Newspaper Page Text
sljn and times.
From the Mobile Tubuuo.
jf voim luoi is rusm, show it;
II your I >ot in pretty, tliow It,
\o mutter where or wlieu,
I.el ull f.'iir mm Join know it.
The foot taken all the men.
The taee, Ito fair amt lovely.
May . harm tne guzei '* eye.
Mnt il the foot In homely,
lie'll quickly pass her by.
If yonr foot is pretty, show II ;
When yon trip alonx file street;
I or It will catch the rafter eyes
of every man you meet.
Don’t lass yonr glossy ringlets,
Nor |n.m your lips so snoot;
hilt gently lift yeiir pottteoats,
Amt show your liamlsome feet
If yonr fool is pretty, show it,
At eoucert, hall ami fail ,
Koi that small pe.tal lilies,
Tells where your grams arr ;
I ho Hgure may ileeeiye nia.
All hooped and paddist iPer ,
Put let my ojA' survey the fi.nl,
I ask to see no more.
il your toot is pretty, show It,
II you want to catch the beaux.
No longer hide that tell-tale charm
heneulh so many clothes.
A araeeftil fool betiays a form,
I if rare ami taintless grace ,
Full rounded I laths it doth rtvea!
For fancy’s eye to trace.
If your foot is pretty, show it,
Yes, show it while you call;
’Twill help your other lovely cbainis
To win some nice young man.
The practiced eye may well distrust
A nicely padded breast;
Hut when It rests upon your foot.
It knows of all (lie rest.
t‘ai agrnplis.
General Carl Scbur/. has arrived at
New Orleans from an inspeolmg tour in
the interior of Georgia ami Mississippi,
en route North.
Orlando Payne, of (ho ex-Confederate
army, was kilted tu a duel by Captain
Throckmorton, of the IJutled Stales army
at Paris, Kntilitoky, a few days ago.
The Louisvilln I nton Pres antiouuces
tlie iniliotmenl of. Maj. r Oeuerul Palmer
and Brigadier Ooneral Bisbane fur ah
ducting, slaves auil otherwise tulertoring
with the slave law of Konltluky
We hear that hie llolinosa the I’ope hits
given positivo orders that all bis Bulls
shall be kept withm the prc< inois of thi
Vatioiau while the oatilo disease is rife.--
Punch.
OxlicacY.—A young lady refuse.! In
go into the arsenal the other day. be
cause she heard I bat smite ot the muskets
wore without breeches.
There are now but lorly Federal troops
iu all Bouthweetero Missouri, and they
ouly remain to dispose of some Govern
maul properly still remaining. This iis
expected to be done as early us the Ist of
October.
Thirteen brothers and sisters—iho old
est not -0 years of ago—now lie solo by
side in a grave yard in Maryland, all of
whom died of diphtheria. Eight of tht>ni
deceased within four weeks.
The guerrilla Qatowooil, long tho terror
of Upper Georgia and North Alabama, is
m Mexico. ills wile received a letter
from him a short time ago, and imme.li
ately left Uaylosville, Alabama, whore
she has been residing uiuoo tho war, with
the intention of rejoining her husband
The British force in Ireland may bo
roughly estimated thus : Cavalry and in
fantry, if,ooo ; artillery, 2,600 ; veteran
corps, armed pensioners, 2,100; militia,
1,600; constabulary police, 14,000; rev
enue police, armed and drilled, 2,200
total, 78,700.
“Wife, 1 am to live but a few hours at
most —1 shall soon be iu Heaven.” “V on
—you’ll never get any nearer than you
are now to Jtieavon, you old brute ! VouM
look well stuck up tu tloaveu -I think I
see you there now.” “Dolphus, Do}
pbus,” hoarsely growled the old man,
“bring my cane, au.i let uie larrup lha o|d
(rollup once more before I die.’’
The New York Tribune says of the
North Carolina eleotiou All tue candi
dates elected in Wake, Guilford and
Granville counties went before the people
avowedly opposed to uegro autirage, and
all, exoeptiug one, pledged against even
giving the blaok man the right to testify
in courts The election is undoubtedly a
triumph for the professed conservatives
A Washington dispatch of the 2(>th
says : Since Saturday the President has
granted one hundred and twenty-five par
dons principally to persons who come
under the $20,000 olauue. The clerical
force at the Executive Mansion is very
busily engaged, just now, in making out
the warrants of pardon, for the list just
granted. .No more requisitions will con
tinue to be issued trorn the Attorney Gen
eral’s office.
