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THE SOLDIERS’ COLUMN. ;
PRACTICAL HINTS FOR VOLUNTEERS.
We find some very excellent advice in a
letter written by a father to his sort, who is
a volunteer in a Mobile company now in
Richmond:
You are now, my son, in a position dif
ferent altogether from any you have ever
before occupied, and it is my duty to give
you all the information and counsel which
may be in my power, to enable you to un
derstand your duties and appreciate the re
sponsibilities which are attached to your
position.
In the first place, then, my son, when a
soldier shoulders his rifle under the flag of
his country, he must surrender to that coun
try his will, his whims, tastes, fancies and
prejudices; and the first, highest and most
solemn duty he owes to that country, is
the most implicit and prompt obedience to
the orders of his superior officers. Diso
bedience, even in matters of minor gravity,
frequently forfeits life. If an order is is
sued, that must be the end of inquiry.—
The success of a battle or campaign may
depend upon the concealment of the purpo
ses of the command; and it may become
nece'ssary to punish with death an omission
to observe that which may seem to be a
very unimportant order to*the soldier who
dues not understand it.
Napoleon once issued an order that the
lightg of the camp must be extinguished at
eight o’clock, and seeing a light burning in
the tent of an officer after that hour had
elapsed, he repaired thither in person, and
entered the tent just as the officer had fin
ished writing his wife’s name on the back
of a letter he had written to her. He told
the Emperor he had unconsciously violated
the law only for one moment, and it was
done in the enthusiasm of affection, with
which he had been overcome by thoughts
of home. “ Unseal that letter,” said the
Emperor, " and write as I dictate.” The
officer obeyed and wrote as follows : “P.
S. 1 die to-morrow morning, at eight o’clock,
for violating the laws of the camp, by not
extinguishing the light in my tent at the
precise time. I was commanded to do it.”
That decision may have seemed savage
and barbarous, but when your intellect
shall have matured to the comprehension
of how much depends upon subordination
and a rigid adherence to the laws of the
camp, you will see that Napoleon could
only be just to the thousands of lives under
his care by assuming the appearance of se
verity to this one delinquent.
Obedience is not servility, it is duty.—
It is therefore not cowardly, but honorable.
The camp is no place for the soft manners
of the drawing-room, and soldiers are pro
verbially blunt; therefore, do not imagine,
if an officer speaks sharply to you, that he
wants to insult you or brow-beat you; and,
my dear son,.as you value your happiness
and usefulness, do not, I beg of you, listen
to the scandal of tattling go-betweens, or
allow your feelings to become prejudiced,
either against an officer or a fellow-soldier,
by anything that may be said against them
in their absence. That man is a foe to your
country who attempts to sow dissension
between brother soldiers, or shake the con
fidence of the army in its officers; and if
he is inconsiderate and malignant enough
to select such a holy spot as the bivouac
for such a sacrilege, ho must be too base to
apeak the truth, and you will be meting out
to him his just deserts to give, in place of
your respect and confidence, your derision
and scorn.
Nothing can make me more happy, my
dear son, than to know that, young as you
are, you enjoy the esteem and confidence
of your brave comrades in arms; and I
therefore warn you against the common
fault of the volunteer soldiers, to-wit: mur
muring. Never murmur, my dear son, at
anything. In the first place, it is not man
ly; in the second place, it weans from you
those who else might love you and cleave
to you; in the third place, it demoralizes
the army, and makes a mob of grumblers
out of men, who, but for this propensity,
might have been much happier themselves,
and been the source of happiness in the
very ranks in which their puerile com
plaints must breed discontent. Be cheer
ful, my brave boy, and it will make your
officers love you. It is not a pleasure ex
cursion yuu are on, and you must not ex
pect that luxories will fall in showers along
year path. The soldiers Washington led
marched barefooted over the frozen ground,
with the blood pouring from the gashes in
their feet. They braved the terrors of a
Northern winter, only half-clad, and won
laurels that must flourish in perennial ver
dure, while the Goths and Vandals, who in
vade us from the North, with the exchequer
of a mighty government to provide for
their comfort, will have been, in charity,
forever forgotten.
THE DUTY OF ALL.
