Newspaper Page Text
THE HERALD.
BV JOH.M K. SI'K.V 11,
CKIPIBOBO, GA:
SAII IOM y MOKMKfi, : : : ACO !7 18C7
GENERAL OKLERS NO 49.
llewdqunrter#, Third Military District,)
(Georgin, Alabama and Florida.) V
Atlanta, Ga., August 12, 1867. |
General Orders. No. 49.
1. TheCoiumanding General has bceomo sat
isfied that the civil officers in this military dis
trict are only observing his order prohibiting
them from “using any influence to deter or
dissuade the people from reconstructing their
State governments under the recent acts of
Congress,” so far as their own personal con
versation is concerned, and nre at the same
time, by their official patronage, supporting
im! encouraging newspapers which ate, almost
without exception, opposing reconstruction, and
abstracting and embarrassing civil officers ap
pointed by the military district in the per
fonnatkoe of their duties hy denunciation and
threats *4 future penalties fur their official
acts.
11. SoA use of the patronage of their offices
» simply am evasion (perhaps unintentional) of
the proviso ops of the General Order above re
ferred **l «wd is, in fact, an employment of the
omdtiuery of the provisional State governments
to defeat the execution of the reconstruction
sots.
ill. 4w therefore ordered —That all adver
tisements or other official publications hereto
fore, or to he hereafter provided by State or
municipal laws or ordinances, be given by the
proper civil offices whose duty it is to have such
publication to be made, to such newspapers
and such only ns have not opposed and do not I
oppose reconstruction under the acts of Con
gress, nor attempt to obstruct in any manner,
the civil officers appointed by tins military au
thorities in this district, in the discharge of
their duty by threats of violence or prosecution
or other penalty as soon as the military pro
tection is withdrawn for acts performed tn their
official capacity.
IV. All officers in this military district and
all officers of the Freedmen’s Bureau, and all
Boards of Registration, or other persons in the
employment of the United States under its
military jurisdiction, are directed to give
prompt attention to the enforcement of this
order, and to make immediate report to these
Headquarters, of any civil officer who violates
Its provisions. By command of Brevet Major
Gcueral Pupa.
G. K. Ss?!DißSoj«,
Cnpt. 33d C. S. Inf. A A. A. A. G.
While in the present state of the South any
factious opposition to the will of the rulei of
the District is unavailing, it must be apparent
to Gen. Pope himself that the above order is an
unwarrantable interference with the sacred
rights of that characteristic institution of
America, ti e free and unshackled press. In
despotic governments the monarch maintains
his supremacy by intimidating the press and
abridging the privilege of free speech ; but in
charity let us hope that the commanding Gen
eral has been betrayed into this tyrannical order
by designing men, who only seek their own
aggrandizement without regard to the means to
w hich they have resorted, or the ruinous re
sults of such a course in overthrowing thut‘pal
ladium of all rights,” the freedom of the press.
It is to be hoped thut the proprietors of the
papers of this District are none of them so lost
to all considerations of rectitude ns to be in
dueed to change their course, or advocate a
policy which their own honest judgment must
condemn, even though the bribe offered were
ten times as valuable as the patronage which
is referred to in this order. If vtc are among
the proscribed press, this ordor deprives ns of
n largo amount of advertising per annum,
but reiving on the promptness and liberality
of onr individual patrons to sustain us we
shall respectfully decline the position in the
Radical ranks by which we might retain this
patronage.
At all events, with or without the pay, the
public printing which has heretofore been
done in this paper will continue to be inserted
for the benefit of our renders, so that they may
not be compelled to patronize the radical pa
pers for the purpose of obtaining the legal
notices which are of interest to them ; though
as we have no recollection of ever having had
any occasion for resorting to the threats alluded
to in the first paragraph of the order, it may
be that this paper is not included among the
proscribed sheets.