A New York dispatch of thn 2tilta says
Father MoKennon, pastor of the Church
of Our Lady of Mercy, who has recently
returned from a visit to Europe, preached
a sermon yesterday and took oooaeion to
oondenin the Fenian movement in the
strongest terms, lie stated that it was
creating great trouble in Ireland, and
that some young men had beeu transport
ed in oonsequence of it, and he earnestly
advised the members of his congregation
to have nothing to do with the move
ment.
A speoial dispatch to (he Cincinnati
tiazett*, dated Lexington, Ky., of the >tu,
soys: “A little speok of war has appeared
in Morgan county A man named Wil
liams, with about fifty followers, has ar
rested the llulled States Collector of In
ternal Revenue, and oompelled him to
desist from his business, lie has also
arrested every man who has brought a
suit against any Rebel, and oompelled
them to withdraw them A company of
United Stales forces attempted, without
suooess, to drive the gang from the coun
ty. More troops have gone to the scene
ot action. Geu. Rrisbin hopes to capture
the party."
Coavtnliim of tlie Southern People.
Some of the leading journals South,
says the St. L iqis Republican of the loth,
are disoussiug the expediency of holding
a convention ot delegates from the South
ern States, to declare the sentiments of
their constituents upon their lato and
present relations to the General Govern
ment I. is urged as necessary to disa
buse ih nublic mind of the North of the
errone , impressions made upon it re
specting iiio disposition of the South, by
gross misrepresentation, exaggeration,
and all those means of deception resorted
to by virions and unprincipled newspaper
correspondents.
The Kansas City Advertiser says Col.
Nelson, who bad reoenlly been along the
line of the Pacific Railroad, assured the
editor that the last rail of the road would
be laid on the 15th inst., Friday last.
About teu days more would be required
to finish spiking down the rails, and bal
lasting the road, when the cars would
run through from tit. Louis to Kansas
City.— Mo. Rep., 18f/i.
Foreign Aittva.
From the NiW Vork News of (he 27th
we take the following .
The Royal Mail Steamship Cuba, which
left Liverpool on the llithf und Queen.-.-
iov.ii ou the 17th in«t., arrived at Halifax
yesterday, with Iwo days later news. At
so extraordinary general meeting of the
Atlantic Telegraph Company, it was de
cided to lay down anew oable next year.
The company announced that they bad
concluded a contract with the Telegraph
Construction Comp my to manufacture
sad lay the new cable for the sum of five
hundred thousand pounds sterling The
Construction Company were to go to sea
with sufficient cable to complete tho pres*
eat broken one, aud use their best en
deavors to thaL end, without any addition
al charge. At the meeting of tho Cork
magistral ti, whicti w.*s largely attended,
a memorial to tho Govornmeut had boon
unanimously adopted,, praying for an un
mediato increase of the police aud milita
ry fori eof that county. There was wuoh
excitement in the county, and it was gen
erally conceded that the secret organtF.a
turn liud axauuiuU dangerous proportions.
At Dublin (he pulton had broken in aud
taken possession of the paper called the
Irish Pi',file., an alleged Fenian organ,
and arrested some twelve or fourteen per
, ouh couneotel wtihthe i ftioe,, who were
cenvoyud to li.e Castle Priuon. Tho arri
val of the Ghannel Fleet off Cape Clear
bad produced great consternation among
llmcoast population, hut it is added that
the people were satisfied on learning that
they worn the tjueen’s ships. Mention is
mads of a reported plot against the Em-
peror of the French, either on bin way to
Ban Soiiasiiau or his return to Bayonne,
the parlies to which were aliens, tuclud
a brother or OOU.sin of the Orsinis. The
cholera had increased so much at Mar
seilles that tho Mayor had summoned a
meeting of tho physicians to conceit
in ensures lor relief.. Much alarm prevail
ed among the people and large numbers
were leaving tuc place. The representa
tives of Dm Truss.on anti Austrian Gav
ernniofitH had 'reSpeflively Assumed tneir
administration ot all airs in the Buhleawig
lioUtoiu iJuunies, and issued & proolatua
tion to tho people, t ailing on them to
maintain public order anti loyally, and
promising them justii ) and liberality to
return. There bebit no material
change either in English consolidated
funds or American securities since the
sau.ug of the Moravian.
