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RUN' AND TIMES.
THK LOVIC-KNOT*
I*V NORA I’EUKY.
Tyii lier lion net timtar Imr chin,
hit no.I htfr rttVtMi in;
Hut not Rlono in tho silken nimro
|)i.( ahfCHtnh ht*r lov«ly <1 ‘Utling hair,
for i\intr li«r bonnet uod<*r b*-r chin,
Mi. a young man’s lieirt within.
Th.-y wore ritrolbtifc t«K«thor up th« liitl,
\v r.>r* t n** wind women Mowing morry aud chill;
A <i it h nvv (ho curls h ir<>|itj»oine race
U i»vor tut* happy poach •colored sac« r
I hi-< »»ldli.K »ltil Imighintf, "ho lietl them in
i inicr h«*r huauti al dimpled chin.
\ jt i>W u h col -r «** the b'oom
O' the pink, st tmchiaV tuning plume
\i! ever ‘he cliPekH of tilt* prettiest girl
'(hit ever Imprisoned t» romping curl,
* in eying her iionnet under her chin.
Tied h young nirtii’n heart within.
ieeper and steeper giew flic hill,
Madder, merrier, chillier "till
Ts t> western wind blew down and plaved
The a iMoet t iekrt with the little maid,
•■». lying her bonnet uoder her chiu,
. ; n- tied u young luan'ri hea»t within.
o western wind do yon think It wat lair
(<• i i«v •mOtj turks wiiii her floating tiaii ?
I ,ii lly, gleefully and * your heel
t id w tier ttgaiu.lt tilt* touiw mao’# hi east,
vVo- re ne as gladly folded her in.
A 1 1 kissed her mouth aud dirnpieJ cum.
O i KPery Vine, ym lit le thought
n h nr ago, when you heaoiight
I *• i| ouutry lan to walk with you
M.**r the euu had dried the dew,
U r*H» perilous duuger you'd he in
As she nod her bonnot under her chiu.
A Htedoici of Ueiai.
PAuy (ellu of Die misfortunes of Nonius,
*I. > wasi proscribed by Mark Antony for
me sale of his famous opal, but who,
► noner than surrender ins treasure, val
nt'l at £20,000 of-our uiou<-y, wont into
voluntary exile. The story told by the
r .nie writer of Cleopatra’s wager with the
inumvir, (hat the would upend upon a
H t>gle dinner a sum equivalent to £l,*
000,100, i« better known The queen was
accustomed to wear in hereare two pearls,
and when her lover ridiculed the banquet
i ihi had been prepared as too expensive,
. ae throw one of these into a vessel rs the
v longest vinegar, dissolved it, and drank
i -j 11'. The other was to have followed,
ion the umpire, by declaring that Antony
bad already lost the wager, preserved it :
and afterward, on the Oouquest of Egypt,
i was sawn in two, to make pendants tor
the ears of Venus in the Pantbeon.
Mr. King reproduces this story to dig*
credit it, assuring us no aoid the human
».ocuach can endure is capable of entirely
omsolviiig a pearl, oven after long maoer
a urn The wily queen, be surmises,
swallowed the pearl in some more agree
able potation than vinegar, and, in order
in K ain her wager, invented the tialion of
ii aisuolutiou, secure of its ultimate re
covery. but there was another pearl dt
unrivalled magnitude, to which a more
i -in.olio tale attaches. This was the gem
niiisiued by a diver at .the price of bis
lif«. for (be .S.ssauiau king Poroses. No
prized was it by the mouaroh that it oo
copied bis thoughts oven in death. In the
supreme moment of h.s fate, when about
i,i perish in the pitfall into which he had
b-en entrapped by the feigned retreat of
in« enemy, be plucked from bis right ear
t'cs glory of his reign and hurled it be
s ire bun into the abyss, deriving oomfort
even then Irani having cheated the foe of
wist would have heen[ooneider«d the most
gioiious trophy of their victory. In later
< nuns when ihe diamond bad supplanted
ihe pearl in publio estimation, we have
the story of that known as tho Haney, the
history of which, generally oonfounded
web that of Charles toe bold, is here our
really given. The famous stone was unce
com by its owner, bigueur de Haney, to
floury IV., who wanted to raise a loan on
i' The servant to whom its transmission
wat entrusted was beset by robbers and
murdered. His master, however, recov
ered the oorpse, and oouutiug upon the
i ipeiliente of tiis faithful envoy, opened
it and bail the satisfaction of discovering
iii tiein his lost treasure
Itonaparte mny lie said to have founded
h ; n loriuuea upon a diamond, fur after
ih i eighteenth Brumaire, it was by pledg
iii ■ iCe celebrated ••regent" he procured
ills binds indispensable for the Oonsolida
iiou of his power. The finder of this
: b.iue, a slave, is said to have conoealed
i> hi a gash made for its reception in the
