Newspaper Page Text
<flj£ gailj Celegraplj.
Amamoy or tee Sormzvr M-'rara* —
The 'tew YorV Timet Washington specie!
of the 34th, »i;i that leading republicans are
urging the consideration of financial matters
at the opening of the session, leaving the ad'
mission of Southern members till after Christ
mas, by which time harmonious action may
be secured.
Baltwoke ash Livewool Live of
Steamers.—There is now established be
tween Baltimore and Liverdoo! a line of
steamers equal in every respect to any cross
ing the ocean, and to persons going from, or
coming to the Southern States, it offers ad
vantages of convenience and economy, the
iaro between New York and Baltimore, and
tho time consumed in the trip, being saved
in each case.
The Huntsville (Ala.,) AdtoeaU ot the 16th
instant says: “The Memphis and Charleston
Road is now completed through to Memphis,
and daily trains aro running—a transfer bv
steamboat taking place at Decatur. The
bridgo across the Tennessee, there is under
contract, and will be finished as soon as pos
sible.’'
3?" A pumping engine on a new principle
has .lust been tested at the Cincinnati water
works. The engine baa no crank or fly wheel,
bnt the piston-rod acta directly on the pump.
It is the invention of George Shields, and is
a monster machine, though but little of i
visible above ground. On the trial it tb
into the reservoir a stream of water five feet
in diameter.
The wife of Maximilian, of Mexico, recent
ly reviewed the Mexican troops in a carriage
that cost $40,000. It was constructed entire
ly of glass and silver, and the inside was
lined with white satin and gold lace. This
Austrian princess should take warning from
the tragical fate of one of her relatives, the
late Marie Antoinette. Why should tho
Mexican people be supposed to bo less impa
tient of this infamous squandering of their
resources by a foreign princess than tho
French t
IatMtoiiASTS Monvo Somn—Among the
newly arrived immigrants in tho Atlantic
cities, considerable number* are bound to tho
States lately at war. This is a matter of im
portance as well as novcjty. Heretofore im
migrants have avoided the States where the
slave labor system prevailed. This hardy
class of strangers has added immensely to the
producing labor of the Northern States, and
consequently to its great wealth; and their
presence will have the same effect, in the
South, where they should bo warmly welcom
ed. It is said that these southerly bound im
migrants arc better provided with moans than
tho averages of thoso who come to seek better
fortune in this country.
Ajtoistmekts fox Ybrmott.—Governor
Dillingham has appointed the Chief Justice
of tho Supreme Court, Hon. LukoP. Poland,
of St. Johnsbury, to fill the vacancy in tho
United States Senate occasioned by the death
of Senator Coll am cr. Judge Poland is one of
the ableet lawyers in the State, and his ap
pointment gives general retisftetion.
Hon. John Picipont, of Ycrgeunes, Firct-
Assodate Judge, has been appointed Chief
Justice of tho Supreme Court, and Judge Bar
rett, Kellogg, Beck, and Wilson, have been
♦promoted to fill the vacancies, and Benjamin
H. Steele, ot Dcrbv, has been appointed Fifth
Associate Judge oi the Supreme Court.
Cctlsbt WonXA-—A Harrisburg dispatch,
of the 3-4th, thus spoaks of tho establishment
of a manufactory of fine cutlery ware:
The eecrctary of the Pennsylvania rileel
Works has decided to accept the Kelkcr
Farm, 3 1-3 miles Southeast of Harrisburg.
The ground at that point is contiguous to tho
Susquehanna river, and immediately on the
line of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Engi
neers were on the spot to-day surveying the
necessarv lines for the erection of tho above
works. 'It is admitted by all practical ma
chinists that this enterprise will be the most
extensive of its kind ever erected in America,
and is to be on this continent what the cele
brated works of Wade, Butcher & Co., Shef
field, are to Europe. 1.000 experienced work
men in steel will be brought from England.
I, 500 other experienced mechanics will be
required for the toll operation of these
works.