H«v. 11. VV. Bvt. licr o.« H<£r» Sus-
Rev. Henry Ward Btiocher opened the
political campaign at Plymouth church
last evoniug by a y ermon a good part of
which wan develop to an argument la
favor of nogro stilfragt*. lie claimed suf
frage an :t right of the negro, although tie
might ash it even rm other grounds. He
was sot ituivernal Hi.llVage, and would give
a vote to every man that lauds on i»ur
shores. At tho same limn, he believed
that tho four millions of Africans now
hero could be belter trusted with the bal
lot than the Irishman and foreigners that
swarm pure from tho old countries. Ha
believed, foo, that in withholding the
ballot, from women We are not acting up
to the spirit ol American iree iastilutions.
Mho should have every civil light tbtd
belongs to tho man.
Speaking of negro suffrage, again, Mr.
Beecher said : ‘ (l.itF abdicates, and is
false to bis attributes, if ihore is peace
betcre you settle that igieeuou of right.”
110 continued to spuak ot tlio duty on the
part of the strong to protect the weak.
(Inti of three things must happen to the
freedmen —thetr masters must take o«re
•if them, or wo must take care of thorn, or
they must take care of themselves. The
voice of the people, speaking as the voioe
of Hod, has decided that their old masters
rbjilJ take care of them no longer; aud it
is our duly to give them all the rights of
citi’/.enship, that they may be able to tako
caro of themselves. Iu coaolusion, ne
spoko hopefully of the luture ot tho coun
try, boliliving the people of the North and
ot the South will finally be more friendly
than over before—A. Y. World.
'4lir. At’<iti ini ti# oi ilouifiieailti.
Anting Commissioner Nelson, of tho
General Land Office, in answer to inqui
ries as to the right to take homesteads
under the Congressional statutes, replies
that the article requires five years aotual
continuous residence and cultivation from
dale of entry, before the department can
give the feo simple title by patent. Should
the party, alter entry, abandon or other
wise uot meet tho law, his claim would
be invalid, and the laud would revert to
the mass of the public domains. The
fourth section of the law declares that no
lands acquired under its provision shall in
any event become liable to the gatiefae
tion of any debt or debts contracted pi tor
to the isHtiiog of the patent under these
legal conditions, whilst the fee simple re
mains in the United Hiatus. It must bo
quite apparent that the taxing power
could not be successfully exercised in so
far as taxing the laud is ooucenied, what
ever might be the authority, for which no
opinionT.i expressed, to tax improvements
on the promises.
The tit Louis merchants are making
an organic.ed effort to import directly from
Europe by way of New Orleans An
sg <ot has gone io Liverpool to make large
purchases of similar goods as those im
ported dirootly into this port, which are
to be shipped to New Orleans and there
trans shipped directly on steamers for St.
Louis without touching the wharf. The
advantage possessed by the lake cities in
the direct trade is that wit h us no trans
shipment is necessary.
The wwk. of manufacturing the new
Atlantic Cable has commenced, and the
present arrangements are that it shall be
laid in May next- The Great Eastern
will then return from Newfoundland to
the spot where the old cable was lost, fish
it up, splice it, and complete the laying
to Newfoundland, thus giving two Atlautio
cables instead o! one.
lltrliltiiii.
The Commissioner of Infernal Revenue,
oil the 2u>h, made the iollowiug decis
ions
Butcher? who psy a license lav 01 too
dollars may retail other merchandise than
meat at. the name store, but may not ped
dle moats without a peddler’s license.
Butchers who pay a liceuse of five dol
lars, may peddle meat or fish without
peddler’s liuenso, hut cannot sell other
articles.
I'KSWtITrKS’ r.vv
The ti'eond Comptroller,of the Treas
ury has decided that deserters serving
after the expiration of original enlist
ment to make up time can only receive
the amount of pay allowed by taw during
the period covered by enlistment.
William tichouler, the Adjutant General
ot Massachusetis,,ia thoroughly convinced
that the Ist Massachusetts regiment tired
the volley at Chanoellorsville which killed
Stonewall Jackson. It will be hard to
convince others of the fact.
BEMIFIiL, BEHTIFUL.
Just Come and See
VIIB BBACTIFWI. VAHIBVY OF
DRY GOODS
FOR
FALL and WINTER WEAR,
NOW BEING OPENED AT
PHELPS’S, NO. 114.
Rot h Gentlemen and Ladies
WLLL FIND HERE
Every Article Their Ward
robe May Require !