If Congress designed to cOti.\ r ' ft l tk® people to
pursue* the course which would bring the ex
eluded States into iho Union as allies of the
raJicoFporty, they could have so ordered in the
bill w. s ti> na rtlor ® f usurpation of power than
what was .'CMimod in the registration feature
of the some I'll ; for Hfey had just as nraeh
right and power td dictate tire sentiments of
those whose names shoo'd be registered as to
prescribe the qualification? speerStrd. But it
was left optional with the people t» remain
under military rule, or to hold ® contention
subject to the call of the com mm dcr of the
District. This was expressly provided in the
bill. llow, then, can the Advocacy of OC« of
these courses he construed as any more opp v
ition to Jhe Federal goterjimer.l than the oth
er f It would certainly seem that if it be re
bellious to oppose tbclioldirg of a convention,
the leaders of tlmt rebellion are the men who
originated the bill and cmrlcd it as a law* of
the United States.
—Georgia Enterprise.
The Surratt Trial.
On the 10th iuet., this interesting ense was
deferred, the jury failing to agree and being
discharged by Judge Fisher, against the pro
test of Surratt’s counsel J. B. Bradley, Esqr.—
The Judge then proceeded to order the name
of Mr. Bradley to be struck from the roll of
attorneys practicing in that court, alleging
chat be had used language calculated in its
nature to intimidate the court and deter it frou
<bc discharge of its judicial duty. Mr. Brad-
Vy denied the allegation of the Judge and also ,
dt-nietl his power to dismiss him from tin? har,
which he mid couW only be dtoe by three
Judges of the Supreme Court. It was reported
that a challenge was passed between them, the
penalty for sending whkdi is a heavy fine
and five years imprisonment. The question
was who sent the challenge, «nd theexcitemcnt
was intense. If the spirits of the deceased can
blush w hat crimson must suffuse the faces of
Ftory »r,d Tarry wler the Bench is so dis
graced
Tmz I’Hr.sxxT C*uu.—Speaking of the dif
ficulty between the President and Secretary
Stanton, which led to the suspension of the
Sccretury oHVar, and the appointment of Gen.
Grant in his place, the N. Y. Herald concludes
an article with the following significant para
graph, which indicates that light is beginning
to dawn in that fanatical scetion.
The whole issue in the South depends upon
the spirit in which these laws of reconstruction
are applied. If the restrictions against rebels
aro rigorously enforced, while the negroes,
without question, are freely admitted to the
suffrage, as they have been so far, the negroes,
will rule in the work of reorganization and send
whom they please to (’ingress. If, on the
other hand, the restriction against the South
ern whites arc somewhat relaxed, and the re
t|uirements to suffrage arc fairly applied to the
blacks, the white majority, where it exists in
any Southern °*atc, w ill he brought into action,
and white asctii.icy will be the result. We
believe, too, that under this system Southern
reconstruction may be so fairly accomplished
as to compel even the Radicals of Congress to
accept it; for if the idea of universal suffrage
I as now gone so far that it cannot lie arrested,
that other idea of a general amnesty is close
behind. If Jeff. Davis, on the bail volunteered
hy lending Radicals, can tie turned loose, sure
ly we need no longer delay in letting all the
small fry of the rebellion go scot-free. Now,
then, is the time for President Johnson to
make the issue we have suggested between his
method of executing tho laws of reconstruction,
which means Southern white supremacy, and
the Stanton method, which means Southern
negro suprenmey, and twenty or thirty negroes
in the two Houses ns a beginning before the
expiration of the present Congress. Let Mr.
Johnson prepare at once to try New York and
Pennsylvania on the test, and he will discover,
before tho re-assemhlnge of Congress, that they
nre not yet ready to be jostled hy sambo in
tho United States Senate.’'
ICuriout.
The unnatural and unexampled preponderance
if African influence is singularly manifest at.
present. The potty chief of a small tribe of
hurbarous negroes hnvTig been refused the baud
of '4»een Victoria in marriage, threatens to
murder a few hundred Englishmen who happen
ed to ha in his power, an net which the natiou
on whose flag tlic »un never ceases to shine, is
not able to prevent. While in America, the fa
native who worship ths ebon idol, ars thraaten
ing to he equally successful in sacrificing the
forty millions of whites at the same shrine.—
Do«» history record any put allel to this singular
preponderance of an inferior race)
Kentucky Representatives Denied Admis
sion-
Whan will forbearance cease to be a virtue?
