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THE DAILY SUN
VOL. XI.
THE DAILY SUN.
XHOB. PE WOIF. IDO3. GILBEBI- 3- K, QQDDMD.
TEOS. GILBERT & CO.,
EDITORS SVV PROPRIETORS
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atiellbATlONS OP TUB FREED.
MEN'S JBUHEAU.
The following important circular has
been issued by General Howard and ap
proved by President. -Johnson:
War Dep’t., Bureau of Refugees, 1
Freedmen and Abandoned Li.hds,
Washington. D. C, Sept. 4, 1865 J
Ciroular No. 15 and Ciroular No. 18, of
July 28, 1865, frotn this bureau, is here
by rescinded, and the following rules and
regulations are adopted for the purpose
of establishing a definite and uniform
policy relative to abandoned lands or
real property, and lands or real property
to which the United Statos shall have
aoquired a title by confiscation, sale, or
otherwise, which now, or may hereafter
come under the control of this bureau, by
virtue of the aot of Congress, approved
Maroh 8, 1866, establishing, by orders of
the Piesident, to-wit: General Orders,
No. 110, War Department,, June 7, 1865:
1. The abandoned lando referred to in
tho law and regulations govorning this
burenu aro defined according to a second
aot of Congress, approved July 2, 1864,
as follows, viz:
“Property, real or personal, shall be
regarded as abandoned when the lawful
owner thereof shall bo voluntarily absent
therefrom, and engaged either in aims or
otherwise aiding or encouraging the ry
bellion.”
2. Property will not be regarded as
confiscated until after the deoisiou of the
United States Court in the district in
which the property may be found has
been made, by which the property is
condemned as an enemy’s property, and
becomes the property of the United
States-
R. All abandoned land and real prop
erty, and all land and real property to
which the United States shall have ac
quired a title by confiscation or sale, or
otherwise, that now is or may hereafter
beooms under oonlrol of the Bureau of
Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned
Lands, by virtue of Bhid act and orders oi
the President, and shall bo set apart for
the use of loyal refugees and freedmen,
and so much as may ba necessarily as
signed to them, as provided in section 2
of the aot establishing a bureau, viz :
“To every mala person, whether refugee
or freedman, as before said, there shall
be assigned not more than forty acres of
suoh land, and the pemon to whom it ie
assigned shall be protected in its use and
enjoyment for the term of three years, at
an annual rent not exceeding six per
oent. of the value of said land, as it was
apprised by the State authorities in the
year 1860, for the purpose of taxation,
and in case no such appraisal oan be
found, their rental shall be based upon
the estimated value of ths land in said
year, to be ascertained in such manner
as the Commissioner may by regulation
prescribe. At the end of said term, or
any time during said term, the oocupants
of any parcels so assigned may purchase
iands and receive suoh title thereto as
the United States Commissioner may
oonvey, upon paying the value of the
land as ascertained and fixed for the pur
chase. All lands or other real property
in Virginia, North Carolina, South Caro
lina, Georgia, Florida, Mississippi, Lou
isiana, Tennessee, Kentucky, Missouri,
Maryland, Arkansas, and Texas which
tbe United Btates have acquired or shall
acquire, taken by confiscation, or sale, or
otherwise, and all abandoned lands, or
other abandoned real property in those
States, provided tbat Euoh property,
whether confiscated or abandoned, re
maining until otherwise disposed of,
shall have been properly transferred to
the bureau on the requisition of the Com
missioner or Assistant Commissioner,
shall be considered as under tbe oontrol
of (ho Commissioner of Refugees and
Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, for the
purpose herein before set forth and for
the time authorized by the aot establish
ing tbe bureau ; and no part or parcel of
laid confiscated rr abandoned property
snail be surrendered or restored to tbe
former owner or other claimants except
tuoh surrender or restoration ba author
ized by said Commissioner.