4 »ine anti See! Come Quick
before iliey are all Sold !
BRING THE CHILDREN—CANDY A
PLENTY !
fit
TANARUS, E. BLANCHARD,
115 It ICO ID STREET,
(McROUUH’S OLD STAND,)
HAH JUST OPENKD A.
OHOIOE LOT OF
STAPLE AND FANCY
DRY GOODS,
Hats, Shoos, Blankets,
Umbrellas, &c,, &c.
CAT.,I. AND SEE THE STOCK.
fvsy* N.) Charges Made for Showing.
•egua lm
K. W. H.CHK, K (i ST®WART, Q. 8. STEWART
ACRE, STEW ART & CO
DEALERS IN
Men’s, Youths and Children’s
CLOTH IN 6!
ANl>
GENTS’ FURNISHING GOODS!
Ok ALL kinds, now on hand and daily
ARRIVING AT
No 91 Broad Street,
filthumßUS, GA„
Nerf door to Redd, Johnson <s' Co's oldstand
Bfc{»vm viv
VV". it. HFALS.
.1 as. N. Jl.hiKS, J. SID. ACKB,
I<u ma ty will formerly
Redd & Johnson, with Tillman.
MORE NEW GOODS!
OPENING aud to ARRIVE,
A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF
I>UY r 0-00 OS.
CALL AND SEE THEM AT
Broad Street,
Third Poor ABOVE Mauley & Bodges’s Corner.
Beals, Jones & Acee.
t ep‘22 2w ____________
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Fall and Winter Clothing,
FtIHSISHING GOODS, &e.,
A C n Hiw YORK PRICES!
ROSENFIELD& LEVI
161 Broad St., Columbus, da.,
Are now opening anew stock of
Fall and Winter Clothing,
CONSISTING OF EVERY VARIETY.
They have also on hand the LATEST STYLES of
Calicoes. Furnishing Goods,
Valises, Carpet Bags,
Boots and Shoes,
Hats and Caps,
and a great variety of other articles.
g*Sjf- Give as a call before purchasing
elsewhere.
Our Goods WILL BE SOLD AT NEW
YORK PRICES!
s«p9 lm
To My Friends and Patrons.
HATING sold ont my entire interest in the
Drug business to Messrs. DAWSON, COL
-1.1 ER A CO., I return my sincere thanks to ail my
kind friends who have so liberally patronized me for
the past ten years, and respectfiifly aek, in behalf
of mv successors, the same liberal patronage,
knowing they will be well treated, and as well
please.! at* »i any other House in the city.
.T S PEMBERTON.
Columbus,Sept. 13,1866 lm
DT. DAWSON, J.B. COLLIER, J. J. CLAPP.
MW SOS, COLLIER & CO.,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
DRUGGISTS,
No. 15(i llioatl Street,
t iH.UMIUJS, GEORGIA,
TTjroULD respect fully inform their friends and
Vy the public generally that they have
Freight Out the Large Drug Establishment
•F
Dlv. J. >4. PEMBERTON,
TJvuiei* Cook’n XTotel,
and have received the LARGEST STOCK of
DRUGS, MEDICINES, DYE-STUFFS
and Fancy Goods,
now being offered in this section of county, which
they offer
AT A SMALL ADVANCE ON COST !
TO COUNTRY MERCHANTS and PHYSICIANS
having hills filled we offer superior inducements,
as we put up our goods ueatly, pecked securely,
and at the VERY LOWEST PRICES. All we ask
is a trial, feeling perfectly satisfied that we will
give entire satisfaction.
Respectfully,
DAWSON, COLLIER A CO.
seplS dim
TO OWNERS OF COTTON.
We find that ths Urgs quantity of Cot
ton whioh we own and council in South
Western Georgia, aud ths unsettled con
dition of ths country, wiii require us to
establish a House at Apalachioola, Fla.,
for the purpose of reoeiving and forward
ing all Cotton to our Houses at Liverpool
and New York.
We will be assisted at that point with
the most eminent business tneu of the
country, who will Receive, Store, Gooi
prees and Forward all Consignments, pay
Taxes, Charges, and make advances upon
shipments to Watts, Crane & Cos., New
York, or W. C. Watts & Cos., Liverpool, or
Given, Watts St Cos., New Orleans, or will
forward Cotton on the most reasonable
terms, where owners prefer to consign to
other Houses.
Bagging and Rope supplied.