How long must we endure the taunts and
sneers, reproaches, and maltreatment of these
Radical disunicnists, these special agents of
hell and viceregcnts of the devil ? Kentucky—
one of the first in the galaxy of States; the home
of the Marshalls, Clays, and Crittendens; the
home of Breckinridge, the most profound
statesman of this or any age; the birth-place
of the two revolutionary Presidents, Abraham
Lincoln and Jefferson Davis—a State renown
ed for hor orators and statesmen—a State
which clung to the Union, refused to pass an
ordinance of secession, sent to the field hor
noblest and bravest men to battle for the old
flag, the Union and Constitution ; after all her
sacrifices of blood and treasure, sho is refused
recognition ns a true and loyal State, and bor
able Representatives kicked from the halls of
Congress ; we mean, denied admission—not
an application of boot leather; for those
cowardly pupa have not forgotten the Grinnell
affair, end tho name of Rousseau will never
be forgotten.
This is but one of the expiring kicks of
Radicalism, There is surely an avenging day
in store lor Kentucky’s noble sons. When
that day does come, old Pluto and his family
will hold a high carnival on the arrival of tb c
Radical host—these unprincipled, hell deserv
ing Bacchanalians— these thieving, mnrdering,
nigger-loving libertines, these nigger pimps,
spoon-thieving hounds who have blackened our
national escutcheon with crimes enough to
damn forty genereratious.
Democrats of Kentucky, never yield to the
pressure. Stand to your post; he firm.
“Oh how sublime a thing it is
To suffer and be strong.”
f Si ant on Fa., Vindicator,
A War Amu T.--Kverv indication points to
thecei’ttinty of w ar between France aud Prus
sia.
A council of war nt the present moment
being held in Russia, between the staff's of the
armies of Ruas'a nnd Prussia, nnd under the
presidency of th® Fznr 1 im-elf. Plana of
campaigns s>’gge ; .to,l by probable coalitons
between V.-ance and other States are under
consideration, .Further, it is asserted that
Prnssia is eager to Uym the par immediately
and before France has g'* > nto atiitude.
Russia, however, inclines postponement,
which does not make the strife it may defer
less raevitahle. No doubt front »ho vasts nig
gle impending will comes ontalysin somewhere.
Cork Er.
I^xssion. —The torrent and blast can »' , ® r
the lot *rliest scenes of nature. War with iff
ruthless >»nd, may rival the elements in their
work of destruction: but it is passion alone that
ettn lay waste fh® human heart. The whirl
wind and the flOC<? Imve duration in their ex
istence, and have bounds for their fury ; the
earth recovers from rhe devastations of the
conflict with a fertility that seems enriched by
the blood of its victims ; bn* there are feelings
flint no human agency can limit, nnd mental
wound# which are beyond the art of man to
heal, ,
It is not generally known to the country,
that otic of the most gallant men ot the late
war. on tlte Southard fkle, is languishing in a
Northern prison, in violation of the aniDOS.y
which was granted to him by the President s
proclamation of the 2nd of May, 1865. It is
Lieutenant John C. Braioe, fata ot the Con
federate States navy, a. very Bayard of the sea,
whose daring and gallant acta will form a bril
liant page in the history of owr unfortunate
war. and of which our Northern brethren,
equally with ourselves, would be proud, if there
was any magnanimity left in the laud. He
lies still in King’s county Penitentiary, near
Brooklyn, New York.
Fr, at the Georgia Enterprise,
A Few Desultory Extract*
From Ike Cmmtt ’wfiow and B</-Im*cs of the
ItacMor’t Industrial, Eroiutmicfand Matri
monial Club es Newton Cos., Ga.
1. We are encumbered with no officers ex
cept a Sachem, sub-Sachcm, Secretary and
Committees.
2. Any bachelor of sober, industrious, frugal
habits, who takes the pledge, and receives the
signs and grip is entitled to membership.
3. B<>vs who behave well, nnd whose beard
begins to sprout lreely, and who have the qual
ifications of No. 2, may become a member, and
come under protection and guidance.