calf of his leg, aud then to have esoaped
b> Madras. Here he fell in with an Eng
li b i kipper, who, by the promise of tind
i' fa purohusor in consideration of re
ceiving a moiety of what was to be real
-I, lured him on board ship, and there
disposed of his claims by pitohing him
>u i tho sea. It afterward came into the
po it eesion of Gov. Pitt, to whom, howev
i-i , ii must have been a source of fearful
a;i*iaiy, Binoe we read he never made
I,wu beforehand the day of his coming
in town, nor slept twice consecutively in
ib‘ same house until 1717, when he dis
pon'd of his harassing possession to the
regent Orleaus
i<Vr liuptacliing i'mldcat Jobaioii
ir.e Boston Cosmonwoalih (Sumner’s
ergen), is intensely bitter on “wooden
■in u.eg State,” “the Jersey of New Eng-
Is.while its London correspondent
. 'I s thus for the impeachment of the
President :
I'tiere should be some chivalry soms
wni're, enough to fight the President and
his Cabinet, one and all, to the death, and
ptuoli the spoil out of their teeth. Shame
mi un-in, one and all ; on Johnson, who
h is basely betrayed those who plaoed him
in power, and the negroes to whom he of
t’Ti-d himself as a Moses ; on Seward, on
B i non, ou the whole eet, who have not
1 1-o tumor to resist him, and, failing suc
* s-, to abandon and help to impeach him ;
nud—alas, alas!—shame on the whole
N irth, who not only permit for one mo
on nt this wrong to go on, but actually
luoo.ate to arraign their infamous agents at
Washington.”
Mr. Stephens.
A Boston paper commenting upon the
Connecticut election says: “We learn
• hat A. H. Stephens, uow confined in Fort
Wa-reu, lain favor of the impartial suf
frage which Connecticut repudiated,—
thai is, he is in favor of allowing negroes.
I'lulified by an educational test, to vote.”
Xuis, on the Connecticut definition, makes
S'r-i'hens a “radioal republican.”
Ad gas. Nothing more. Mr. S. is a
humane Christian gentleman, and there
foie in favor of educating the ignorant
blacks—not, however, we presume with a
view to their political equality with the
while;.
Safe.
The S.) le Advertiser of the 13th learns
that the su uer Jewess reported lost in a
et >ini between New Orleans and Mobile is
sate. She was lying at Bird’s Island.
fee Savannah Herald states that Hon.
Thomas E. Lloyd, member eleot to the
Stale convention, has besn pardoned by
the president.
An a wall or Wl«dwar«l—What th.
President Held to Senator Wilson.
Senator Wilson, at a Republican meet
ing in Philadelphia on Saturday night,
said:
"A day or two ago I said to President
Johnson, ‘there are differences of opinion
in regard to negro suffrage. In my State
we are all one way. We are all for seou
rity for the future. We di not ask any
indemnity fo* the past. There is no in
demnity for the 325,100 dead heroes who
lie under the sod o( Southern battle tioldi.
There is no indemnity for widows and
orphans—none I We oan forgive their
murderers ; hot we want security that our
sons shall not be murdered in the future.
We want loyal men to govern America
forevermore.’ I asked the President if he
made any discrimination among Ihe men
who nleoted him on account of their views
on suffrage or on reconstruction. The
President said he never had made any such
distinction, and never intondeil making
any in tho lutu r e—that he was in favor of
the freest nnd fullest discussions of all the
questions now arising before us. And bo
long as we have broad toleration and free
disouHsions, we can go right on, shoulder
lo shoulder, arguing, dismissing and ex
amining i In-no questions that are before
ub to be solved, and I believe now, ss 1
did during tho war, that we will solve
these questions right, and that our coun
try will come out in the future glorious
and free!"
•‘Pellucai Preachers ”
The Louisville Journal has recently
read this class of divines a wholesome
lecture. In its issue of the 4th, we find
the following ;
“We have received a communication
from Munfordville, written, we pieeu.no,
by a clerical gentleman, in reference to
our aniole upon ‘Political Preachers,’ in
whioh ho wishes to know 'how the clergy
aud the churches of this country are to
understand the article in question.’ He
asks, ‘Go you advise us to give up entire
ly the politioel issues of the whole oouu
try V As preachers, yes, every bit of it.