Shippers can rely upon prompt atten
tion. General patronage solicited.
Address,
E. M. Bruce, Morgan & Cos.,
«ept6 lm APALACHICOLA, SLA.
SOUTHERN LITERARY JOURNAL!
THE WEEKLY VISITOR,
Devoted lo thoice Literature, Romance, News
and Commercial Intelligence.
THE publication of THE WEEKLY VISITOR
will be commenced in Selma, Ala., on let Sat
ntdayin December next, and will be published
every Saturday following.
It 13 the puiposa ok' the proprietor to make this
Southern Uiih irt Joursal, in point of Interest,
literary merit, and mechanical execution, inferior to
no family paper published in the United States.
Eaori number will comaiu forty colntnos of origi
nal aud cnoice reading matter in an eight-page
form.
The services of many of the most eminent and
popular writers of tne country have been secured,
aud they are now writing thrilling romances for
its columns. One of deep and absorbing interest
w ilt be commenced iu the fiist number.
Particular attention xvili be given to Commerce,
Agriculture, etc. The publication of the most ap
proved recipes aud useful him* iu household econ
omy will not b 8 neglected.
Terms of subscription for the VISITOR have
been dxsd at a very low Fares, iu order that It may
be placed within the reach of all, and it is hoped
that several thousand subscribers can be secured
before the time for commencement of publication.
IE Rllb:
One copy, one year $1
“ u 9.x months 2
Any one making up a club of tea subscribers at
one post-olßee will receive the eleventh gratis.
All orders should be addressed to
J. P. ARMSTRONG,
Proprietor Weekly Visitor,
seplti dtf Selma, Ala.
TIIK
NEW YORK DAILY AND WEEKLY
NEWS!
TO THE PUBLIC !
/|>RE NEW YORK NEWS has battled against
i despotism for four years of blood and terror
in assertion of the sanctity of tb» Constitution. A
patriotism sufficiently broad to embrace both sec
tions bss been its only guide, and it refers now
with honest pride to its record to show that it taas
not turned to the right or to the left under all the
violence of arbitrary power.
True toils principles as Tbs Nrws has been thro’
tbe reign of terror, it challenges public confidence
in its honesty and independence tor tbe future.
The political transition of the present day opens
to Ths Nsws anew and wider field of usefulness.
Standing now, as it always has, on tbe inviola
bility ot the Constitution, according to the inter
pretation of the strict constructionists, it presents
a rallying ground for all, In both sections who are
friends of a generous conservatism.
Asa true and tried exponent of sectional
amity it occupies a position which makes it
tbe fitting mediator In holding up to the party cf
order in both sections, interests and principles
that give breadth and vitality to their alliance. As
an intersectional agent, devoted to freedom of elec
tion, to trial by jury, to the sanctity of the habeas
corpus,and opposed now as for four years of ter
ror It has been, to the centralization that dares to
trample on tbe rights of States, North or South,
Ths Nsws places itself as a candidate for support
before tbe great body of this once free people.
The olrcumciances of tbe moment make tbe dis
semination of the principles of Ths News a dnty of
individual patriotism. Every man who concurs in
its doctrines must, if he entertain a true sense of
freedom, do so In no spirit of indifference, but
rather with the earneetoeesof-a nigh trust. Jus
tified. nay boaud, in his love of liberty to do so, the
proprietor places the canvass he makes here of the
publio generally In tbe hands of those men who
give him the approval of their consciences as his
individual agents. Every reader of Tax News can
not avoid the conviction of duty which is here
pointed ont as the ground of the request, that he
urges Its claims for a wider support npon all his
trends and neighbors who give their earnest sym
pathies to the cause of “strict construction,” in
tersectional conciliation, and all the rights of tbe
citizen under ths system set up by our fathers of
liberty regulated by law. Th# proprietor of The
Niws calls, therefore, upon good and true Conserv
ative!, throughout the country to discharge to their
convictions of political right at this great crisis In
tbe country’s fortunes, the duty of giving to the
influence of his paper, daily or weekly, the wider
power for good which It seeks here throngb the
service of its individual supporters.
bend tbe names of all Friends of Constitutional
Liberty, and we will send them Specimen Copies.
TERMS:
New Fork Dally News, to mail subscribers, per an
num |lO 00
New York Daily News, to mall subscribers, 8
months 5 00
New York Weekly News, one copy, one yesr.sJ 00
Three Copies “ “ 550
Five Copies “ “ 875
Ten Copies “ “17 00
Twenty Copies “ “ 30 00
To Clergymen “ “ 160
And an EXTRA COPY to any Olub of Ten.