War, at best, is a dreadful scourge.—
Most wars ordered or permitted by God,
are judicial punishments for the wickedness
of a nation. Often nations equally wicked
are allowed to execute His purposes on each
other, and nations are sometimes divided
to scourge each section. Our present case
may be one of this sort. Personal wicked
ness has been rampant in the country for
years. Political degeneracy, official cor
ruption, fraud, trickery, and moral degra
dation, have infested and ruined and per
verted the Government. Weak, wicked
men have brought it to the precipice over
which it has tumbled. Yet we can not
doubt that God has a mission fur our coun
try, yet unaccomplished. Upon this land
reste the responsibility and the duty ot
spreading the light and enlarging the area
of civil and religious liberty. This, per
haps, can be better done by two or three
Republics than by one.
God may chastise us. What is our duty
Os? SOOO
in such a case? First, let us not fight
against God. He must be propitiated by
repentance, humility and reformation.—
Resist your enemies, but propitiate Jeho
vah. He is just and merciful. Repent
towards God, but fight for your country,
for your rights, for your wives and your
children. Fight, but pray. Banish intem
perance, swearing and licentiousness from
your armies and your people. If you must
fight, yet repent and pray, but fight, and
God will hear and forgive.
THE CHILDREN’S COLUMN.
Charade, No. 1.
My first is an animal useful and kind,
And sometimes the result of dissection;
My second is good for the sole, we find,
And is used to avoid detection.
My whole is somewhat influential
In malting bad boys penitential.
[Answer next week ]
“ Remember now Thy Creator in
the Rays of Thy Youth.”
Remember thy Creator now
When youth and years are bright,
Ere evil days draw nigh, when thou
Shalt find them no delight;
Now, when the moon and stars above
Are pleasant things to see ;
Now. when thy days are soft as love,
And all is joy and glee.
The voice of songs and mirth must cease,
And Music’s daughters die ;
The bird’s sweet voice be hushed to peace,
And earth’s best beauty fly;
And almond buds shall blossom white.
Where now thy locks are dark,
To dim thy young eye’s sapphire light,
Or hyacinthine spark.
Or ever then the silver cord
Shall loose the golden bowl,
Remember thy Creator Lord
With ever bowing soul;
For dust to dust must mingle then.
And earth its earth shall claim,
And thy free spirit flit again
To God, from whom it came.
THE CROWN OF TEARS.
The last rays of the setting sun rested,
crown-like, on the tops of the forest trees,
leaving in the deepening shadows of twilight
a little child who sat weeping by the way
side. Her tears fell through her clasped
hands upon a few withered roses in her lap.
Suddenly, by a magnetic influence, whose
! mystery is eternal, she felt that she was not
' alone. Looking up she beheld standing be
-1 fore her an aged man. Upon his shoulders
1 fell his white hair, and his form was bent
‘("with the burden of years, but his eyes still
I retained the fire of youth, and the child felt
their glow irradiate her inmost soul. As
■ she looked up the old man spoke:
“ Child, why do you weep ? ”
“ Because,” said the child her tears flow-
■ ing afresh, “ iny little brother is dead.”
1 “ And should you weep at death ? ” ask-
ed the stranger. “Do you look beneath
, the brown earth only, for your little broth
“ er? Child, he is not there.”
> “Yes, he is,” said the little girl, mourn-
* fully. “ I saw him lying white and still in
1 his little shroud ; he would not look at me
when I called his name, nor even when 1
. brought my pretty white rose and placed it
> in his hand. Then mama told me he was
1 dead, and I never should see him again after
they laid him in the ground; it is for that
• I weep.”
“ Child, your brother still lives,” said the
I old man solemnly. She looked eagerly in
• his face.
s “Have you seen him? Oh ! let me run
> and tell my mother.”
- “ 1 have not seen him,” replied the stran-
I ger, “ but I know that he lives. Not here
i —not in this world again,” continued he,
raising his eyes heavenward, “but there is
a beautiful land where weeping is unknown,
i where sorrow aud death never enter—and
‘ yet, death is the shining portal to that land I”
I The little girl looked wonderingly at him.
i “And is he there ?” asked she ;“if I die
may I see him again?”
t “ les, my child,” was the answer; “and
there you will find the tears you have wept
i here, transformed into a crown of light and
J life. Seo, even now thy work has begun.”