Preachers as citizens have the same right
that other citizens have, of course, but as
preachers they have nothing to do with
•politioal issues’ or ‘political sins.’ They
have no business to introduce such topioi
into the pulpit. If they do, they disgrace
both it and themselves
“Let our correspondent and his breth
ren stick to their texts, we repeat, and lei
politics alone. They have enough to do
in their own line.”
Life Compared To A Clock'
Our brains are seventy year olocks
The angel of life winds them up once for
all, theu closes tbs cases and gives the
key into the hand of the angel of resurreo
non. Tie tao ! tic tac ! go the wheels of
thought; our will oannot stop them ; they
cannot stop themselveß; sleep cannot si ill
them ; madness only makes them go fast
er; death alone oan break into the case,
and seizing the ever swinging peudulum
Which we call the heart, silenoe at lasi
tho clicking of the teirible escapement we
have oarried so long beneath our aching
forheads. If we could only get at them
as we lie on our pillows ahd count the
dead beats of thought after thought, and
image after image, jarring through the
overtired orgau 1 Will nobody blooti
those wheels, uncouple their pinion,
cut the siring whioh holds those weights ?
What a passiou comes over uu sometimes
for silence and rest, that (his dreadful
mechanism, unwinding the endless tapes
try of time, embroidered with spectral
figures of lifs and death, would have hut
one brief holiday I —o IV, Holmes.
ll.markabl. Medium.
A remarkable ‘'medium,” iu the person
of a litile girl, twelve years old, is now
exciting the wonder of the residents of
Springfield, Mass. After being looked in
a square wooden cabinet, with her bands
lied lightly behind her baok and fastened
to a nug in the hack of the cabinet, she
ties and unties knots iu cords, places a
ring on any finger, in her ear, and in her
lap, plays on a drum and triangle, rings
a belt, talks plainly with a large block of
wood iu her mouth, changes a brass hoop
from her neck to oue foot, aud vice versa.
At a late meetting of Mississippi Plant
era at Vioksburg a committee of five was
appointed to write a memorial addressed
to Msj. Gen. O. O. Howard, Commission
er of tne Freedmen’s Bureau, Washing
ton City, setting forth the injustice of co *
leoting from leesees and planters the one
eight and one-tenth tax on ootton grown
the present year, as is proposed by the
Freedman’s Bureau.
The Bristol (Teno.) News of the Oth
Inst, says: “Mr. Stover, daughter of ihe
President, is in town, and will remain a
day or two. Her husband, Col. Daniel
Stover, of the 4th Tennessee Infantry,
died in Nashville in 1803 ; and Mrs. S.
visits her native State at the present time
to have his remains removed from Nash
ville to Carter oounty,”
The radicals are clearly displeased with
the alacrity manifested by Mississippi,
Alabama and South Carolina, in yielding
obedience to the constitution. They liud
nothing to oomplain of in their notion,
and so begin to talk satirically of their
sudden couversion.— Boston Post.
litturansc on Cotton.
From a note in the Savannah Herald
we learn that a meeting of the board of
commissioners ot the Fire Insurance com
panies was held in New York, a few days
since, to oonrider the propriety of ebang
ing the premium on ootton insurauce.
The board deoided, by two-thirds vote,
to make the rate on cotton, and on other
goods in stores where ootton is stored,
one dollar and thirty-five cents on each
hundred dollars, with privilege to the
keepers or owners of the stores to pick
ootton on the premises.
Where a stipulation is made that there
shall be no ootton picking, the rate will
be one per cent. The large companies
will adhere to this aotion ; and the effect
of it will be to induce ownere of goods
to separate their ootton from their mer
chandise.
A man in Buffalo was stabbed and kill
ed the other day while attempting to break
his wifa’s head with a bottle. It is
enough for men to destroy their own
heads with the bottle without trying to
smash those of their wives with that
deadly weapon. —Louisville Journal.
The Chattanooga Garette says: A man
from Nashville was shot and killed a few
days ago while standing on the platform
of a train of oars, this side of Knoxville,
by a gentleman who was hunting in the
woods. It was entirely accidental. We
were unable to learn the name of the un
fortunate young man.
The King of Hanover has written an
opera oallod »The Hermit of Felopon
nesus. ”
It All. KO AD imtkCTUHV.