Any persoD sending a Club of Fifty for the
WEEKLY NEWS will be entitled to the DAILY
free for one year.
The NAME of the POST OFFICE and STATE
should In all cages be plainly written.
To insure safety in remittances, money orders
are preferable.
Address, BENJAMIN WOOD,
Daily News Building, 19 City Hall Bquare,
yepJS ts New York.
RAILROAD RECEIPT BOOKS,
TWO-QUIRK
Railroad Receipt Books,
For sale cheap at the
sepfi ts SDN OFFICE,
Georgia Academy for the Blind!
PARTIES interested are hereby informed that
the buildings in Macon having been restored
to this Institution, the School has been removed
from Fort Valley, and the exercises will be re
sumed In the former place on Monday, 8d October.
Papers of the State will greatly rerve this pabile
charity hy copying this announcement.
W D WILLIAMS,
* e P2i> Principal!
TO OWNERS OF COTTON.
In answer to numerous inquiries from
abroad we would say that we are prepared
TO TAKE CHARGE OF,
PPT IN OH.UKR AND
Ship any Lot of Cotton
in the States of Georgia, South Carolina or
Alabama, as we have local agents at nearly
every town and a corps of most efficient men,
selected for integrity, capacity and experi
ence, to take charge of every lot.
We will also pay all Taxes
and Charges ol' every
Description, and
MAKE LIBERAL ADVANCES
ON THE COTTON!
In short, we will take charge of the Cotton
on receipts or orders and give the
Owners no trouble whatever,
from the time we receive it until sold and
returns made by our houses.
WATTS, CRANE & GO,
New Fork, or
W. C. WATTS & CO.,
Liverpool, England.
We invite the especial attention of non
residents to our facilities.
E. M. BRUOE & UO.,
Augusta, Oa.
Located in Columbus as Agent for E &1 Bruce A
Cos., I am prepared to take charge ofCottous under
the above advertisement, and to make advances
thereon. lam also desirous of purchasing largely
and will pay full market rates.
FELIX ALEXANDER,
Office 106 Broad Street,
sep2ltf over WARE’S Drugstore.
GOODS IT WHOLESALE!
Montgomery, Ala.
D. BROWDER & GO.,
NO. 24 MARKET STREET,
MONTGOMERY,
HAVE JUST RECEIVED A LARUE STOCK OF
Dry Goods, Hats, Shoes
and Notions,
which have been purch used at Nett Cash Prices,
by the case, from Manufacturers and original Im
porters with a view to Wholesale Trade—consist
lug in part of
25 oases Prints,
10 cases Bleached Domestics,
Bales Sea Island Domestios,
100 pieces Pacific DeLaiues,
100 “ Fancy all Wool DeLaines,
100 “ Colored and Black Alapaca,
100 “ Fancy Poplins,
100 “ Mozambiquss and Lustres,
100 “ English and French Merinos,
300 “ of Swiss Jaconet Mull and
and Nainsook Muslins,
Black and Colored Silks and Velvets,
150 Pieces Irish Linens—assorted,
200 dezeu Linen Cambric Handkerchiefs,
100 “ Cotton and Madras “
60 pieces Silk “
100 dozen Neck Ties and Cravats,
200 “ Ladies’ Cotton Hose,
100 “ Ladies’ Plain and Embroidered
Linen Collars,
600 Ladies’ Frenoh-Wove Corsets,
100 dozen Gloves—assorted,
100 “ Suspenders,
100 “ Gants Half Hose,
200 “ Dress Braids,
200 “ Trimming Braids and Cords
100 Pieces Linen Crash and Diapers.
A full assortment of
Combs, Brushes, Hair Bins,
Keedles, Pins,
Spool Thread, Buttons,
TAPIS;,
Toilet Soap, Perfumeries,
HAIR NETS,
BELTS, BELTINGS BELT BUCKLES,
Dress Trimming's,
UMBRELLAS, CLOAKS, MANTLES,
LADIES’ HATS AND HOODS.
A large stock of
SHOES AND HATS,
OF GREAT VARIETY.