The Astvtant Commissioner will, as
rapidly as possible, cause accurate de
scriptions of all confiscated and abandon
ed lands, and such confiscated atid aban
doned real property under their control,
to be made, besides keeping a record,
which they will forward monthly to the
Commissioner of the Bureau. Copies of
such descriptions, in the manner prescrib
ed by Circular No, 10, July, 1866, from
COLUMBUS, GA., THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 14. 1865.
this Bureau They will, with at little
delay as possible, select and set apart
such confiscated lands and property as
may bo deemed neoessary for the immedi
ate use of refugees and freedmen ; the
specifio division of which into lots and
the rental or sale thereof acoordiug to the
law establishing the Bureau will be com
pleted as soon as practicable and reported
to the committee. In the selection and
sotting apart of suoh lands and property
oare will be used to take that about which
ihero is the least doubt lhat this Bureau
should have control.
Whenever any land or real property
that shall oome into the possession of this
Bureau as abandoned does not fall under
the definition of abandoned as set forth in
section 21 of the aot of Congress, approved
July 2, 1864, hereiu before mentioned, it
will be formally surrendered by the As
sistant Commissioner of the Bureau, upon
its appearing that the claimant did no l
abandon the property in the sense defined
in said section and aot.
Former owners of propsrty held by the
bureau a3 abandoned, who claim its res
toration on the ground of having received
the pardon of the President, will forward
their applications to the Commissioner of
the Bureau, through the Superintendents
and Assistant Commissioners of tho Dis
trio's and States in which this property is
valued. Eaob application must be aa
oompanied by, first, a copy of the soooiul
pardon of the President of the United
States or of the oath, under his amnesty
proclamation, where they are not em
braosd in any exceptions therein anumer
ated ; second, proof of title ; third, evi
denoe that tho property has not, been
confiscated or libeled, in any United
States Court, or if libeled that the pro
oeedings against it have been disooniin
ued. The officers of tho bureau, through
whose hands tiuch applications may pass,
will indorse thereon such faois as raaj
assist the Commissioner in his decision,
stating specially the use to which the
property is put by the bureau.
(Signed) 0.0. HOWARD,
Major General and Commissioner of Ref
ugees, Freedmen, and Anand'd Lands
Approved September 4, 1865
ANDREW JOHNSON,
President of the United States.
How t® Reorganize Promptly the In»
dustry of the South.
We find in tho New York World a com
munication from Albert Brisbane with tbe
above heading. The World describes him
as a childish doctrinaire who in his youth
became fascinated with Fourierism, and
set on foot the socialistic movement in this
country. He however has managed his
business shrewdly and lias amassed a for
tune. Mr. Brisbane having asserted that
the whole civilized world wants cotton
aud that “it. is useless to talk of obtain
ing supplies from any other country than
tho South, eays :
The plan is simply this: It is for the
planters to organize and work their plan
tations on joint-stock principles ; that is
to organize joint-stock cotton grovoing corn
panics The mode of procedure would be
something as follows: Let the planters ot
a State, or a section of a State, form
chemsalvcs into an association, and take
tne direction of operations. By their 00l
lectivo action—we suppose them to be m-an
of intelligence and high standing—-th ey
will give a guarantee that, truth will gov
era alt tbe rapreoeutaliouß they make, and
probity their dealings. Witc i cM-aaitiit
members of tbe association wishes to or
ganize a company, or two or three unite
tor the purpose, they will have their lands
appraised, at a fair valuation, and put in
as so much stock. They will th6n issut
an additional amount of stock, eutfieieu 1
to procure the necessary working capital
This stock they must induce the capital
ißta of the North and of Europe to take
For this purpose they will give suoh guar
antees as will be considered perfectly sat
isfactory. They open offices of subsorip
tion iu New York, Boston, Liverpool,
London, Paris and Hamburg. With the
working capital, they will put up tbe
neoesßary buildings, procure teams, boats,
implements and presses, lay iu a stock oi
supplies, and keep a fund on hand to pay
wages
Wo see heavy iaveeita'-nts made ia gold,
oil, coal aud other companies, the product
of which is far less certain than that of
cotton. If a body of respectable planters
would unite, and by their collective ao
tion, afford a guarantee that the lands arc
appraised at their just value; that, toe
amount of capital is fixed at a proper
amount, etc, it appears to us that, be
yond all quostion, success would follow.
