong, and as soon as they awake to any de
cent icn-c of the outrage, will rebuke it. The
action of Congress, giving orders to a States
elected Governor in regard to a State Legisla
ture, is one step in advance of all previous
despotisms, and the case is all the worse from
the fact that this Governor is publicly accused
by his own party of corruption in office.—
Every way and every where this man is de
graded. By his official conduct at home, by
his betrayal of his constituents before Con
gress and its committees, he has forfeited the
respect of even those who may profit by his |
baseness Then, when we remember what
General Grant did and promised, and what his
chief in Georgia, General Meade deedared in
his telegrams to the President in July, 1808,
showing that Georgia had complied with the
Reconstruction laws to the letter, and consider
that the President could have prevented this
legislation —who is there who can now sin
cerely respect the president.”
A Hard Customer, —The following incident
is said to haye occurred in a Utica restaurant.
A man recently entered the place and ordered
a very elaborate dinner. Ho lingered long
at the table and finally wound up with a bottle
of wine. Then lighting a cigar he had ordered,
leisurely sauntered up to the counter and said
to the proprietor :
“Very fine dinner, landlord ; just charge it
to me, I havon't got a cunt.”
‘‘But I don't know you,” said the proprietor,
indignantly,
‘‘Of course you don’t. If you had v you
wouldn’t let me had the dinner.”
“Pay me for that dinner, 1 say 1”
“And I stvy I can’t."
“I'll SCO about that,” said the proprietor, who
snatched a revolver out of a drawer, leaped
over the counter and collared the mau, exclaim
ing, as he pointed it at his head, “Now see
if you'll get away with that dinner without
paying for it, you scoundrel.”
“What’s that you hold in your hand?” said
the impecunious customer drawing back.
“That sic, is a revolver, sii.”’
“Oh, that’s a revolver, is it ? I don’t caro
for a revolver, I thought it was a stomach
pump!"
The lady Principal ofa school, iu her adver
tisement mentioned her lady assistant, and the
“reputation for teaching which she bears,” but
the printer left out the “whicn,” so the adver
tisement went forth commending the lady's
“reputation for teaching she boars. ’
COVINGTON GA, JAN, 7, 1870.
My Wife’s Bridal Tour. *
BYJMOSE SKINNER.
When I married my second wife, she was
dreadful ret about going off on a bridal tour.
I told her slio had better wait six m mtlis or a
year, and I’d try to go with her, but she said
she and rath or go alono—when a woman was
traveling a man was an out and out humbug.
So I gave her seventy-five cents, and told
her to go off and have agio,! time. I never
begrudge money where my wife’s happiness
is concerned. My first wife never could com
plain of not going anywhere, for I’m dreadful
fierce to go off on a good time myself, and al
ways was. I don t pretend to say how many
times I took her out to see tho engine squirt,
and there was no end to the free lectures I lot
her go to. The neighbors used to say, “It
docs beat all how the Skinners do go !”
W hen Signor Blits was in Slunkville, with
his wonderful canaries, lie gave rny wife a
complimentary ticket. I not only sold that
ticket for my wife, hut I gave her half the
money. I don’t boast of it though ; I only
mention to show how much I thought of my
wife’s happiness.
I dun t think any man ought to get married
till he can consider his wife’s happiness only
SOCOhd to his own. John Wise, a neighbor of
mine, did thusly, and when I got married I
concluded I'd do like Wise.
But the plan didn't work in the case of mv
second wife. No, it would not, I broached the
subject kindly.
‘Matilda,’ I said, ‘I suppose you are aware
that I am now your lord and master.’
‘Not much you ain’t,’ said she.
‘Mrs. Skinntr,’ I replied, ‘you are fearfully
demoralized. You need reorganizing at once.
You are cranky.’ And I brandished iny new
sixty-two cent umbrella wildly around her.
She took the umbrella away from me, and
1 icked me up in the clothes press.