’ She looked, as indicated by his hand, and
* lo I her roses, brightened and refreshed by
, her many falling tears, smiled up into her
, face.
IHE BOY AT THE D YKE.
A little boy in Holland was returning one
. night from a village to which he had been
sent by his father on au errand, when he
- noticed the water trickling through a nar
row opening in the dyke. He stopped and
thought what the consequences would be if
the hole was not closed. He knew, for he
t had often heard his father tell, the sad dis
i asters which happened from such small be
. ginnings; how, in a few hours, the hole
would become larger, and let in the mighty
. mass of waters pressing on the dyke, until,
the whole defence being washed away, the
rolling, dashing, angry waters would sweep
on to the next village, destroying life and
property, and everything in ns way. Should
he run home aud alarm the villagers, it
would be dark before they could arrive, and
the hole might then be so large as to defy
all attempts to close it. Prompted by these
thoughts, he seated himself on the bank of
the canal, stopped the opening with his
hands, and patiently awaited the approach
ot some villager. But no one came. Hourj
after hour rolled slowly by, yet there sat
the heroic boy, in cold and darkness, shiv
ering, wet and tired, but stoutly pressing
his hand against the dangerous breech. All
night he stayed at his post. At last the
morning broke. A clergyman, walking up
the canal, heard a groan, and looked around
to see where it came from. “ Why are you
there, my child I" he asked, seeing the buy
and surprised at his strange position. “Il
am keeping back the water, sir, and saving’,
the village from being drowned,” answered’
the child, with lips so benumbed with cold;
that he could scarcely speak. The aston
ished minister relieved the boy. The dyke
was closed, and the danger which threaten
ed hundreds of lives was prevented.
The Nazarene Banner. ['
FOB THE SOLDIERS.
There is now published, in the city
of Atlanta, a monthly journal entitled
THE NAZARENE BANNER,
intended for gratuitous distribution in the
Army and the Hospitals. Each number
contains twenty columns of choice reading.
Churches, societies, or individuals who
feel inclined to aid the Editor in this enter
prise, will please address Jas. N. Ells, at
Atlanta, Ga.
Eight dollars, per month, will secure one
hundred copies—mailed to any point.
railroaFguide.
Georgia Bailroad & Banking Co
Augusta to Atlanta. .. .171 Miles. ...Fake $6 00
GEORGE YONGE, Superintendent.
Mornlug Passenger Train.
(SUNDAYS EXCEPTED.)
Leave Atlanta daily at 7 00 A. M
Arrive at Augusta at 5 47 P. As
Leave Augusta daily at 7 00 A. J/
Arrive at Atlanta at 6 00 P. JU
Night Passenger Train.
Leave Atlanta daily at 6 80 P. M
Arrive at Augastaat 5 30 A. M
Leave Augusta at 6 00 P. M
Arrive at Atlanta at 5 00 A. M
This road ruus in connection with the trains oi
the South Carolina and the Savannah and Augusta
Railroads, at Augusta.
Macon and Western Bailroad.
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
Macon to Atlanta.... 104 Miles.... Fare 85 00.
ALFRED L. TYLER, Superintendent.
Leave Macon at 00 a. m
Arrive at Atlants at .4 00 p. m
Leave Atlanta at 6 30 a. m
Arrive at Macon 12 54 p. m
This train connects with Central, South-western
and Muscogee railroads at Macon.
Western & Atlantic (State) Railroad.
Atlanta to Chattanooga, 138 Miles —Fare,... $5.
JOHN S. ROWLAND, Superintendent.
passenger train.
Leaves Atlanta, nightly, at 7 00, P M
1 Arrives at Chattanooga at 4.14, A M
; Leaves Chattanooga at 4.50, P M
Arrives at Atlanta at 2.38, A M
EXPRESS FREIGHT AND PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta, daily, at 6.45, A M
Arrives at Chattanooga at 6.25, P M
Leaves Chattanooga at 4 25, A M
, Arrives at Atlanta at 4.20, P M
I ACCOMMODATION PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta at .... 2.40 P.M.