4. Hen pecked husbands, qualified ns afore
said, may join, as honorary members, provided
they report their domestic troubles and receive
our sympathies, counsels and remedies.
5. The Club shall meet once every week,
for regular business, and oftener at the call
of the Farthem, if the necessities of hen-pecked
brethren require it.
0. The wbolo country with its towns and
tillages, shall he under our surveillance, and
oonstitute our bailiwick.
7. Ledgers shall be provided to open en ac
count current with all of our members, and
the rest of mankind, of both sexes, for the
purposes hereinafter expressed.
8. These accounts shall show the behavior
of all; how much work has been done by them;
money spent, nnd for whnt.
9. The Secretary shall keep his books posted,
so as to see at a glance, whether good or bad
prevails in any character, and how much •
making a scale of merit from 1 to 20, bo that
it may ho known who will make good wives
and husbands.
10. Committees shall tie appointed by the
Sachem, whose duty it shall be to collect infor
mation and hand it over to the Secretary.
11. There shall be a Committee on Church
es, to note the behavior there, and all costly
dresses, and how the wearers look and do. A
word on bonnets and hats, ‘so called,’ might be
very interesting. No atauding at the Church
door, before or after services, except by special
dispensation, to investigate any extravagance
in silk stockings or fine shoes, and this, not to
gratify an idle curiosity, or any thing worse, but
that the books may be kept right, and our in
formation authentic as to what may be expec
ted from matrimony.
12. A culinary Committee, to ascertain who
aro learners and who experts in cooking aud
gastronomy.
13. One on doggeries and drams; to smell
breaths and repirt. We invoke the aid of la
dies of good noses in this depottment. If
they smell cloves, or other aromatics, it
amounts to a suspicion, if liquor, to a conclu
sion. Report to the Sachem through a brother
or friend, or through the Enterprise without
the name. We have a compound telegraphic
horosoope to identify the man.
14. Garden, size, cultivation, kind and quan
tity of vegetables and who cultivates, gathers,
and cooks them, nnd if well done,
15. Hands, whether they show indications of
labor, or nre too soft or too fair for the usos of
our Club.
16. Feet, whether damaged hy tight shoes,
disabling for domestic duties. Bursting goat
skin and prunella, and wasting money.
17. Paints, cosmetics. Healthy habits and
useful employment lay on the prettiest and best
coat of colors. The artificial disapproved.—
Gentleness of disposition and sweetness of
temper, cover a multitude of defieieuces, in
making out reports.
18. The Secretary to keep the books subject
to tho inspection of the members at any time,
so that, if any one falls in love with a
lady, he can see what sort of wife she will
make by looking at her record, whether n No.
1, or further off from perfection, in the scale
of quantities. And if any young lady should
desire such information, with the same object
in view*, she can get it through a brother, or
confidential friend.
Further information given by tho Sachem
to nil applicants through the Enterprise. The
Sachem admonishes nnd strictly enjoins all
Committees and members to great vigilance at
Chutch, and elsewhere, that improper conduct
may be reported nnd recorded. More anon.
JACOB KETCIIUM.
Attorney nt Law,
Secretary.
The Freed men.
It is now acknowledged by agents of the
Freedmen’s Bureau in this State that tho
freedmen prefer idling and lying about to
working up their crops, that they complain
bitterly when refused rations by the agents of
the Bureau, and denounce tho suppression of
their armed organization as an interference
with their rights.
These things were to be expected. The ne
gro will not work while he can live without
working, he regards himself as being entitled
in perpetuity to free rations and idleness, and
lie has been taught sedulously that be has
epery right while the white mau has none.