The Storm nr Bbqoxxtt;.—The heavy
rains of tho 30th, and the night previously,
caused the flood to rise over the string pieces
of the Atlantic dock, some eighteen inches
in height, and causing the involuntary emi
gration of entire colonies of rats .from the
storerooms, some thousands of which were
drowned. When the tide subsided, the
wharves were so thickly strewn with their
dead carcasses that it was diflicult to walk
without treading on them. The occupants
of the shanties at Tinkervillo had a hard time
of it. The tide rose some four feet over the
door-sills before daylight, compelling the
men to evacuate, while the women and chil
dren sought refuge on chairs, tables, boxes, or
anything else that would bear them. The
tide fell during the forenoon, and left them
in a better condition,
A Father Without Anns.—W. M. Beau-
camp. Onondaga county. New York, sends
the American Agriculturist an interesting ac
count of a inner he formerly knew, who was
bom without arms.
Instead of appealing to the charitable for
support, he commenced early to help himselL
His first property was a hen and chickens, the
next a pet lamb.'and afterward a shaggy colt.
He took good care of these, and increased his
stock a little at a time until hebccame a pros
perous farmer. Having no hands, he learned
to nse his toes, which were longer than com
mon. His legs were also very flexible, and by
practice he was enabled to readily perform
most operations with ease. He put on and
took off his Own clothing, shaved and fed
himself, milked his own cows, and took part
in most labors of the farm. He was a terror
to evil doers, whom he could punish witu se
verity. Ke was powerfully built, and possess
ed oi great strength in the head and shoul
ders. He would butt like a ram. or seize an
offending urchin with his teeth and shake him
with bull dog tenacity. He died at the age
of seventy, leaving a large family—having
been marriad three tlaSta.
The Scotch Tenant System to he Tried In
Virginia. »
We ware informed, on yesterday, that Mr.
Black, the Scotch capitalist to whoa refer
ence was made in this paper some time since,
has already leased that large and valuat'. es
tate, the “ White Hour at., prop.-* . at
once introducing the ant system of L-cov
land upon it. Apart from the historical in
teract which attaches to this famous estate, it
will be now additionally interesting as the
first plantation in Eastern Virginia where the
new system of labor is to be tried by a gen
tleman of capital and intelligence. If suc
cessful, the value of lands in King William,
Hanover, New Kent, and Queen must speedi
ly advance.
We also hear excellent accounts from the
various immigration schemes and agencies for
procuring labor which have recently been es
tablished in this city.
Wc have recently conversed with intelli
gent and reliable agriculturists from several
sections o£East Virginia, who tell us that
the laborers procured through the agency of
Messrs Goddin & Appersou aro giving great
satisfaction.
The attention that has been called to the
metallic and mineral resources of the state
by the geological report of Dr. Grant, and
the excellent and able letters of Sir. J. R
Hamilton, are wo learn, already greatlv bene
fiting the owners of such property. Wo have
read for months past the letters’ which have
been published in the New York World, by
Mr. Hamilton, with pleasure and profit, and
now that he has announced himsel an agent
for capitalists who wish to invest in the min
eral and metallic producing lands of the state,
and also for tbo3a who wish to sell, we can
recommentl him as a gentleman of intelli
gence and integrity, whose letters have done
much to remove the prejudices which haTo
existed at the North against us.—RiEwnorA
Timm.
2. M. BRUCE & CO.,
BANKERS AND COTTON FACTORS,
A ’* O T S T A , GEORGIA.
E. F. METCALFE & CO.,
COMMISSION AND FORWARDING MERCHANTS,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
Thomas Sashes, the Pugilist.—Thomas
Sayers, of whose recent death we have infor
mation by the China, and who is known
wherever a newspaper in the English language
is read, as “Tom” Sayers, was born in 1820.—
He was brought up to the trade of bricklay
ing, but having a turn for tho prize ring, and
showing tho qualities necessary to success in
it. besoou became a boxer by occupation.—
His first fight in n regular stricken field was
at Greenhithe in 1849, where ho beat Crouch.