Indeed our Stook is a COMPLETE ONE,
which, in addition to our Retail Stock,
we have arranged in a separate and dis
tinct Department for Wholesale Trade,
and we respectfully
Invite Merchants to call upon
us and examine our Stock,
confident that we CAN MAKE IT TO
THEIR INTEREST TO BUY FROM US.
We are determined to
Sell these Goods as Cheap as
they can be bought In any
market In the Country.
D. BROWDER & CO.
Montgomery, Ala., Sept. 12 lm
SHOES, SHOES.
BLACK
and
RUSSET
BROGANS!
Best Grade.
—AT—
J. A. CODY’S.
gepli ts
BILLS OF LADING,
—AND—
Blanks of Every Description
Printed and for tale at tbe
eeplS ts SUN OFFICE,
THE SUN AND TIMES
BOOR mi.l JOB
PRINTING OFFICE
Is now well prepared to do all kiude o.
BOOK AND JOB PRINTING
in the
NEATEST HTY L. if. ,
and all orders will be filled
Promptly, Reasonably, and
Neatly.
CARD PRINTING,
EITHER
PLAIN, FANCY, OR IN COLORS.
Business, Wedding or Visting
O A. IM>
Printed at Shortest Notice.
Connected with the Office is a
BOOK BINDERY
In Charge of an Experienced Workman,
PREPARED TO DO
ALL KINDS OF WORK
Appertaining to a Bindery,
Orders from abroad will receive the same
attention as if the parties were present
to transact business, and will be
Promptly Filled.
GREATREDUcfioNINTREiGfrS
ON
OOTT O PT l
Quickest and Cheapest
ROUTE TO
NEW YOKK!
The Kailroaels south of Nashville have Agreed apon the following' Tariff of Freig-hts,
and will sign through Bills Lading to Johnsocville and Nashville :
From Eofanla, to Ala., Johnsonville- $lO 60 per bale, to Nashville,... $9 25
From Albany, Ga , to Johnsocville 10 00 per bale, to Nashvilie,... 8 75
Frem Columbus, Ga., via Mbooe, to Jobnscnville 10 50 per bale, to Nashville,... 9 25
From Macor, Ga., to Johnsonville 8 00 per bale, to Nashville,... 6 75
From Columbus, Ga., via West Point, to Johnsonville 10 60 per bale, to Nashville,.. 9 25
Prom Montgomery, Ala , via West Point, to Johnfionville.... 11 00 per bale, to Nashville,... 9 76
Prom West Point, Ga., to Johnsonville, 9 00 per bale, to Nashville,... 7 67
At Jobnionville, on the Tennessee river, a close
connection iimada with a fine daily line of steamers
to 8t Lonis. They will receive the Cotton and pay
all accrued chargee; to that point, and transpoit it
to St Louis, giving through bill ol lading to New
\ T ork. At St Louie the Cotton is transferred by
the boats to Broad Gnage, Mississippi and Ohio Riv
er railroad, free of drayage, and by themisca6-
ried to New York without change ot cars. If ship
pers prefer the route by way of Louisville, the
agents of the different Through Freight Lines
to New York, will receive it at Nashville and for
ward it all the way by Kail, b'‘.v‘<‘« «croed cbHr
ges without extra expense. The Nashville and
Louisville, and the Nashville and cl attanooga
Roads being connected, Cotton shipped by way ot
Johnsonville will not change cars at Nsshvi’le.
Rates from Johnsonville to New York $b per
bale- from Nashville (all Rail) 110 50, (as we are
advised ) Parties desiring to reship at Nashville,
Instead of Johnsonville, can have option of ship-
Ding by Steamboat to Cincinnati—“the Cumber
land River being in fine boating order,” at low
rates of Freight, not exceeding $2 per.bale to Cin
cinnati, and from that point overlthree different
lines of Railroad, at $o per bale. Cotton by either
route can be laid down in New York trom Eufaula,
Montgomery, Columbus or West Point, in twelve
days.
Shippers must consign to Steamboat Agent at
Johnsonvilie, and to Agents ot Through Lines, or
a Commission Merchant at Nashville. Govern
ment permit! must accompany each biil of lading
R BAUGH,
Supt W and ARB.
GEO Q HULL,
" Supt A and W P B R.
CHAS T POLLARD,
Prest M and WPEB.
W L CLARK,
Supt Muscogee Railroad.
VIRGIL POWERB.
Supt 8 W R R.
E B WALKER,
Supt M A W R R-
K H EWING,
Qen ! lFreight AgfiN&Cand NA N N BE
sbpfig lm