The difficulties now acknowledged to exist
will inclose. »f the present system is contin
ued. Unless the Burean is prepared to force
tbc negro to work or to issue free rations in
definitely, emancipation will work oot its ac
customed result, and the blacks w ill soon
revert to that condition of savage barbarism
from which they were rescued by American
slavery. The true remedy for the present evil
would be for the Bureau to discourage all po
litical agitation, to discontinue the issuing
of rations, to refrain from arbitrary interference
with master or servant, and to allow the whole
question of free labor to be solved by those
W*ho understand the negro and his faults, and
who have friendly feelings and sympathies,
and while they require the fulfilment of a con
tract, will give him the protection ami justice
of an impartial civil law*.— Char n. Her,
Pass it Aoocvd. —If the family or friend*
of Mr. Dan Wood, ulw was wounded and ta
ken prisoner at the Inutile of Peachtree Crock,
will apply to Rev. W. P. Harrison, of Atlanta,
they can learn ssiue paiueulaj* him.
Th* Teacher’* ConventiOfl.
We have received the subjoined with a re
quest to publish and desire other papers
to copy, which it affords us great pleasure to
do. The time appointed for the Convention
named is the 21st instant, and Atlanta has
been designated as the place. Already assu
rances have been given by the teachers and
citizens of that city of lively interest nnd co
operation, and we cannot but think good is to
icsult from the meeting to the groat cause of
ed u cat ion.
This is the communication :
Athens, Ga., August 6, 1867.
Wc cordially approve the proposition to hold
a teachers' Convention at Atlanta on the 21st
of this month, and would respectfully urge the
teachers of Georgia to meet on this occasion
(Signed) A. A. Lipscomb,
P. H. Mell,
W. Rutheford,
W. 11. Waddell,
;W. L. Brown,
L. 11. Charbonnier,
University of Georgia.
GustavusJ. Orr,
S. M. F. College. Covington.
A. M. Scudder,
Centre High School.
B. T. Hunter,
University High School.
Carlton Hillyer,
Carlton Ilillyer’s School.
Papers please copy. —Athens Watchman.
The Latest News.
Washington, August 13.
General Grant’s letter to Stanton con
cludes : “In notifying you of my accept
ance, I cannot let the opportunity pass
without expressing to you my approba
tion of the zeal, patriotism, firmness and
ability with which you have ever discharg
ed the duties of Secretary of War.’’
Stanton, in replying to the above, con
cludes : “You will please accept my
acknowledgement of the kind terms in
which you have notified me of your acs
ceptance of the President’s appointment,
and iny cordial reciprocation of the sen
timents expressed.”
Washington, August 14.
An Omaha dispatch says the Sioux In
dians are banding together and crossing
the Platte for battle at Plain Creek Sta
tion. General advices indicate hostili
ties increasing.
Dull Times in New England* —The
Springfield (Mass.)Republican gives the
following rather gloomy account of busi
ness affairs in New England:
The manufacturers of the country are
, not particularly active nor cheerful just
! now, and the makers of knit goods are
even arranging things preparatory to a
mutual stopping of work for a few weeks
altogether. The accumulated stocks of
manufactured goods do not diminish very
rapidly under the continued dullness of
business, and neither woollen nor Cotton
manufacturers Care to further increase
their investment in unsaleable goods.—
At Manchester, N. H., business is almost
stagnant, though the mills are still run
ning; the Manchester mill and print
works at that place having on hand over
§2,000,000 worth of unsold goods. The
same inaction is prevailing in the boot
and shoe business, and the large boot
and shoe manufacturers at Lynn, Haver
hill, and the adjacent places are nearly
idle.
The Michiganders. —The Michigan
Constitutional Convention has adopted a
clause conferring suffrage upon- the ne
groes, the Indians, anri—the ladies. We
doubt whether the Michigan women will
feel complimented by the order in which
they come in tho estimation of these
Radical delegates. The new Constitution
does not go into effect until ratified by
the people.
A Clincher. —The Chattanooga Union ,
one of the mostspirited of our exchanges,
embodies a good deal of good sense in
the following short paragraph :
It will be seen front our dispatches
that Judge Lawrence, of Nashville, has
been authorized by General Carlin to
look after the interests of the negroes
discharged for voting the radical ticket.
When the manufacturers of Connecticut
i discharged their workmen last spring for
; not voting the radical ticket, we never
heard that the Freedmen’s Bureau deem
ed it necessary to interfere. This whole
freed man's business is the most infernal
humbug of the age. If the negroes are
fit to exercise the rights of citizenship,
they are certainly in need of no other
j rotection than the law gives to white
citizens, and if they are children, and
need the protection of the United States
continually, it is an imposition upon the
counlry, and an insult to its citizens to
confer upon them an equality of civil
rights with them.