MUSCOr/ZZ RAILROAD.
L«iveOolumbu»7 00 am I Leave Macon 7 23 a m
Arrive at Macon 4.10 p m | Ar. at Colombo!) 4 24 p m
MOMTOOMkKY AND WRST POINT RAILROAD.
LwaveGlrard 0 23am I L’veMuiitKrn’y.4.oo a in
Ar MoniKomory.fl.l6 p m L’ve W. Point..l 15 a m
Ar. Wo.t Point.. 12.00 in | Ar.at Girard. .6.45 p m
MORILI AND OIRARD RAILROAD.
knave Girard 2.00 p m I L’ve 11. Spr’gn 5.35 a m
Ar. Un. PpriiiKi. .6.30 p ni | Ar. at Girard. 10 00 a m
ATLANTA AND TV LSI POINT RAILROAD.
Leave Atlanta .6 oo a iu | L’ve West Poiut.l «0p m
Ar West Poiut.l2 04 pm | Arrive Atlanta 7 03 p m
MACoM AND WESTBRN RAILROAD.
DAY TRAIN.
Leave Macon... 7.50 a m I Leave Atlanta.. .7.20 n m
Ar. at Atlanta.. 4.05 p in | Ar. at Macon. ....3.20 p m
NIOiIT TRAIN.
Leave Macon.. 8.30 p m I Leave Atlanta.. .6.50 p m
Ar. at Albania. 3.23 pm | Ar. at Macon 630 a m
»OUTH-WEyTKRN RAILROAD.
Leave Macon. .7.23 a m I Leave Kafau1a....5.10 a m
Ar. at Kot'aalH.6.l3 pin | Ar. at Mar-ou 4.10 pin
MAIL TRAIN ON ALBANY BRANCH.
L’vt Srnitliville 2.42 p m I J.navn Albany ...7.30 am
Ar. at Albany. .4.84 p in | Ar. at Huiilhville 9 09 a m
CENTRAL RAILROAD.
Trains run each way tri-wcekly, leaving Macon
on M unlay a, Wednesdays aud Priduya, and return
alternate days.
Leave Macon 7 51) am I L’ve Eaton’on—B 00 a m
Ar.at Katonton. 121 pin | Arat sfacon 1.38 a m
MACON AND BRUNSWICK RAILROAD.
Leave Macon 330 pm I Leave.l miction.6 30 a m
Ar ai Junction.. 6.40 p m | Ar. at Macon. 10 20 a m
(i BO ROM RAILROAD.
Leave Atlanta..6.oo a tn I Leave Augusta. 5 35 a id
Ar at Augusta..7.oo p m | Ar. at Atlanta. .6.80 p m
WESTERN AND ATLANTIC RAILROAD.
Leave Atlanta..7.4s p in I Lv Cliatiauoogab 45 p rr.
Ar Chattanooga 5.10 a m | Ar. at Atlanta. .5.10 a m
NASHVILLE AND CHATTANOOGA RAILROAD.
I.v O'nattatieoga 7 30 a m I Lv’e Nasliville...B.Co a m
Ar atNHHhville.B.3o pm |Ar Chattanooga.93o p m
LOUISVILLE AND NASHVILLE RAILROAD.
Leave Naslivilie 7 00 a m 7 45 p m
Arrive Louisville 5 00 p m 6 00 a m
Leave L luisvllle 7 00 a ni 7 00 p m
Ariive Nawhvlile 5 30 p in 6 30 a m
General Business
Atkins, Dunham & Cos.,
CoiiimisKlonand Forwarding
MERCHANTS.
APALACHICOLA, FLORIDA.
ocß-tf
B ARNETT A CO.
COTTON FACTORS,
fiItOCUBS AID (10 Iff All 881 ON MERCHANTS,
Corner Si. Clair an«l Broad tti ,
Columbus Ga.
PROMPT ATTENTION given lo all Cons gnments
and HiipiiionU of Cotton to New York, New Or
leans and Liverpool. Liberal advanced made gu
consignments. Beptl ts
D. E. WILLIAMS & CO.,
Receiving and Forwarding Mer
chants,
Office Ao. Sl» Itroad Street,
Coluinbusy Gu.,
POSSESSING every facility, with aa experience
of six years, they will gi?e every attention to
all business entrusted to their care.
REFERENCE
.1 Eunia A Cos., Hard ware Merchants, Columbus, Ga.