The companies would employ laborers
of any kind that it could obtain—Ger
mans, Irish or negroes.; it would make no
distinction in this respect, and would pay
such wages as the profita of tbe business,
and competition in the labor market
should determine.
To attract the white laborers to the
South, we would reserve a certain por
tioa of tbo stock, say a quarter, to be sola
to them at a low valuation, or even a
share or two could be given to each at the
outEet as a bonus. As to tbe shares they
purohase, they should have the privilege
of paying for them gradually out of
their earnings or wages. In this way
they would become stockholders in the
enterprise, wbioh would attach them to it
by the ties of property, aud increase (heir
assiduity. They would thus, in addition
to their wages, receive dividends on their
stock, which would so increase their
earnings as to render labor in the South
profitable and popular.
Wages will not, he says, induce negroes
to work Readily. “The negro, iu his
present, siato is a child grown up, and he
must be trained to habits of thought and
voluntary industry We must not apply
to him the tame law that we do to the
white man—it will prove a failure.”
To get the negro to work he proposes
the following plan; First, we would eus
pend labor on Wednesday and Saturday
afternoons ; such intermissions will ren
der active labor during the two and a hall
preceding days much more bearable. Sec
ortd, we would intermit labor during the
greatest heat of tbe day. Third, we
would deal out ou the aiternoons man
tinned some extra good, things for the pal
ate. Fourth, we would givelhera a dance
once a week. Fifth, at tbe end of each
month wo would distribute a few prizes
among the more assiduous and meritori
ous; they would consist of some arUoleu
of dress, or oi any objeota that aro known
to please the negro’s fanoy. Snoh in
ducements, constantly recurring, would
have more influence than the prospeots of
high wages paid at the end of the month.
To prove the practicability of this plan
he adds : Avery large planter on the
Mississippi, Who formerly worked eleven
hundred negroes,is already reduoing it to
practice. Having lost everything ou his
plantation, he came North and obtained
the capital to restock, rebuild, and start
anew. He stated that he should hire la
borers of any kind that offered, and that
he felt confident he could make more off
his plantation with hired labor than for
merly with s'avo.
Tbe history of a few thousand years de'
moustrates that the more tho upper olass
es oppress and’spoliate tbe lower or
laboring classes tho more they suffer
themselves. (Jan there ba any doubt, for
ex’jmple, that the capitalists of the North,
wiih the wages system, are richer aud in
every way better oircumsTanccd than
wero the slaveholders of the South with
slavery as the law of labor ? Let, then,
intelligent aud far-seeing men of theSontb
reverss their old policy and take anew
direction.
To provide such associations with cap
ital ho rcoommonds the.following ;
Let the joint-stock companies of a dis
■ riot organize a bank; in connection with
it let them establish depots for the storage
of their ootton and other staples—tobacco,
rice and. sugar; then on the artioles
stored let the bank lend the owners three*
fourths of their value. The currency
issued would be safely secured by these
staples—far more so than by any indorsed
uoio3. Tho bit is of the bank would be sc
many drafts lor cotton, St o. ; gradually
they would obtain a circulation at tbe
North, and even among the manufaqlnr*
era aud business men of Europe. A>»
augemenis might even be made to mate
advances on growing crops. In this cs®e
, system of insurance on crops againsi
destruction should be established. As
the planters who organize tho banks de
sire credit at tho lowest rata of interest
practicable, then would deoide that just
enough should be charged for the use of the
currency to cover the ootsi of issue and tbe
uanrgement of the banks. This charge
for the use would bo the rates of interest.
What probably would this rate bet If
economy in management is observed, we
estimate that it could bo reduced to one
per cent, a year. Tnus the planters
could, by a proper system of banking, se»
cure to themselves all the credit wnich
their legitimate business operations re
quired at one por cent. The banks could,
iu addition, act as their factors, and ship
their products to the North or to Europe,
as they might desiro, saving many useljss
commissions. If a general system of
eonuomy in interest, commissions, stor
age, &nd shipment, were introduced, a
great additional profit could b# scoured to
the producers —enough alono to place in
ten years tbe industry of the South on a
prosperous footing.