Where are the “American Flag” patri
ots now i The Mexicans, to seize San
ta Anna, in violation of the laws of na
tions, literally trampled, with their feet,
upon the American Hag, an.d yet we have
not heard a single note of wail from these
leather-lunged heroes, who but just now
made our country a bedlam with their
hypocritical yells. The American flag
may he trampled into the mud forty fath
oms deep, and these flag screamers will
never raise a note, unless it may, some
how, redound to the glory of negroes.—
‘Beautiful black darlings J” —Old Guard.
A little girl in Troy, N. Y., swallowed a nick
el cent some days ago. Soon after she was taken j
very sick, exhibiting every symptom of poison j
by arsenic and strychnine, and finally died.
n:i;uv riAVis 1 natuu -ais killer.
IHK UNIVERSAL REMEDY FOR INTERNAL AND
EXTERNAL COMPLAINTS.
At this period there are but few of the human
race unacquainted with the merits of the Pain
Killer; but while some extol it ng a liniment,
they know but little of its power in easing pain
when taken internally, while others use it inter
nally with great success, but are equally ignorant
of iis healing virtues when applied externally,
We therefore wish to say to all that it is equally
successful whether used internally or externally
and it stands alone, unrivalled by all the great
catalogue of Family Medicines, and its sale is
universal and immense. The demand for it from
India and other foreign countries is equal to the
demand at home, and it has become knows in
these far off places by its merits.
pil I L L I P S & C O
Importers and Wholesale Dealers
Have just opened a large and well selected
Stock of F'ine and pure
BRANDIES, GIN,
BOURBON and RYE WHISKY,
ALSO
A GREAT VARIETY OF WINES
A N D
Imported Havana and Domestic Segars.
Also a fine Stock of
Gr I* O O O X* lOS,
To which they respectfully invite the attention
of all Hotel Keepers and Retail Dealers in tlwiir
line, as tlieif intention is to sell their stock of
LIQUORS AND GROCERIES,
As Low as can be Bought in the city #r
NEW YORK,
PHILLIPS & CO.,
1,46tf 282, Broad street, Augusta, Ga.,
SADDLERY & HARNESS.
E. ANDREWS, & CO,
Keep constantly on hand, of
their own manufacture, a general
assortment of
Saddles, Saddle Rags-, Felt Saddle Cloths,
Bridles, Martingales and Harness
of all grades, including Dump Cart Harness
Collars, Enameled, Top, Lining, and Patent
Co'lar Leather, Harness Leather and Skirting.
Enameled Duck, (figured- at,d plain,) for Carriage
Tops. Whips, Sad ilory Hardware, Sadd e
Trees, Wood Haraes, A-c. Eastern made
BUG G- I E S
of the best quality, At the Sign of Golden Horse
Head, Empire Block, Whitelmll street,
3m28 Atlanta, Ga,
T. M. & K. O. CLARKE,
Corner of Peachtree and'Line Mreets, (Sign of
Big Pad Lock.) ATLANTA, GA.
HAVE NOW IN STORE
200 KEGB NAFLS,-
350 Pairs Trace Chains,
60 dozen Brade’s Hoes,
40 dozen Scoril’s Hoes,
50 dozen 8 W. Collins’ Axes,
Guns, Rifles, Pistols,
Washing, and Wringing Machines,
Hubs, Kims, and-Spokes, Carpenter’s Tools,
Lucks, H inges. Screws, Sl Blacksmith’s Tools.
The above goods wc offer low for CASH.
AMO AGENTS FOR
Fairbanks’ Platform and Counter Scales.
Which we sell at Factory Prices, Freight added
T. M. Jr R. C. CLARKE,
10c3m Corntn- Peachtiee and Line Streets
T. M ARK W ALT ER.
MAIII3 L E WORKS,
Broad Street, : .: : AUGUSTA, GA
MAR BL E MON UM E NTS,
Tomb Stones. &c.