I am quick to draw an inference, and the
inference I drew here was, that I was not a
success as a reorganizer of female womon.
After this, I changed my tactics. I let her
have her own way. and the plan worked to a
charm from tho very first. It’s the best way
of managing a wife that I know of. Os
course this is between you and me.
So when my wife said she was bound to go
off on a bridal tour anyhow, I cordially assen
ted. Go. Matilda,’ said I,’ ‘and stay as long
as you want to ; then if you feel as though
you w ould like to stay a lit tie while longer,
stay, my dear, stay.’
She told me to stop talking, and go up
stairs and get her red flannel night cap, and
that hag of ponnyroyal for Aunt Abigail.
My wife is a very smart woman. She was
a Baxter, and the Baxters are a very smart
family indeed. Her mother who is going on
eighty, can fry more slapjacks now, than halt
those primped up city girls, who rattle on the
piano, or che walk the street with their fur
below- and fixings, pretending to get mad if a
voting chap looks at ’em pretty hard, hut get
ting mad in earnest if you don't take any no
tice of them at all.
Ah ! girls aint what they used to he when I
was vnung. and the fallows are worse still.—
When I went courting, for instance, I never
thought of staying till after ten o’clock, and
only went twice a week. Now they go seven
nights in a week, and cry because there aint
eight.
Then they write touching notes to each
other during the day. ‘Dear George, do you
love me as much now as you did at quarter
past twelve last night ? Say you do, dearest,
it will give me courage to go down to dinner
and tackle them cold beans that was left over
from yesterday.’
AVell, well, I suppose they enjoy themselves,
and it aint for us old folks, whose hearts have
got a little calloused hv long w ar, to interfere.
Let them get together and court if they like
it, and I think they do. I was forty-seven when
I courted my present wife, hut it seemed just
as r.ice to sit on a little cricket at her feet, and
let her smooth iny hair, as it did thirty years
ago.
As I said before, my wif.? is a very smart
woman, |jut she couldn't he anything else and
be a Baxter. She used to give lectures on
Woman’s Rights, and in one place where she
lectured, a big College oonforred the title of
LL D. upon her. But she wouldn’t take it.—
‘No, gentlemen,’ said she, ‘g ve it to the poor.’
She was always just so charitable. She gave
my boys permission to go barefooted all win
ter, and insisted upon ii so much in her kind
way, that they couldn’t refuse.
She fairly dotes on my children, and I’ve
seen her many a time go to their trowsers
pocket aod take out their pennies after they
got to sleep, and put them in her bureau draw
er for fear they might lose them.
I started to tell you about my wife’s bridal
tour, but the fact is, I never could find out
much about it myself. I believo she had ft
(food time. She came back much improved
in health, and I found out, before she’d been
in the house twenty-four hours, that she’d
gained in strength also. I don’t say how I
found it out. I simply say I found it out.
* * * * *
In conclusion I would say to all young men,
Marry your second wife first, and keep out of
debt by all means, even if you have to borrow
money to do it.
What is that which ties two persons and.
only touches one ? A wedding ring.
Incendiary language —Thoughts that breatho
! and words that burn.
' If you would he miserable, look within. If
! you would he distracted, look around. If you
would be happy, look up.
Then aiul Now.
We published the other day a letter from
President .Jefferson insisting upon paying tho
duty on some wino which he might have got
free. In connection with that letter tho St.
Louis Republican revives the following reply
which one cf Jefferson’s successors sent to
some gentlemen of New York who desired to
present him with a carriage and horses:
While I fully appreciate the purity of your
motives in thus tendering to me such substan
tial evidence of your regard and ostcem, I am
compelled, solely from the convictions of duty
I havo ever held in reference to the acceptance
of presents by those occupying high official
positions, to decline the offerings of kind and
loyal friends. The retention of the parchment
conveying your sentiments, and the autographs
of those who wero pleased to unite in this
manifestation of regard, is a favor I would
ask ; and I assure you gentlemen, I shall re
gard it ns one of the highest marks of respect
from any portion of my fellow citizens.—
Trusting that I shall continue to merit your
confidence and esteem in the discharge of the
high aud important duties upon which I have
but just entered, and with the best wishes for
your health, &c., individually, I am, gentle
men, yours truly, Andrew JonxsoN.