Estes A Jflro., “ “ “ •*
Thus. Pullum & Cos., Uuion Springs, Ala.
seplT ts
WARNOCK & CO.,
Warehouse and Commission
JVI K HC HANTS,
COLIIDIBIJS, 6EOKGIA.
IJVVVVv WE now havo arnplo S I'O It AG
£AuHHkOI >M l"r ail CUT'fON c<'n,i|;n«dutt||«y
-f-V: .’.“"d, us. Prompt attootion given
THE SALE OF COTTON
AND
O T II £ R PROD 0 OB!
«i“ADVANCES made on COTTON for ship
ment. WAUNOOK A Cos.
Columbus, La., Out 3,1865 ts
F. J. CONANT. A. X. YuUNG.
OONANT & YOUNG,
Commission Merchants,
l¥«. 39 SOUTH STREET,
NEW YORK,
Oiler tlieir services
For Sales Cotton, Tobacco,
AND
OTHER PRODUCE.
AND WILL PimCHASK ON ORDKB,
Goods of All Kinds.
RKI'ER TO:
Atkins, Dunham & Cos, Apalachicola ;
G K Woods, Euianla;
E B Young, “
\V H Young, Columbus;
K M Qunby, “ oc” 3m
DISSOLUTION!
T|VHE Brin of HUdIES & HODGES is thi» day
J dissolved by mutual consent. The firm name
will be need by either partner in making settle
ments. The Books are kept at the office of Fon
taine A Hughes.
W H HUGHES,
W 0 UODC4ES.
Columbus, Sept 19,1865 oc3 lm
NEW FIRM.
SY\YVv THE undersigned beg leave tn in-\\ \\ \\
jUw|Aß6irui their friends and the publicjgWgtU*|
BSSESgenorally, that they have this dayc—• -
formed a copartnership uudertbe name and style
FONTAINE & HUGHES,
for the transaction of a
WAREHOUSE AND GENERAL COMMISSION
BUSINESS.
All business entrusted to them shall receive
prompt atteotiou. Our Warehouse, ia process of
erection, will soon be ready, but in the meantime
»e will provide storage tor our patrons nutil the
building is nnished. Our office at present is on
Kandolph street, tn W W Garrard’s building, near
the old Lowell Warehouse.
JOHN FONTAINE,
W II HUGHES.
Columbus, Oct 3,1865 ts
WITHERS & LOUD,
GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
AND
PURCHASING AGENTS,
Third, between Cherry and Mulberry Streets,
MACON, GEORGIA,
SOLICIT consign ments of Merchandise, Country
Produce of all kinds, Cotton Yarn*, Sheet
ings, Osnaburgs, Wool, Cettou, Syrup,
Manufactured and Smoking Tobacco, Ac.
Orders for any article in our market promptly
Ailed. Gold and Silver bought and sold.
Special atteution given to the purchase of Cot
ton by our Mr Loud, who has 23 yeais’ experience
in that business. WSI W WITHER!).
Late of Withers A Cos. Atlanta. (Ia
P H LOUD,
Late of Mcßride, Dorsett A Loud.
REFERENCES:
We respectfully refer, by permission, to Messrs
Barrett A Bell: Mitchell. Reed 4 Cos. Lee. Jone- &
Cos, D P Ferguson 4 Langston, Crane A- Hammock,
Atlanta. Ga. and J IV Fears A Cos. Dunn 4 Mnng
hant, G F A 11 U Oliver, .1 L Baußbury, E C Gran
nies. Macon, Ga, Messrs Kayrnou & Uo. Joyce, Al
auder 4 Cos, Eufauia, Ala. augSl ts
W. r U- WOO D:
General Commission & Forwarding Merchant,
Np3 APALACHICOLA, FLA. 3m
MUSIC BOOKS
Bound in the Best Style
at the
sepia ts SUN OFFICE.
Livery andSale Stable.
McIiEIIEE, HAYNES & CO.,
Suressors to R. F. Harris & Cos.,
IIKOAD St., BELOW COOK’S HOTEL
jfk Tlio und©rsii<be<i having pnrohan
ed tba T' ' rK
Slfiv tieluir^tbe^CßOSirAW LOT,” fronting on
Broad street, where they have arranged the largest
and most commodious STABLE anil LOTS in the
city, and will keep always on hand
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES AND SADDLE
HORSES,
To Hire on lteaaoaable Terms.
HORSES BOARDED at our Stablea will receive
careful attention, ami we will endeavor to pleaie
all who may plane HOUSES FOR SALK with us.