His next fight was with Collins in 1830, which
was interrupted by tho police twice, and fin
ally abandoned, and a new match made for
tho stake of £25, which lie won after a hard
fight of eighty-four minutes. His next vne-
ture was a challenge to Jack Grant a very cx-
>ert boxer, on which a match was arranged
: or £100 a side. <
The fight was won by Sayers, and gave him
an immediate and extensive notoriety among
the class to which ho belonged. After beat
ing Jack Marlin in 1853, he was beaten bv_
Nat Laogham. This fight, tho only one. uu-'
less we except the Hccnau fight, which
Bayers lost throughout the long career, was
won by tbestrategem and superior adroitness
of Langham, who succeeded in closing both
his eyes by successive blows, though Sayers
was almost perfectly fresh in every other" re
spect at tho close of tho fight. Langham’s
friends were so well aware of Bayers’ superi
ority that another match could not he ar
ranged between the parties, and Sayers wont
on conquering, and to conquor, all the most
noted boxers of his tine, irnong whom were
Aaron Jones, the Tipton Slasher, Tom Pad-
dock, Bill Benjamin, and Bob Bret tie. The'
April,
decided drawn, as will be well remembered,
and the matter attempted to bo settled by
giving a belt to each of the aspirants. Since
that time Sayers has been tho bright particu
lar star of several circuses. He had. in a re
markable degree, the qualities necessary lor
success in prize-fighting—ability to give and
take the molt tremendous blows, ttubbom
pluck, a quick evo, and an impcriurbalc tem
per.— N. E World.
The Dpke of Alva.—The following ex
traordinary domtetic tradition is extracted
from a new book which is mnch talked o. in
Europe:
The brothct-in-!aw of Napoleon HT, is a
short little man, who has something ic\ about
his whoie manner. Small and week, bis faco
displays an alabaster hue, which gives him a
ghost like aspect. In Spain the story is cur
rent that the duko was buried before he was
born. When his mother was eneiente with
him, she was taken so desperately ill that all
the attempts to restore her remained fruit
iest The ducheso died far from Madrid at a
choteua which had always been her favorite
residence. She was buried in the family
vault; and, as it is the custom of the 'Spanish-
nobiltv, several valuables, among others
her rings, were put in the coffin. The
treasures which had been left to oblivion
with the duchess aroqse-d the cupid
ity of some ruffians; they broke into
the vault on the night following the
funeral. robbed the dead woman, and“would
not leave the coffin till they had plucked a
flashing diamond from the linger of the
corpse. The diamond was on the little tin
ier, and would not come off. This gave the
iody-snatchera the truly cannibal idea of cut
ting the finger. The pain aroused the appa
rently dead woman; she canto to her senses,
sat up in the coffin, and, by her unexpected
wakening, put the robbers to flight. When
they departed, they forgot to close the vault.
The duchess found sufficient strength to quit
her coffin and return to the chateau, where
she was at first taken for a ghost, and a priest
was called in to exorcise it; but as be was
unable to banish the spectre, the people in
the chateau gradually began to believe in her
corporeal existence. The duchess recovered
and gave birth to a boy. who has never lost
the deadly pallor which he brought into the
world with him.—Napoleon the Third and his
Court, by a Retired Diplomatist.
National Express Comp ant.—The Rich
mond correspondent of tho Baltimore Gazette,
writing about this Company, says:
It is to be much more extended in its op
erations than the expresses. It is to go off
railroads sad deliver goods in tho interior.
It is to supersede the necessity of fowarding
houses. Hundreds of applications are daily
made for situations from all parts of the South.
Every man who has been in the army, and
has no occupation, feels that he is entitled to a
rood sa'.arv from this company. It is made
ror the soldiers, and they have a right to
profit by it. The company starts under fa
vorable auspices. It has abundant capital,
and hss united with it the Reid Express, a
well established and efficient company.
E. M. BRTTOE, MORGAN & CO.,
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants.
APALACHICOLA. FLORIDA.
Advances Made on Consignments to
WATTS. CRANE & 00„ WATTS, GIVEN & CO.. W. C. WATTS & CO.,
New York. t New Orleans. Liverpool, Eng.
EI.THER OF THE ABOVE HOUSES:
wpUO-Sia
WHOLE SALE .
LARGE ARSIIVAL OF .NEW ,GOO£>S
AT
G. RICE & CO.’S,
59 College Street, Nashville, Term
By our heavy purchases during too last three months, and by conauatiy watching toa Eastern mar
ket and taking advantage of every fluctuation, we are enabled to say that w* have now on hand, toe
LARGEST, CHEAPEST & BEST SELECTED STOCK
OP
FALL & WjJTER DRY GOODS
, r,V THE CITY OF NASHVILLE. *
Our assortment of
BLACK AND COLORED SILKS.
FRENCH AND ENGLISH MERINOS,
POPLINS, MOHAIRS, LUSTRES,
AND OTHER NEW STYLES OF DRY GOODS.
CANNOT BE SURPASSED.