A Cocoanut Plantation,
A cocoanut plantation has altogether &
singular appearance. The trees being oi
one age, are of uniform height and thick
oess of trunk, and spread of top ; they
are planted iu horizontal lines at equal
distances, and growing up straight and
perpendicular, present a series of long,
all, prey columns, roofed over by green,
feathery foliazra- trees at turn,
.tt-.i., » Height of forty feet, unbroken by
a leaf or branch, and rarely inoliuiu*
more than two or three degrees from th,
perpendicular, the tops have a spread ol
*bout twenty-five feet iu diameter, and a,
the trees are seldom planted further apart
than th-rty feet, their foliage forms nearly
the unbroken canopy, shading the ground
below. The nuts grow in clusters be
tween tho roots of the leaves and branches
ar, the top, in -all conditions of ripeness,
It not picked when ripe they drop, ana
even witti careful picking many nuts are
tost by dropping and being broken on
the ground Indeed, iu a large plants
uon/tna noise of the falling cuts aud the
dead old branches strangely breaks the
silence that reigns all round. The force
with wnion they fall is considerable—
sufficient if they alight oa the head to
kill a maa of ordinary thick skull, and I
iiave thought it. remarkable that no death
should have happened frotn this cause—
at least I have never heard of a single
case. This is especially remarkable
among native villages, which are thickly
crowded with cocoanut trees, under the
shade of which the huls repose, and the
little black children play about frotn
morning till night.
Tba will of Richard Thornton, the mil
lionaire merchant of London, which has
just been proved, is a remarkable doou
ment. Thera ia apparently no end to the
bequests, when Mrs. Ellen Bimpson has
£IOO,OOO, and Mr. Thornton West £3OO, -
000, a*>d the clerks £20,000 eaeh, and the
servants from £ TOO to £I,OOO, and the
Leathersellers’ aud Christ’s Hospital and
Hstherington : s Chanty are “mentioned”
to thß tune of £26,000, and the .twenty
five other hospitals are put down for
£2,000 each; anil Mr. R. N. Lee, of the
Middle Temple, Brrrister-at Law, has got
his £400,000, and Mrs. Ellen Pulford and
the Misses Lee life interests in £500,000,
only a hole has been made in the vast
treasure. There ia enough remaining to
setup Mr. Tnomas and Riohard Thorn
ton 'West, nephews and executors, with
prinoely fortunes for life. The personali
ty of tbe deceased was put dowu at
£2,800,000. There was only one wealth
ier nran in London.
Orlnic ■» tne North.
While itinerant scribblers iu tho South
rack their invention to get startling etc*
ries of crime, at whioh good people North
feel greatly shocked, the newspapers are
full of acoouuts of crimes at the North
that will counterbalance the worst that
can be invented. We have now a long
story of a woman, iu Allegheny city, who
has been poisoning her neighbors pro
miscuously Several have died myster
iously, atri she is at last arrested. She
has tjorue a good character heretofore,
and no cause for the wickedness is given.
We can hardly credit the story. Circum
stances look suspicious, and aa people
have got to feeding on horrors, she is in
dangtt us being hung on suspicion. J f
innocent, she may be thankful lhat she
will not be tried by a commission appoint-
I ed to find her guilty.— Lou, Democrat.
BLANK BOOKS,
SUCH A8
Ledgers, Journals,
GASH AND DAY BOOKS,
Os Various Sires,
WELL AND NEATLY BOUND,
0» A fIOOD ARTICLE OF YELLOW PAPER,
For sale at the
aepfltf suw orricp.
Wad receipt books, ~
TWO-QUIRE
Railroad Receipt Books,
For sale cheap at the
sep6 ts SUN OFMCB,
COLUMBUS
IRON WORKS 00.