This is a model of a composition ; and if A.
J. had kept all his conversation, writing, and
action up to tho level at which he began as
President, lie would have gone out of office
amid universal respect and admiration ; or
rather, he would not have gone out of office at
all before March 4, 1873. — [N. Y. Sun.
A curious state of things has been developed
as regards the effects of the abstention from
ardent spirits, by statistics lately published in
Scotland, which, by the way, has the reputa
tion of consuming more ardent spirits in pro
portion to its population than any other coun
try in Europe. It appears that within the past
few years the consumption of spirituous li
quors has decreased in that country about
one third. Within the same period—that is,
since 1853—there has been a corresponding
increase in pauperism and crime. Hero is a
fact, abundantly vouched for by official returns,
which flies directly in the face of all the oidi
narily accepted beliefs concerning the intimate
connection between whisky and want, beer and
beastliness, porter and poverty. The canny
Scots drink less than they did sixteen years
ago, hut they arc more vicious and have more
poverty among them than when they drank
more. Facts can not be set aside by any the
ory, however plausible. Now, liovv do our
temperance friends account for this curious
and anomalous condition of things?—Ex.
- --OS-- •- —-
Wheat Bran. —“lf chemistry had rendered
no higher service to common life,” says the
Hearth and Home, than to analyze our daily
bread, it would have placed society under a
perpe ual obligation. It is now generally un
derstood that ir. bolting ground wheat, the
sieve takes out tho host and most uutriti >us
parts of the grain. A process lias of late been
patented in England for grinding the bran into
fine p iwder and mixing it with the flour. A
German chemist has discovered a method by
which bran may be bleached entirely white so
as to he cooked wish the flour, thus adding to
its nutritive power without affecting its color.
The vile conspiracy against the people of
Georgia promises at present to he a partial
failure. Still we would admonish our Demo
cratic and Conservative friends to be watchful
and wary. Do not be entrapped into a couroe
that will lend to the substantial accomplish
ment of all the designs of Congress. The
mere defeat of the personal aspirations of
Bullock and Blodgett, though very gratifying,
will not compensate in full or a ready acqui
escence in the other Radical demands. !he
new complications arc making the situation’
intensely interesting, but they do not free it
from danger.—Columbus Enquirer.
A Federal Monster Traveling Soctii.—
The Tennessee papers report that one Captain
G. 11. Ah!, the bruta wretch who had charge
of the Confederate prisoners at Fort Delaware,
during the war, is now a member of tho shoe
firm of R. N. Pomeroy & Cos., N. lork, and
with brazen impudence, is traveling through
the South on an electioneering tour for his
house. He will, no doubt, do a smashing
business wherever he is known. Pass him
around.
A Sorry Case—That of a tailor who dunned
a man for the amount of his bill. The man
said he was sorry, vory sorry indeed, that he
couldn’t pay it. Well, said the tailor, I took
you for a man that would be sorry ; but if you
are sorrier than I<mi I’ll knock under.
A blushing damsel called at one of the
agencies the other day to buy a sewing ma
chine. ‘Do you want a feller ?’ inquired the
modest clerk in attendance. The ingenuous
maid replied with some asperity : ‘No, sir 1 I
havo one.”
The violet grows low and covers itself with
its own tears and of all the flowers yields the
sweetest fragrance. Such is humility.
Why is a one dollar greenback better than
a silver dollar? When you fold it you double
it, and when you open it you find it in
creases.,
Christians, if you be poor in this world you
should be rich in faith ; and if you be rich in
this world, be poor in spirit.
God is the safety of his people, but we tempt
Providence if we do not make use of the nec
i cssary means for our perservation.