Arrives at Kingston at - - -650 P. M.
Leaves Kingston at - - - - 430A. M.
Arrives at Atlanta at - - - - 9.25 A. M.
This Road connects, each way, with the Rome
Branch Railroad at Kingston, the East Tennessee
and Georgia Railroad at Dalton, and the Nashville
& Chattanooga Railroad at Chattanooga.
Atlanta and West Point Kailroad.
Atlanta to West Point 87 Miles Fare $4 25
! GEORGE 3. HULL, Superintendent.
MORNING PASSENGER TRAIN.
. Leaves Atlanta, daily, at 5.80, A M
Arrives at West-Point at 11.07, A M
Leaves West-Point, daily, at 12.10, P M
; Arrives at Atlanta at 5.28, A M
EVENING PASSENGER TRAIN.
i Leaves Atlanta 6.30, P. M.
. Arrive at West Point - - - - 11.58, P. M.
Leaves West Point .... 1.00, P. M.
Arrives at Atlanta .... 0.20, P. M.
l
Psi/ V7 ’AU- ~
X BOOK-JMNDERY.
, TEN PRESSES IN OPERATION!
. ...........
Ail klndi ot Printing axacutett in the beet style
Address J. J. TOON A CO., Proprietors,
rSAMKLIN BVILBIXa,
# George E. White, M.
ATLANTA, GA.
' 4JF Os PICK at Nila.’ Insurance Agency, up stairs 1
1 corner ot Alabama and Whitehall streets.
Al nig hi. he may be found at his residence, near the
I dwelling of Judge Lyon, on Whitehall.
Dr. White would solicit the attention, especially, of those
afflicted with chronic complaints. March, 1883.
M. A. llornady,
RESIDENT DENTIST,
FORSYTH, GA.
LSF" OrriCß over Lampkin’s store.
1 Particular attention paid to calls at home, and
also at a distance.
For? - Tt!1 ' JaQ - 10 »1862. feb 15 ’62
S. D. Nilcsb
Fir© and Life Insurance
AGENT,
Corner of Whitehall and Alabama streets,]
ATLANTA, GA. Oct 18
Hughes, Hagan &. Co.,
Manufacturers of and Dealers in all kinds of
ENVELOPES,
ATLANTA, GA.,
Lg - * Manufactory on Peach Tree Street
LANIER HOUSE,
Logan <k Meara, Proprietors,
Main Street,
MACON, GEORGIA
AUGUSTA HOTEL,
William Wheelock, Proprietor,
BROAD STREIT, AUGUSTA, GA.
• .. .... .. i I
GLOBE HOTEL,
BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA.
Mui larky de Gannon, Proprietors.'
AUSTIN MVLLARKY. JOHN M. GANNON. ;
«I. B. Tippin,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Foreign and i
Domestic
goods,
Connally s Block, on Whitehall Stree’
ATLANTA, GA.
John G White. w Powers.‘
White de Powers,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
GROCERS,
DEALERS IV
PRODUCE, and FAMILY SUPPLIES, j
Marietta Street, Atlanta, Ga. i
0. A. DAVIS, A. K. SEAGO,
late of Greensboro’, Ga. Atlanta, Ga.
Seago & Davis,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
ATLANTA, GA.,
Will give their personal attention to the PURCHASE
and SALE (at ioholet>ale only) of
Real Estate, Negroes, Cotton, Tobaceo, Produce,
and General Merchandize,
(Liquors excepted.)
OFFICE, up stairs, on the corner es Whitehall and
Alabama streets. apl H y
Anderson, Adair de Co.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
PRODUCE AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Whitehall street, near Georgia R.-R. Bank,)
ATLANTA, GA.
Oct. u. 9m
Gen. I. R. Foster. J. L. Queen. H. R.Fowler.
Foster, Queen & Co.,
GROCERS,
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
ATLANTA, GA.,
Keep constantly on hand all kinds of PRO
VISIONS and Family Supplies. Buy and sell
all kinds ot Tennessee and Country PRODUCE,
and sell Goods consigned to the best advantage.