HAVING completed the reconstruction of their
Works at tho OLD STAND, Corner of Lower
Brii/e, are uow prepared to farnlsh ALL KINDS
c-a.stiingmsj,
IRON OR BRASS,
• —AND —
Machinery for Railroads,
Steamboats, Mills, &o.
STEAM BOILERS,
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
SHEET IRON WORK,
—ABC—
Forging of the Heaviest Class
AT THE SHORTEST NOTICE.
Steam Engines,
Sugar and Bark Mills,
Kettles, &c., for Sale.
jgjy* 1 Provisions will bo reoeived in pay
ment for work.
sugSllra .
CITY FOUNDRY!
Great Reduction in Prices of
SUGAR MILLS AND KETTLES,
WE aro i3ow offering our IMPROVED SUGAR
MILLS, which vro warrant to stand, at
Greatly Reducod Prices!
also cur
Sugar Kettles on the same terms, wkiob
is LOWER than tboy wore
ever sold in this market,
»nd wo would invito all iu want of a MILL or
KETTLE to give us a call before purchasing else
where, as we are satisfied WE CAN DO RUTTER
FOR THEM than any other House iu the City,
Wo are also MAKING o large assortment of
SKILLETS, LIDS,
OVENS, POTS,
Ate. JScc, &c-
We ore also prepared to do any kind of
Maobine Work for Mills!
or anything elso in our lino of business.
ORDERS SOLICITED AND PROMTLY
EXECUTED.
PORTER, iIIcILBEYWY & CO. (
Near Steamboat Lauding, Columbus, Ga.
ang3l dim
TO OWNERS OP COTTON.
Wo find (hat the large quantity of Cot
ton which wa own and con-rol in South
Western Georgia, and the unsettled con
dition of the country, will require ns to
establish a House at Apalachicola, Fla.,
for the purpose of rooeiving and forward
ing all Cotton to our Houses at Liverpool
and New York.
We will be assisted at that point with
the most eminent buslnoss men of the
country, who will Receive, Store, Com
press and Forward all Consignments, pay
Taxes, Charges, and make advances upon
shipments to Watts, Crane & Cos., Now
York, or W. C. Watts & Cos., Liverpool, or
Given, Watts & Cos , New Orleans, or will
forward Cotton on tho moat reasonable
terms, where owners prefer to oonsign to
other Ilouaes-
Bagging and Rope supplied.
Shippers can rely upon prompt atten
tion. General patronage solicited.
Adilrets,
E. M. Bruce, Morgan & Cos.,
aepts ]tu APALACHICOLA, FLA.
W. T- WOO Or
General Commission & Forwarding Merchant,
Bt>p3 APALACHICOL t, FL.4. 3m
JAMBS JOHNSON l. T. DOWNING.
Johnson & Downing,
ATTORNKYB AT LAW,
»»p« nOLPMBU-.QEQUQn. ;im<>
DOCTOR STAN FORD
RESUMES tho practice of Modicino and Surgery.
Case from a distance requiring surgical attmi
tion cau find comfortable accommodations iu the
city.
Office hours from 11 to 2 P. M. sopt6 8m
Prescription Drug Store.
DR. S. B. LAW
18 PREPARED, at 77 BROAI) STREET, to put
up, at am n 'tins, Preset! pi tons with the lies
and purest Drug. sop 2 Im
The Planters’ & Merchants’
INSURANCE COMPANY
t 8 now prepared to tako risk* on Dwellings,
I Stores, Merchandise, Cotton in to vn or on plau
tation, aud all other iUßurablo properly.
ESTES & BROTHER,
septO lm Agent*.
m"insurance company,
Os Hartford, Conn,
Incorporated 1819... .Perpetual Charter!
NET ASSETS, «»,000.000.t
INSURES PROPERTY OF EVERY DE
SCRIPTION.
RIVER RISKS TAKEN
L G BOWERS. Agent
Columhm, Oa., Sept. 8,1866 B<lt
ALEX. C. MORTON,
ATTORNKY AND COUKSBLLOR AT
la A W ,
OFFICES NO. 100 BROAD STREET,
Columbus, (Georgia,
MR. MORTON 1h fn readiness to prepare caaea
to b»» brought In »ho State Courts of this Cir
onit, when they are esttthtiahed, and to arrange de
fences against anticipated suits In said Courts.