J. C. MORRIS,
_£vtt<r>:E»jaLo3r £4,-fc Xjdxtr,
CONYERS, GA.
J. W. MURRELL,
]DEHT I 3 T ,
Office—Up'.Stairs in Murrell’s Brick Stork,
Covington, Ceoboia,
Uc' ll ? prepared with the latest im
saujjggstaprovemcnts in Dental Material,
NtOffifflyy Guarantees Satisfaction in each
branch if Operative and Mechanical Dentistry.
flf desired will visit Patients at their
homes in this and adjoining Counties,
All orders left at the Covington Hotel, or at
the residence of Mr. G. VV. 11. Morrell, Oxford,
Gn., will receive immediate attention.—ly37.
Hotels.
PLAN TER S NOTE L~
Augusta, Georgia.
This-well known first, class II«tel is now re
opened for the accommodation of Die traveling
public, with the assurance that those who may
have occasion to visit Augusta, will be made
co nfortab'e. As this Hotel is now complete in
every Department, the Proprietor hopes, that bv
strict and personal attention, to merit a share cf
public patronage.
JOHN A. GOLDSTEIN, rro’p,
United States Hotel.
ATLANTA GEORGIA
WHITAKER & SASSEEN, Proprietors.
Within One Hundred Yards of the General Passcn
gcr Depot., corner Alabama and Prior streets,
A M E It I C AN H O T E L,
Alabama street,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
Nearest house to the Passenger Depot,
WHITE & WHITLOCK, Pro ictors
Having re-leased and renovated ie above
Hotel, we are prepared to entertain nests in a
most satisfactory manner. Charg s fair and
moderate. Our efforts will be to .ease.
Baggage carried to and from Depot ree of charge
ALBERT HATCH’S
New Carriage and Harness
Repository,
177 Broad St, Augusta, Ga.
One door below Southern Express office, in the
Augusta Hotel Building..
AGENT FOR
THETOIVILINSON DEMAREST CO.’S
celebrated;
Carriages, Buggies & Plantation Wagons.
lla>-ne-8 always on hand and male to Order.—
Repairing neatly don-, and at short notice. 3m4
tfr - MANUFACTURE
Superior Cotton Yarn
No. Gto 12. A Doz, No. 400 to 700.
MATTII E S S E 8
All sizes an 1 qualities to suit orders.
Oct-fctixa.®,
Os Waste or Good Cotton’^
’ V O O L C’A R D I M C.
Th a quality of the Rolls unsurpassed.
FLOUR and MEAL.
r r IF, GRIST MILT, cannot h surpassed in
the quality, nor the qnantif of MEAL or
FLOUR turned. A supply of leal or Flour
constantly on hand. Flour of all grades to suit
in taste and price.
Fancy, Double Extra, Extra Family, Fam’ly
Superfine, and Fine. Graham Flour an 1 Grit,
t ) order. SHORTS! and BKAN, for Stock Feed
i'so kept. The patronage of the public is re
spectfu'ly asked. Satisfaction guaranteed.
A splendid stock of
Ory Goods and Groceries
in hand and for sale Cheap for Cush or barter
toi all kinds of Country Produce.
F..' STEADMAN, Prop’r.
stbvdmvn Newton Cos., G.u, Feb 18— 19,-
J. C. HOL3RQOK,
Wholesale and b’et.nll Dealer in
FUR ANTI WOOL HATS,
< 'f all the Latest styles,
Ladies’ an 1 Misses FURS, Trunks, Valises,
Traveling Lags, Umbrellas, W alkingOane*, &e.
“Particular attention given to Filling
Orders. Metoh nts arc r-quested to call and
examine for themselves.
1 will pay the Hi A-at C '*h Prices, for
FURS
of sll kids, such ns Otter. Mink Bea'-er, Wild
Oat, Fox, Coon, .'-kunk, Rabbit, Musk Rat, &c.