We would call the particular attention ol DRO
t KKS to our large and well-arranged Lois for drove
tf MoGKHKE. HAYNKS Sc CO.
Livery and Sale Stable
partiiis with the heat of
Buggies, Carriages & Horses,
and we will
BUY OR SELL STOCK.
We will do our utmost to please all who may fa
vor us with their patronage.
Our Stables are oil Oglethorpe street, opposite
the old Oglethorpe House.
6 JOHN DIBBROW A CO.
Columbus, AugSl ts
LIVERY AND SALE
STABLE.
THE undersigned is now
f-.!’- prepared to supply tbetoib
carriages,
HUKBEM, aud everything iu tile Livery Business
Also for FUNERALS he is prepared to furnish a
FINE HEARSE, at abort notice.
HORSES TAKES ON BOARD ASD SALE,
and every attention paid to them.
A. GAMMELL.
Columbus, Oct 12 ts
FRENCH RESTAURANT,
No. 42 Broad Street, Columbus, Ga.
THE undrsigned has recently been to
great expense in thoroughly renora- lak
ting his establishment, and is now well yjKSpah
prepared to supply customers with ev- “
erything the Columbus markets afford, as well as
delioftciesfrom abroad.
Meals furnished at ail hours, aud every at
tention paid to guests.
Connected with the Restaurant is a S4LOON
supplied with the choicest LIQUORS, WINES aud
BEE 3.
ocS ts JOHN CARUQHI.
Saratoga Restaurant,
WEST HIDE BROAD STREET,
Next Door to D, P. Ellis’s Auction House,
UP STAIRS,
(FORMERLY DR. WOODRUFF’S OFFICE.)
_ Ladies or families wish-v v
log meal© sent to f
rooms caß bave them sent
** any part of the city at
reasGuahle rates.
ocs ts D. B. CALDWELL.
Dr. Carlisle Terry,
RESIDENCE Jackson street, east of Court Honee,
Office at IJrquhart A Chapman’s Drug Store.
PRIVATE CONSULTING OFFICE VV STAIRS.
Persons from a distance requiring SURGICAL
OPERATIONS will he furnished with rooms aud at
tendance. s«pl2 ts
Prescription Drug Store.
DR. S. B. LAW
I S PREPARED, at 77 BROAD STREET, to put
1 U]>, at all hours, Prescriptions with the bed
aud purest Drugs. 4 sep£ Brn
DOCTOR STANFORD
RESUMES the practice of Medicine und Surgery.
Case* from a distance requiring surgical atten
tion can find comfortable accommodations in the
city.
Office hours from 11 io 2 P. M. _ sent 6 3m
V. W. WYNNE,
Attorney at Law,
IT TILL practice iu the Courts of the City of Go
ff V iumbus, and adjoining counties in Georgia
ami Alabama. Will also give personal attention to
the preparation and presentation of application for
special pardon in Washington City.
Office over Spear’s Jewelry Store, Broad Street.
oct!3 ts
ALEX. C. MORTON, ~
HTTOttNEY A NO COUNSELLOR AT
LA W ,
OFFICES NO. 106 BROAD STREET,
Columbus, (Georgia.
MR. MORTON is in readiness to prepare eases
to be brought iuthe State Courts of this Cir
cuit, when they are established, and to arrange de
fences against anticipated suits in said Courts.
He will attend the United Htates Courts which
hold in Georgia, and on special retainer, the Su
preme Court of the United States.
He also attends to the preparation of cases for
Special Pardon, under Presideut Johnson’s Am
nesty Proclamation of May 29th, 1865.
■epS 3m
JAMES JOHNSON. 1. T. DOWNING.
Johnson & Downing,
ATXORNKYB AT LAW,
•ep6 COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. 3mo
S. Rothschild. F. Rothschild
S. Rothschild &Bro.,
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
BOOTS AND SHOES,
21 Warren St., Now York.-
ocß 8m
Saddles, Bridles, Harness,
Collars, Whips, &c.
ffS^ BUGGY harness, Mjgll.
6 COACH HARNESS’ ar
DRAY HARNESS, WAGON HARNESS. EXPRESS
HARNESS. Also SADDLES and BRIDLES MADE
and REPAIRED TO ORDER.
KENT 6v CO.,
on the corner, up stairs, over Barnetc A Co’s
sepl2 6m and oppsite Gunby’s corner.
Dress Making!