Wc have the latest styles of
Cloaks, Shawls, Balmoral Skirts/ Ladies’ Hats, &,c,
See.
X Urge assortment of
SWISS, MULL. INDIA BOOK, EDGINGS, -INSERTIONS, LACES, RIBBONS, HAND
KERCHIEFS, GLOVES, HOSIERY, NOTIONS, etc.
* Wo are selling to country merchants coming to and passing through the city to supply
themselves with goods, wc wish to say that we can sell them at lower rates than they call
obtain thorn ot Louisville or Cincinnati. Our large stock of ’ *
HATS AMD BOOTS AND SHOES
Has mostly been bought at. auction, very cheap, and will be sold at very small profits.
Onr Clothing Department; Up Stairs ;
Consists of every article or Men’s Wear made up in the latest styles and of the best material,
and will be offered at the lowest prices, wholesale and retail, at
sept 17-Sin
Gr. RICE & 00/9,
COLLEGE STREET, NASHVILLE, TENN.
{From Georgia.)
HENRY T0NGE & CO..
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
SEW YORK,
S OLICIT consignments of Cotton an other
articles, and orders lor purchase of Goods.
REFERENCES:
Charles Day, Esq., T. Ih Bloom, Esq., L C.
Plant, Eso.j Macon, Georgia; Messrs. Phiuizy
A Clayton. Augusta.
They have bad large experience in pur
chasing Railroad Scfflies of all descrip
tions and solicit orders from Railroad Com
panies. novll-Cm*
Nashville &. Chattanooga Railroad.
rpo Passenger* for Uxs North and West Exprwi
X train leaves Chattanooga 6 40 a. m.. connect
ing at Naahvili* with Northwestern Railroad for
JtHicrionviUe and points on Tennessee river. Padu
cah, Cairo, and fit. Loui*, and Louisville and Nits'll*
ville Railroad.
Fare tromCbatt;uioo*ra to Nashville ? 7 75.
“ “ “ “ Cairo :»7T,
*• ** ** “ fiL Loui* IS 75
Passenger* i&avtsg Atlanta on the evening trala
ou V*’. & A. R- R. connect with this train. Frrisjbt
Is now received arid forwarded on quick litre
verv moderate rate*.
WM. P. IXNE*.
Gen’i. Snp’L
J. W. BROWN,
<S«s*L Passenger Agent.
octlS-2m.
Law Notice,
I HAVE resumed the practice *’>f my profession,
and will attend to all basincs* entrusted to m>
care in the State.
Having jnst returned from V.'... Imrton City,
part lea desiring advice and coo. -el relative to the
preparation ol papers under tin Amnesty Prod**
ciatlon for pardon, and the atatoa of contract* and
title deeds, executed dttmg the last four years, can
consult me by lettcror iu person.
Office over Board man's Book store, Macon, Ga.
jy 13 O. X LQCHRANE.
Valuable Cotton plantation lor Sale.
I OFFER for tale my plantation situated on Chl-
ochoe Creek, 32 miles b. W. from Albany,
Dougherty countv Georgia, adjoining the lends of
Benjamin Lockett, Jerry Beil, John Jones, CoL
Nelson and others. The place contains 1,500 acres,
about C or 700 acres of waich are cleared and un
der a good fence. The improvements are all good
framed buildings—good giuhouse and iron screw.
Provisions, stock and plantation tooiucau be
bought with the place. If not sold before the
1st Tnesdav in December next, on that day it will
be sold la Albany at public ontcry. For tonns ap
ple-to me at Cutbbert, Georgia, «r 6. D. Irvin,
SAMUEL CLAYTON.
Hurley’s Stomachic Hitlers.
F >K Debility, Loss of Appetite, Weakness, In
digestion or Dyspepsia, want of action ot; e
Liver, Disordered Stomach, there are no hitters
hat cun compare with these in removing these
distressing complaints. For sale or can bo had a
any dr ug store in toe United States, or from the
proprietor, Louisviiie, Ky., corner Seveuth and
Green streets, to whom oil orders should be ad-
dressed. HURLEY, RUDDLE A CO.
Hurley’* Sarsaparilla.
T HE Great Blood Purifier, os a Spring and Sum
raw Medicine, stands unrivaled, ivinoves all
impurities from the blood, and gives
Uiv vLTfl AND S&EXGTH
to tLft hv&tein.