J. C. HOLBROOK
Opposite National IL.t.d, N•. 9, Peachtree SL,
2moo Atlanta, Oa.
Mrs. N. BRUM CLAHK’S
MILLINERY & DRESS MAKING
ESTABLISHMENT.
251 Broad street t Augusta, Ga.
JUST RECEIVED n largo and varied stuck of
Bonnets, lluls, Feathers, Flowers, etc., etc.,
which are offered at a small advance on thejeost.
Mrs Or,ARK gives her careful attention to
the DRESS M VKING department. Ladies
wishing a perfect fit will be grarfified, by calling
on Mrs. C. perfect fit guaranteed.
All work delivered when pr>mised.
Bridal Trousseaux jniade in Elegant Style.
Prices Keasonabie.
MRS, N. BRUM CLARK,
2m50 251 Broad street. Augusta, Ga.
Agent for the Florence Sowing Machine.
T. 6HARKIW ALTER,
MARBLE WORKS
Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
MARBLE MONUMENTS,
Tomb St o nes ,
Marble Mantles, and Furniture Marble
jOF EVERY DESCRIPTION,
I Front the Plainest to the most Elaborate,design
aud furnished to order at short notice.
I r-Vf* All wo!k for the co.v.'r - .-T-cfully box and
’ decl4-3-5-ly.
VOL 5. NO. 9.
SIMMMLJS X-3COTTSE3,
COVINGTON, GA.,
FRMlE.above Hotel har; ju«t boon opened in
fi this City. Newly furnished throughout,
mid the undersigned will spare no pains to make l
it a favorite rttieat for the traveling public .|f
5-Stf Q. F. MERIWETHER, Prop'r*}
L. B. Anderson. A. C. McCalla.
ANDERSON & McCALLA,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
COVINGTON, GA. *
WILL attend regularly, and practice In the
Superior Courts of the Counties of Newton,
Butts, Henry, Spalding, Pike, Monroe, Upson,
Jasper, Walton, DeKalb, Morgan and Gwinnett.—2
HO L D Y OUR COT T 0 FT
I HAVE made arrinurements to Ship for
Planters their COTTON to New York, and
hold the same for them until the Ist of July
next, and v, ill advance one half of the value of
Cotton on tho day <>f shipment. Ca’l.und make
vour nriangements, and hold your Cotton for
Higher Prices. A. L. CAMP.
Covington, Ga,, Nov. 8, IBfi9. 2n>2
I would respectfully inform the
citizens of N»• w ton. aud adjoining
counties, that. I have opened m
SADDLE and HARNESS SHOP
On north side public square iu COVINGTON
where lam prepared to make to order, Harness
Saddles, Ac , or Repair the same at short notice,
and in the best style.
17 ts JAMES B. BROWN
AC. COOK informs his friends and the pub
• lie that he is now prepared to till bis orders
for Vines and Planting, A full assortment of
choice Grape Vines and Cuttings for sale low.
Also agent for R. d’Heureuee’s Air Treatment ®f
Wines, and in Distilling, Malting, Manufacture of
Syrups, Sugar, Oils, in Tanning, and all Fluids,
aud many solids, as Bread making, curing Tobacco,
and other organic substances.—ly4B,
JOSEPH Y. TINS LET!
Watchmaker & Jeweler
Is fully prepared to Repair Watches, Clock
<tnd Jewelry, in the best Style, at short notice.
All Work Done at Old Prices, and Warranted.
2d door below the Court House.—6tf
JOHN S. CARROLL,
DENTIST
COVINGTON, GEOUGIA.
ipegaK Teeth Filled, or New ones Inserted,ln
Wy the best Style, and on UcasonableTerms
Office Rear of R. King’s Store.—l ltf
W. 11. IUVE IllTi
r> H N T I S T ,
(Office near the Depot.)
CONTINUES the practice of bis profession upon
Terms that cannot fail to gives atisfactlon to all
who employ him.
Covington, June 25tli 1809. 4.32.tf.