MRS S. J. DECKROW (formerly Miss Glenn)
has removed from Broad street to Thomas,
between Jackson and Troup streets, near south
east corner Court House Square, opposite Mr
S’. A. Jepson’s, and is prepared with the LATEST
FASHIONS
To Make Ladies’ and Children’s Dresses
AND OVER-GARMENTS’
Thankful for past favors a continuance of patron
age is respectfully solicited.
sep26 lm MBS. S J DK r, KF I W.,
WILDMAI, 'SOUJVG & BROTHER,
EXCHANGE BROKERS,
No. 110 (East Side) Broad St.
Gold, Silver, Bank Notes,
STOCKS AND BONDS,
FORKIGN ASD DOMESTIC EXCHANGE,
BOUGHT AND SOLD,
Money Invested as Parties May Direct.
City Council Money for Sale.
A NEW SUPPLY OF CHANGE HILLS,
l’s, 'J’s, 35c. and 10c.
septl 2m
BLANK U. S. TREASURY
Permits to Ship Cotton,
For sale at THIS OFFICE.
E. BLAU,
Up Bta«r», Btaaonlc Hall Building,
BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS, GA.,
House, Sign and Ornamental Painter,
Is prepared to fill all orders with dispatch and sat
iafaction.
orll Sl-oin ’ *
METROPOLITAN HD TEL
(A/ute Brown’s,)
WA**H I NGTON, L), C
mute leading Uotel, Rcnovateu and Kbfurnmhiii,
JL is now’in perfect order lor the reception and
accommodation of its old patrons.
oc4 3m
tfeneral Collecting Agency.
IJVIK undersigned is now prepared to receive
ALL. ACCOUNTS FOR COLLECTION,
both from tile North and the South.
My office, for the present, will be at the Law Rooms
of lion James M Russell, over tile store of H G
Mitchell 4 Ci, (late Guuby * Cu.)
1 refer to Messrs Gnnby *oo, J Buuis4Co, Co
lumbus; E A Wilcox, Cotton Broker, Mai-on; Juo
B Walker 4 Sons, Augusta ; J MoNab, biufaula, Al
abama; John W Anderson & 00, Savannah, Ga.
oc4 3m WM. H. HENNKTT.
PHCENIX FOUNDRY
—AND—
MACHINE SHOP
IS now in successful operation, and prepared to
make GRIST and SAW MILLS aDd all kinds oi
MILL WORK to order. We keep constantly on
baud:
t-TTGAR MILLS,of all sir.es; BARK MILLS;
GIN GEARING; IRON RAILING;
KETTLES from Id to 100 gallons;
OVENS, SPIDERS, WASH POTS. PLOWS, Ac.
All kinds of IRON and BRAfS Castings, made to
ordsr. Our prices are reasonable, give us a call
COUNTRY PRODUCE taken in exchange for
work at market price. L HAIMAN & 00.
sel4 ts
L. W. WALL. R. THOMPSON.
WALL & THOMPSON,
Retail Grocers and Commission Merchants,
132 Broad Street, Columbus, Georgia.
HAVING a largesloreroom, we are prepared to
do business iu the i-.dromission liue, and respect
fully solicit a share of public patronage. Prompt
returns made on all consignments.
Will ke->p constantly on band all kinds of COUN
TRY PRODUCE—in facta
Fif‘st-Cla*g Family Grocery.
Farmers will do well to give us a call before j/ui
chasiiig elsewhere.
Reference—Merchants generally of Columbus,
ocl lm
J, H. BRAMHAI.L,
Practical Watchmaker KjggP
AND MANUFACTURER. OF J
FINK WATCHKS,
90 Broad Street. Columbus, Georgia.
A large misoftment of
FINK GENEVA, ENGLISH AND AMERICAN
Gold and Silver Watches,
CHAINS, 4c., Ac, CONSTANTLY ON HAND.
All kinds of repairing done at short notice.
aug3l ts
JT. P. MURRAY,
46 Broad Street, Columbus, Oeergia,
Maker and Dealer in Guns,
All kinds of Gun Material and Articles in
tho Sportingr Line.
RE-STOCKING aud REPAIRING done with
neatness and dispatch
Keys fitted and Locks Repaired.
HATS
AT
F. LAWDON’S,
BROAD STREET.
II^ r £\*s.
a.ptl ts
TO OWNERS OF COTTON.