Amons, Ligon de Co.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
For the sale of Produce, Merchandise, Real
Estate, Negroes, Ac.,
Corner of Whitehall and Mitchell Streets,
ATLANTA, GA.
B. B. AMOSS. D. LIGON. B. H. LEEKE
D. Mayer. J. Jacobe. J. Kapp.
D. Mayer, Jacobe & Co.,
AUCTION and COMMISSION
• MERCHANTS,
For the sale ot Merchandise, Real Estate, Stocks,
Bonds and Negroes,
Whitehall Street, ATLANTA, Ga.
Oct. 18. 9m
A. C. Co.,
WHOLESALE GROCERS,
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Corner of Walton and Peach-tree sts.,
ATLANTA, GA. O 25
J. T. Porter,
WHOLESALE GROCER,
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANT
Marietta St.,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA. 025
Thomas F. Lowe & Co.,
General Commission Merchants,
(exclusively,)
ray* For the sale of PRODUCE, and all kinds
of MERCHANDISE; Negroes,
Real Es'ate, &c., &c.,
(In Daniels’ Block, Peach-tree st., and Winship’s
• corner, ditto,)
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
Thomas F. Lows. Jissb Lows, of Lawrenceville.
Brown, Fleming A Co.,
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
(Masonic Hall Building) Decatur St.,
ATLANTA, GA.
Advances made on Sugar, Molasses, Wool and
other Produce. Special attention given to the
Texas and Georgia trade. Oct. 11 9m
Robert L. Crawley & Bro.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
(Franklin Building,)
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
i October 1, 1862.
Pease A Daviir,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IS
PRODUCE and PROVISIONS,
AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
(Winship’s iron-front store, Peach-Tree st.)
ATLANTA, GA.
P. P. Pease.] [L. B. Davis
Any business entrusted to us will receive prompt
attention and returns early made. We ask oui
friends to give us a call when in our city. Any Pro
duce consigned to us will receive every advantage
our market can give. Also we can make purchase?
to the very best advantage, as we are always pos
ted in reference t® the market prices.
February 15, 1862.
George W. Cook,
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
AND
GENERAL AGENT,
For the PURCHASE of all kinds PRODUCE.
Mount Carmel, Henry County, Ga.
Refers to the following gentlemen in Atlaffta:
Captain J. M. Willis; Captain Wm. Bacon, A.
Q. M.; Amoss & Ligon; White & Powers; J.
J. Thrasher; J. L. Winter; A. K. Seago.
March 28, 1863. ly
Beach A Root,
IMPORTERS and DEALERS IN
DRY GOODS,
(Whitehall Street,)
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
Oct. 11 ______ Bm_,
John Ficken,
MANUFACTURER OF AND DEALER IN ALL KINDS OF ,
SEGARS AND TOBACCO,
Bnuff, Pipes, Meerschaums, Begar-Cases, Etc. i
WHITEHALL ST., ATLANTA, GA.
Hamilton, Markley A Joyner, t
dealers in
DRUGS, MEDICINES, DYE-STUFFS,
PAINTS, OILS, ETC., 1
Concert Hall building, opposite Georgia R.-R. Bank, j
ATLANTA, GA. 025
A. C. Vail,
—SIGN OP MILLEDGEVILLE CLOTHING STORE—
Empire House, Whitehall street,
ATLANTA, Ga., i
* i&rgc Mgortment of READY-MADE CLOTHING
and a large variety of Fancy Articles generally. Oc 25 j
Splendid Milch Co . 1
FIVE Arst-rate MILCH COWS are « for sale by J
GEO. W. COOK, I
Mount Cannel, Henry county, Ga.
AUCTION SALES,
BY
CRAWFORD, FRAZER & CO.
THE REGULAR AUCTION SALES of our
houso will hereafter be on
TUESDAYS,
THURSDAYS,
and SATURDAYS
OF EVERY WEEK,
AT HALF-PAST TEN O’CLOCK A. M.
{py All goods, wares and chattels should be
sent in the evening before, or early in the
morning of sale day.
STOCK SALES OF
HORSES, MULES, ETC.,
will commence at FOUR o’clock in the after
noon on each regular sale day.
Feb. 21 6m
Wo. 8.
CRAWFORD, FRAZER & CO..