Sew Photographic Gallery.
I HAVE completed my NEW GALLERY over
the POST OFFICE, and am satisfied that I
can, with my new Sky Light, take as Fine a
Picture as any Artist in the Slate. As I use
none but the very best mate! ini, I will guaratce
-atisfaction to all in need of Pictures. Give
me a call and examine specimen-*.
J. W CRAWFORD. Artist.
Covington, Ga , Nov. 20, 1869.—4 30tf
JEWELRY! JEWELaY!
I HAVE JUSTQPENEDa Fine lot of Jewelry,
including all the lato styles of Ladles’ Fine
(-old Breast Pins and Ear Rings, also Shell, Jet,
Cornelian, And Pearl Breast Pins, and Bracelets,
Gent’s Shell, Jet, Hair, Steel, and Leather,
Watch Chains, Finger Kings, &<;. Algo, anew
lot of Watches and Clocks, and a full supply of
Spectacles, Cases, &e. 1 res; octfullv invite a
cal! from the ladies, and all in want'of anything
in my line. J. ft*. LEVY.’ *
U. T. II ENR Y,
COVINGTON, GBOUGIA.
HAS REDUCED HIS PRICES, so
that all who have been so unfortu-
ante as to lose their natural Teeth
can have their places supplied by Art, at v*.ry
small cost. Teeth Filled at reasonable prices,
an l work faithfully executed, Office north side
of Square.—l 22tf r
DR. TUTT’S SARSAPARILLA AND QUEENS
DELIGHT. The great Blood Tu-itier.
OR. TUTT’S EXPECTORANT. A certain euro
for Congbs, Colds, drc.
!- \r. TUTT’S IMPROVED HAIR DYE. The
1 / best Dve in use.
DR. TUTT’S VEGETABLE LIVER FILLS*
For Liver Comwlaint, Dispepsia, <fcc.
Those valuable Preparations are fpr sale In
( ovington, by Or. J. 13. H. WARE
U Conyers, by DR. J. A. STEWART
j * Jonesboro, by GEORGE MANSFIELD
In Thomson by A. D. HILL
A . EK f, ESZISGER,
UpYiost.oi'or.
AND DEALER IN FURNITURE, AND
MANUFACTURER OF BEDDING.
Hunter street, three doors from Whitehall,
Atlanta, Geougia.
Feather Beds Renovated for $9,00 each.—6in4B
*T. ;gT RO « E as,
Dealer in
IF* XT lE* ]ST ITU JFL 7Tt
of every Description,
143 and 145 Broad street, Augustn, Ga
Bennrus, Washst.ands,Sofas, Tet»-a-Tetes, Chairs
Rooking Chairs, What-Nots. COTT 4GE HETS,
with and without Marble Tops.—3:n4
riauia MPTlIim ftSICMAI MtCf
FMH and Ktair tMW 3
A. N D CASKETS,
"or sale by THOMPSON & HUTCHINS,
1y29 Covington Gstf.
Fall and Winter Fashions.
MRS. M. A. BINDER has just arrived from Paris
and London with the Latest designs, personal
ly selected from the greatest novelties; also, the
most elegant Trimmings to be secured in Paris.
Lacks, Ribbons, Velvets, Bridal Veils, Fi.owtto
Fine Jewelry, and Trimmed Pacer Pat
terns, Dress and Cloak Making.
Exclusive agent for Mrs. M. Work’s celebrated sys
tem for cutting ladies dresses, sacques. basques, ac.
N. W. corner of Eleventh and Chestnut Streets,
Philadelphia. —Gm4-48
G VOLGER &, CO.,
a Importers and Manufacturers of
SEGARS, TOBACCO, PIPES,
And dealers iu all grades of LEAF TOBACCO
l9d a id 254 Broad street, Augusta, Ga,
Branch House and our Manufactory,
VOLGER A HUNCHES,
dC Front street, 3m59 NovrYjfE