Marble Maidlcs, urtd Furniture Marbl
OK ALL KINDS,
from the Plainest to the most. Elaborate, design
ed and furnished to ordeT at short notice.
gray All work for the Country carefully Boxed
nov.lOaiy
O 3FL O C K ill B. Y.
BEAN & ADAM,
269 Broad street, Augusta, Ga,
Agents for English Manufacturers ,
Importers nnd Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
SSI aS3 A, SIS& S3 HIT 8,
PAINTED ‘ C. C.” & DIPPED WARE.
French, German and American
GLASS WAR E
On hand and arriving,
200 CRATES,
Selected by one of our firm in Europe, nnd put
up to suit the Conntry Trade.
Our facilities for obtaining goods will enable
us to compete with any city in tbc United States.
Being Sole Agents for one ot the largest Pot
teries in England, we can have orders filled at
the Manufactory expresslv for our customers.
J. S. BEAN,
June 14, —2m29 R. M. ADAM.
LATH MANUFACTORY!
THE UNDERSIGNED is now prepared to fur
nish Builders and Contractors with any
quantity of first rate
PLASTERING LATHS!
He is also prepared to furnish LUMBER it
any quantity to suit Customers.
He would also respectfully inform the publie
that he has now on hand a fine lot of
BOOTS, SHOES, AND LEATHER,
Which he will sell low for Cash.
Orders Solicited. A. B. THRASHER.
Thomsox, Ga.,Oot. 2«, 186*. 47#atf
N E W
M il 1 in e r y*
ESTABLISHMENT.
MRS. «;. VISE?ERG. (formerly of Charles
ton, S. C, j fakes p’?a?ure in informing the
ladies of this vicinity, that sh® has established
herself in the Millinery Bus. "ess, w’hcre can be
foumla WELL SELECTED, Fashionable stock of
Bonnets, Hats, Slraw & Millinery Goods
Generally, and respectfully Intites s’l those
visiting the city, to purchase the earns, to price
her Goods, before purchasing elsewhere.
Mrs. C. WISEBERG,
No. 3, Peachtree street, Atlanta, Ga
Nest door to Cox a. Hill, Wholesale Liquor
Merchants.- ly3Q
Special Notices.
Errors of Youlb.
A Gentleninn who suffered for years from
Nervous Debility, Premature Decay, and all th«
effects of youthful it discreton, will, for the s H k«
of suffering humnnity, sen free to all » ho need
it, the recipe and directions for making th*
simple remedy by which he was cured. Suffer
ers wishing te profit by flic advertiser’s expert,
•■nee, can do so, by addressing, in perfect confi
deuce, JOHN B. OGDEN
24 ly 42 Cedar Street, New York
To CoiiNtiiupCveg.
The advertiser, having been restored toliealtk
in a few weeks hy a very simple remedy, after
having suffered for several years with a '*«»«•»
ting affection, and that dread diteas* Cornunu
ion—is anxious to make known to his fellow
utierers the means of cure.
To all who desire it, he will send a copv #f
the prescription used (free of charge,) with the
and ractions for preparing and using the same,
which they will find a sure cure for Consumption
Asthma, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, and aH
lhroat and Lung Affections. The only object of
the advertiser in sending the Prescription is t*>
benefit the afflicted, and spread information
which he conceives to be invaluable, and h*
hopes every sufferer will try his remedy, as it
will cost tlnm nothing, and may prove a blessing.
Parties wishing ti e prescription free, by return
mail, will please address
P.EV. EDWARD A. WILSON,
24 ly Williamsburg, Kings Cos., New York.
taTloeingT
w. W. OSBORN
-Jo WOULD Respectfully announce to th*
Citizens of Newton County, that hois new
-ILL prepared to CUT aud MAKE any GarmoaU
in his Line of Business, in the
Best and Latest Styles,
And upon Liberal Terms. No Pains will ho
Spared on his part to give entire Satisfaction.
He has a Splendid SEWING MACHINE, aid
will please the Eye, as well as Fit the Body.
He is also Agent lor
SINGER'S SEWING MACHINE.