GENERAL
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Auctioneers,
AND
DEALERS IN NEGROES,
Xo. “ S.” Whitehall Street,
(Opposite the “ Intelligencer ” printing office,)
ATLANTA, GA.
In addition to our
AUCTION AND NEGRO HOUSE,
at No. 8 Whitehall street, we have
FIRE-PROOF STORAGE
' of three thousand barrels capacity at our new
Ware-Rooms—No. 1 Alabama street. Our
NEGRO YARD and Lock- Up, at No. 8, are
safe and comfortable.
Dealers and other parties will find us pre
pared to fkkd and lodge well; and, from
experience in the business since our boyhood,
TO HANDLE THE NEGRO PROPERLY.
( Charges reasonable and right, and satisfac
tion guarantied in every instance.
Parties at a distance may know our market
by addressing us.
CRAWFORD, FRAZER & CO.,
No. 8 Whitehall street,
Feb. 21 6m Atlcnta Ga.
Atlanta Baptist Banner.
FOURTH VOLUME.
Xow is the Time to Subscribe !
Terms of The Baptist Banner, $3
per annum —invariably in advance.
James N. Ells & Co.,
I Proprietors.
DAYTON’S
SELECT SCHOOL FOR GIRLS,
, AT LAFAYETTE, GA.
Elder A. 0. DAYTON President, and Teacher of Cheat
ietry, Botany, Mental Philosophy, Rhetoric, etc.
Misa LAURA H. DAYTON, Teacher of the Latin sad
Greek Languagee, Algebra, Geometry, etc.
Tuition; In the preparatory olauea, per term es five
months, ......... gio 00
In the higher classes, - -- -- - 25 00
Board can be had, in good families, from twenty to
twenty-five dollars per month.
Only a limited number of Pupils will be received, ae
our object la to give to each one the most thorough men
tal discipline.
The pupils should bring with them all the requisite
books, as it is difficult to procure them here,
Lafayette, February 0, 1888.
Atlanta Female Institute.
THIS Institution has not been taken for a hospital, as
has been reported, and I have the assurance of the Poet
. Surgeon that it will not be taken.
The exercises will be resumed on the second Monday in
j January, 1868, and continue for a scholastic term of six
’ months. „ . .
Under the pressure of the times, we are compelled to
raise our rates of tuition. The charges, therefore, w.ll be
as follows: .
Collegiate department, for six moetbs, - >B6 00
Preparatory - “ “ “ ; ™
Primary « • 24 uo
Incidentals, - " * "
Music, and piano rent, same old prices.
One half of the above charges be paid tn advance
in every instance. J- R- MAYSUN, President.
MERCER VNIVERSITI,
PENFIELD, GREENE COUNTY, GEORGIA.
FACULTY.
President —N. M. Crawford, D. D.
Professors —S. P. Sanford, A. M.,
J. E. Willett, A. M.,
U. W. Wise, A. M.
Theological Seminary. —Professor N.
M. Crawford, D. D.
DEPARTMENTS.
L A college course of four years, equal to that
of the beet colleges in the country.
2. A theological course, of three years, design
ed for those who are preparing lor theGoepel Min
istry.
3. A scientific eouree of four years, including,
with some additions, all the studies oi the collegi
ate course, except the ancient languages.
4. An academical department, embracing all who
are not prepared to enter college.
COMMENCEMENT AND VACATIONS.
The Commencement is held on the second Wed
nesdayin July.
There are two vacations, dividing the year into
two terms.
Fall Term begins on the first Wednesday in Sep
tember, and closes on the 13th of December.
Spring Term begins on the fourth Wednesday in
January, and closes on Commencement day.
. . 8- LANDRUM, Secr’y Board Trustees,
July 26,1862. ' Savannah Ga
SOLTIIERX PLANTERS!
SHOULD ALL TAKE IT!!
THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR—the old pio
neer in Agricultural Improvement—the only
Agricultural Monthly Journal in the Confederate
Stales that has lived “through the war”—is still
published regularly, and will enter upon its 21st
year on January 1. 1863. Now is the time to sve
tcaiEE ! One Dollar per year, i« advance !
Address D. REDMOND, Augusta, Ga.