He will attend the United Ktatos Courts which
hold in Georgia, and on special retainer, the Su
premo Court of the United States.
He also attends to the preparation of cases for
Special Pardon nnder President Johnson’s Am
nesty Proclamation of May 29th, 1866.
tepS 3 m
JT. P. MURRAY,
46 Broad Street, Coiambus, Georgia.
Maker and Dealer in Guns,
All kinds of Gun Material and Artioles in
tbo Sporting Line.
RE-STOCKING and REPAIRING dons with
ucatnota and dispatch.
Keys fitted and Locks Repaired
augSl ts _ -
Livery and Sale Stable
Ues with tho best of
Buggies, Carriages & Horses,
and wo will f
BUY OR SEL& STOCK.
Wo. will do our utmost to ploano all who may fa
vor us with their patronage.
Our Btablos aro on Oglethorpe street, opposite
the old Oglethorpi House.
JOHN DISBROW A CO.
Columbus, Aug 13 ts
‘ ThTbRAMHALL, jml
Practical Watchmaker Jijgaf
AND MANCT ACTUum OP JIHHL
FUSTIC WA.TOHKB,
99 Broad Street. Columbus, Georgia.
A largo aroortmont ot
FINE GENEVA, ENGLISH AND AMERICAN
Gold and Silver Watches,
CHAINS, Ac., Ac., CONSTANTLY ON HAND.
All kinds of repairing doneat abort notice.
angfil if . ..
OGLETHORPE BAKERY.
THIS well-known Bakery has resumed opera
tions, aui its proprietor in now prepared to
•upply his old friends and customers with
nilliAD, CRAOKBRB, OAKES,
of ail varietlo., and in fact everything iu tho Ba
kery Line
Special attention paid to orders for Cakoo and
Confectionaries for Balls, Wedding and Social
Partiea.
Connected with tho Oglothorpo Bakery is a Con
fectionary supplied with the beat and greatest va
rieties of CaNIJIBS.
—also—
A LAGER BEER SALOON, which is constantly sup
plied with the best and fre.ih'Bt BEER.
C. BRETVOGEL,
sept6l m 32 Broad street.
R. G. BANKS & CO.,
92 COMMERCE fcTREBT,
MONTGOMERY, Ala-,
Receiving, Forwarding and Commission
MEttCHANTS.
Real Estate agonts. Steamboat agents
AND WUOLEBALI DEALSB3 IN
GROCERIES AND PLANTATION SUPPLIES.
Particular attention paid to receiving aud for
warding goods.
Liberal advances iu Cash or Supplies made on
OottOD or other Produce. aep>2 lrn
WILDMAST, 10UNG k hit OTHER,
EXCHANGE BROKERS,
No. 110 (Bast Side) Broad St.
Gold, Silver, Bank Notes,
STOCKS AND BONDS,
FOREJfIIV n fD DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,
BOUGHT AND SOLD,
Money Invested as Parties M.y Direct,
Oity Connell Money for Sale.
A NEW SUPPLY OF CHANGE HILLS,
I*»> 3% nnct XOe*
peptl 2m
COTTON WAREHOUSE.
AT |gg
Jaqueß’Carriage Repository
OPPOSITE PEKRY nOUSE.
undersigned have oj ened a Warehouse and
i Commission Business at tho above 3tand, and
will givo prompt attention to storage, sale and ship
ment of Uo^ ton and all merchandizo consigned to
them.
Will also keep on hand BAGGING, ROPE,
TWINE, and a general stock of
GROCKRIKS,
which will bo sold by piece or package at the I
est market price.
We wii buy Cotton npon order,
w. a redd, i
l.v JAQUIB, V w. A. KKDDk CO.