F.oom Up Stairs, Murrell’s Brick Building
51 arch 28, 1c66 —l7—tf
W. H. GOODRICH, c. • 009 9% •>
g. goo and r i ciTaTcT.
COTTON A TOBACCO FACTORS
A*D GIRBRaL
Commission Merchant*,
I’ll Broad Street, : : : : AUGUSTA, GA
DEALERS lit
ORA IN, PROVISIONS, AND LHjVQSS
Storage for Consignments. Per
sonal attention given to tlie Purchase, Solo aad
Shipment oT COTTON and other Product*, en
tirely on Commission.—l\sel3
r. HANSBERGEg, ZZNT buoi.i
P. HANSBERGER, & CO.
204, Broad Street, Augusta, fla.-
Wholesale and Retail Dealers
TA
'CHEWING & SMOKING TOBACCO,
Havana , and Dome at ie CIO ARS,
SNUFF, PIPES, MATCHES,A*.-
We deal exclusively in Tobageortiots ArtioUsP
and can therefore supply the Trade at at lifcwro'
prices as anyhouse in the city.
All orders promptly filled.—tel,4B*2.S».--
BOOTS, SHOES, & TRIMS
n E M O T At.
r'rilE undersigned would respectfully giv*'
JL notice to tils friends, patrons, and th* trad*
generally, that he bus removed hit Stock of
BOOTS, SHOES, AN3 TRUNKSi,
To tlie Spacious Establishment-
So. 141 Meeting Street
Opposite H aya *,-
CII ARLESTG K, 8. C.-
And with inci cased facilities With the M anuf,#-
turics and his spacious Sales Room, is pirparod
with a sill erior Stock to furnish desirable g-roco
for the Southern Market, consisting of th* fol
lowing kinds:
Men's, Boy’s,- end Y.mthw
BOOTS, BROGANS. BALMORALS, OXFORD'
lIES, AND CONGRFISS, Sewad and Pegged.
Women’s Misses' and rbildrefl’o
PEGGED AND SEWED BOOT*.
Men’s and Ladies’
TRUNKS, VALISES, AND CARPET BA Off.
Also, PACKING TRLNKs of every size aad
description.
The continued patronage of-hie friends aad
former-customers, i# invited, arid all dealer* im
BOOTS,- SHOES AAD TRUNKS;.
are solicited to call and examine hi# Stook,
All orders will bo promptly attended ta.
m L, .EDWARD DALY, Agent.
March latso6m. ’
TO SPORTSMEN'
('JUNS, PISTOLS, and AMMUNITION. Jut
T eceiVed, a full assortment! of Sitigla mad
Double Barreled GUNS.
Colt’s Repeaters, (all sizes.)
Smith <fc \\ esson, Merwin A Bray's, aid
Remington’s PISTOLS.
Powder, Shot, and Gun Wadding.
Best quality Water-proof Capis.
All kinds Tistol Caps.
Metallic Cartridges, for all Pistols.
All lcmds of Powder Flasks nn<l Shot Bags.
DOOR and DRAWER LOCKS, (all sizes.
Soil Haug in s*
AND
KEYS FITTED TO ORDER.
at short notice. A general assortment of every
thing to he found in a well stocked Gun and
Locksmith Store.
REPAIRING done promptly nnd in lha ball
manner, and on the lowest terms.
Remember the place.
W. D. BOWEN,
Over Barry & Batty’s Drug Store.
6m22 2'JO Broad Street, Augusta, Go.
r,
'-ash Advan c •»
The Undersigned will make
LIBERAL CASH ADTANCM
ow
W heat
Consigned to them, and aleo furnish Trane New
Sacks for same.
Sales made in this Market, Baltimore, or New
Y ork, as most tor the interest of Shippers.
J. A. AXSLEY, &. Cos.,
Commission Merchants,
2m29 No, 300 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
WANTED. 4
Lgg. BEESWAX, for which the bxgb
'Ol HI ("si Market Price in Cash will he paid.
G. S. WHITTEN.
CeyiogtoD, Ca,, Jtd/ 9i 1867.—j