In answer to numerous inquiries from
abroad we would say that we are prepared
TO TAKE CHARGE OF,
PUT IN OKI)HU 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 of every
Description, and
MAKE LIBERAL ADVANCES
OX 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 & CO.,
New York, or
W. C. WATTS & CO.,
Liverpool, England.
We invite the especial attention of non
residents to our facilities.
E. Mo BRUOE & 00.,
Augusta, Ga.
Located in Columbus as Agent lor E U Brace A
Cos., 1 am prepared to take charge of Cottons under
the above advertisement, and to make advances
tbereoD. lam also desirous of purchasing largely
and will pay full market rates.
FELIX ALEXANDER,
Office 95 Broad Street,
Bep2l ts over ENNIS’S Hardware Store.
Georgia, mi scooee county.—
Kichard R. Goetchins has applied for Letters
of Administration on the estate of Samuel K Hodg
es, deceased, late of said county :
All persons concerned are helehy notified to show
cause (if any they have; why the administraiion oi
•aid estate should not be granted to said applicant
at the Court of Ordiaarv to beheld in ami for said
oounty on the first Monday in November next.
Given under mi hand this 22d September, 1865.
sep24 4w ,INO JOHNSON. Oi dinary.
To the Voters of Columbus.
IN compliance with the law requiring the names
of all persons entitled to vote at the annual
election, for “Mayor and Aldermen and other offi
cers” of the city of Columbus, to be registered,
I have opened a list at the Council Chamber, in the
Court House, for this purpose.
M M MOORE, Clerk Counci l
seplo 2m
THE SUN AND TIMES
BOOK n.ii<l .1015
PRINTING OFFICE
Is now well prepnred to do all kinds o.
HOOK ID .Kill PRINTING
ih the
NEATEST HTY Ia K
and all orders will bo filled
Promptly, Reasonably, aud
Neatly.
ESPECIAL
ATTENTION
GIVEN TO
CARD PRINTING,
EITHER
PLAIN, FANCY, OR IN COLORS.
Business, Wedding or Visting
CARDS*
Printed at Shortest Notice.
Connected with tho Ofiicy ia a
BOOK BINDERY
Iu Charge of ;ta Experienced Workman,
PBEFARED TO DO
ALL KINDS OF WORD
Appertaining to a Bindery.
Orders from abroad will receive the same
attention as if (lie parties were present
to transact business, and will be
Promptly Pilled.
GREAT REDUCTION IN FREIGHTS
ON
oonr r r oiv :
Quickest and Cheapest
ROUTE TO
NEW YORK!
HATi.
W IO O O O O I
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P* , El< Cs* Ex» fa -£u *1
At Johnsonville, on the Tennessee river, a close
Connection is made with a fine daily line pf steamers
to St Louis. They will receive the Cotton and pay
all accrued charges to that poiol, and transport it
to St Louis, giving through bill of lading to New
Yoik. At St Louis the Cotton is trawfarepd by
the boats to Broad Gunge, Mississippi and “bio Riv
er railroad, free of drayage, and by them is car
ried to New York without change otcars. if ship
pers prefer the route by way of Louisville, the
agents of the different Through ri eight Lines
to New York, will receive it at Nashville and for
ward it alt the way by Ra'b char
ges without extra expense. The Nashville and
Louisville, and the Nashville and Chattanooga
Roads being connected. Cotton shipped bv way of
Johnsonville will not change caisat Naslivi ie.
Rates from John son v lib. to New \ork $6 per
bale; from Nashville (all Rail) $lO 50, (nswaara
advised.) Parties desiring to reship at Nashville,
instead of Johosonvilie, can have option of ship
ping by Steamboat to Cincinnati—“ihe Cumber
land River being in fine boating order,” at low
rates of Freight, not exceeding #2 per Pale to Cin
cinnati, and from that point over three different
lines of Railroad, at $5 per hale. Cotton by either
route can be laid down in New York iron) Koiaula,
Montgomery, Columbus or West Point, in twelve
days
Shippers mast consign to Steamboat. Agent at
Johnsonville, and to Agents of Through Lives. <>r
a Commission Merchant at Nashvi'le. Govern
ment permits must accompany each biii of lading
R BAUGH,
Supt W and A R R.
GEO G HULL,
Supt A and W P Jl R.
OHAS TPOLLARD,
Prest M and W P K B.
W L CLARK,
Supt Muscogee Eaili jad.
YIHGIL POWERS,
Supt £ WR It.
E B WALKER,
Sept M A W li R.
E H KWING,
Gen’! Freight Agt,N & C and NiSSBB.
aeplSlm