H.W.J4QUIS, J
Oolusibus, tia, Sept. 1,1865. scpt2 lm
THE COLUMBUS SUN
BOOK and JOB
PRINTING OFFICE
Is now well prepared to do all kinds of
BOOK IV.I JOB PRINTING
In the
NEATBBT HTY LE,
and all orders will be filled
Promptly, Reasonably, and
Neatly.
CARD PRINTING,
EITHER
PLAIN, FANCY, OR IN COLORS,
Business, Wedding or Visting
C A.RDS
Printed at Shortest Notice.
Connected with the Sun Office is A
BOOK BINDERY.
In Charge of an Experienced Workman,
PREPARED TO DO
ALL KINDS OF WORK
Apperfcaimng # to a Bindery.
Orders from abroad will receive the same
attention as if tho parties were present
to transact business, and will be
Promptly
BAKNETT & CO
COTTON FACTORS,
GROCERS AftD COMMISSION -MERCHANTS,
Corner St. Clair and Broad sta.,
Columbus* Ga.
PROMPT ATTENTION glvou to nil OoDß'gnmenU
and hlpmonta of Cotton toNew York, New Or
leans und Liverpool. Liberal advancoa made on
conß-gnmentß. 4 aeptl ts
t. M. Bauer. thom*. a 8. Mono AN-
E. M. BRUCE & CO.,
288 BROAD .ST., AUGUSTA, GA,
Bankers and Cotton Factors,
DEALERS EXCLUSIVELY IN
FdIIKIUIV A Jill DOMESTIC EXCHANGE;
Coin, Unewrrent Money nnd Cotton,
lllAVEtbisday taken intopartne ship THOMAS
S. MORGAN. Ido this in recognition and ap
preciation of his unimpeachable integrity,and high
capaoity as a business man, and his long satisfac
tory and succes ful management of my commercial
aod financial atfairs, and Ms fidelity to my inter
ests, (having been with me almost without inter
mb-Blon liir more than filteen years.) I do, there
fore, commend b”n with confidence to ihe busi
ness public. E. M. BRUi E.
Augusta, Qa , Aug. let, 1806. augßl lm
TO TAX PAYERd.
THK attention of tax payers is called to the fol
lowing lesolution adopted by Council on this
date:
"Rwalovl, That tlie Treasurer be hereby instruct
ed to publish a notice to the tax payers of this
city to corns forward make returos of their prop
erty and pay tbe tax on the same, on or before
the 6th of September next, and immediate y there
after to proceed to issue executions against alt
defaulters"
I may be found at the Counotl Chamber in the
Court House during the usual hours
J. lr JOHNSON,
aug3l tOt City Treasurer.
IMPORTANT JO cCHOOL TEACHERS I
ASSISTANCE IN PURCHASING
TEXT BOOKS I
TEACHERS desiring assistance in re-opening
tbolr schools will find it to their interest to
address tbe understood immediately. He repre
sents the liberal publisheie, Sheldon & Cos., who of
fer unequalled advantages to Southern teachers.
Wo will arsist all teachers, and on such terms as
will bo satisfactory, no matter how limited their
means. GEO. C. CONNER,
aug3l ts Atlanta, Georgia.
FOR SALE. ~
HOUSE AND LOT, containing three-quarters of
an acre, i-ituated m tbe first range of Lots in
the Northern Liberties Tbe Hoc.se c*a tains* five
rooms and bail, cook room and servants* bouse,
stable, and all recoeseary outhouses. Occupied at
present by Dr. Sch ev
Terms moderate. Apply to
nug3l ts W, R. BROWN.
FOR SALE.
a DESIRABLE U USE AND LOT in
i\ upper pari of the ci yu’ Cos umbns. It
Is situated in one of the most desirable to
c aPties.
The Houso c-mming four rooms, with a wide and
airy Hall, and Dining R orn atiached, together with
Stom aid Bath Rocms,aa woil as superior oat
bui dines.
The House is furnish* and with Gs«.
A fine la-go G-irdo-i is also on the premises.
If desirable, tho BURNITURE wld also be sold
with tbe Hoobo.
Por particulars apply at tho store of
MR. NADLKB,
septß Its No. 80 Broad »t.
NO. 13-