HURLEY, RUDDLE & CO.,
rroprietore
‘•Corner Seventh and Green streets,
soptld’Stn Louisville, Ky.
Hurley** Vopular Worm Candy.
4 8 this la really a specific"for Worms, and the
il best and most palatable form to give to chil
dren, it Is not surprising that It is fast taking the
place of all other preparations for worms—it being
perfectly tasteless, any child will take it
HURLEY, RUDDLE & CO.,
Proprietors,
Corner Seventh and Green streets,
sept 10 3m Lonlsvllle, Ky.
j. w. un c max, v. p. Armstrong.
Mitchell & Armstrong,
PB0YISI05 b COMMISBIOB MEEOHAHTS
AND DEALERS IN
BAGGING, ROPE AND LIQUORS,
NO. 65, MAIN STREET LOUISVILLE, KY.
sept'i2-3m*
-V'OTICK—Hack llna to Perry. Hack will leave
Fort Valley on the arrival of the car* from
Macon every Tuesday, Ci orefiay and Saturday for
Perry, Ga., retnrnirg to ttnM to eonneetwitb
trains from Albany and Lolumuus—o’clock, P. M.,
ror Ms coo.
oem-3m* W. A. GRIFFIN A CO.
Plantation for Sale.
I OFFER for sale my pUntatlon, lying on Blue
creek, three mllesaouth of Blakely, Early coun
ts, Ga.—on the public road, leading from Blakely
to Bainbridge, Ga. ‘Said place contains 1500 acres,
with 400acres cleared and tn* a high state of culti
vation. On toe placets a comfortable boose, ue-
gro cabins, gin bouse and screw, and ail other
nocossaiy buSillngs for a farm. This Is one of too
most deslrablb farms In this section of conntry.
For farther pmlcnlar* address toe subscriber.
. JAMES H. WADE,
nov34-10tt ., Blakely, Early Cornnty.
CONSTITUTION
LIFE SYRUP*.
COMPOSED OF
IODIDE OF POTASSIUM,
WITU THE COMPOUND CONCENTRATED
FLUID EXTRACT OF VALUABLE
MEDICINAL ROOTS AND
HERBS.
PREPARED BY
WILLIAM H. CRECC, M. O.
Graduate of the College of Physicians end
8urgoons, New York: formerly Assist*
ant Physician in tho Blackwell’s
Island Hospitals.
CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP
BAB PRODUCED f DEVOLUTION IN MEDICINE.
" hat may »e«m almost incredible is* that many dm*
ea>cs hitherto considered bopelassly incurable aro frv
? u*‘s:ly cured in a low day* or nock*; and wo cheer-
ally ::o the invest cations of tho itaral minded »ud
saicuuuc to cores which have no ]**rallel at the present
Luring tho past fivo years w o havo contend**! with
obstar c* ana overcome opposition as herculean
were over encountered by any reformers.
RAPIDITY OF CURE.
fiomoaay. **Vourcures are too quick,’* whiles other
doubt their permanence, and think that diseases can
only be cured by the “slow, rccaperativo process of
Nature."
This is our reply: In health, the body, like a well
halanoed sea o, is In astuo ef equilibrium. But when,
from any cause, down roos one side of the sooJe, wc
have tho effacts of disease. What 1a requisite, u to re
store the norma* balance of the seal*
CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP
Is aperture and dtlo remedv for all dtpoosee orut-
natlua from an IMPURERTA1 £ OF Til£ BLOOD, atd
fer al(ber«diiary)Dimsjrs transmitted from Pixart u
PARALYSIS.
It Is so universal y admitted that Constitution Lira
BTRCTis the only effective me&ne of roetoration in \L j
various forms or Paralysis, that we reed cot rciucau
that It Is emphatically the Groat Life-giving Power
DYSPEPSIA,
erwasanoy, wrtosr at itexacn. namcrcr, unit cox
rvuxr, wxsr or Avmrrr, lunsa&atB, costs?*
ranox. nujorsxua
SCROFULA,
astrau, area's xvs, oultoclax swiuraje, nrcrua, cv-
ccsanox, sxir mint
This taint (hereditary and erquired.) fl’llnirltfs with
juo d misery, ia, by all usual medical remedioe, incur-
RHEUMATISM.
(**18170*,} inouoc, airaiLcu, scut tea* oocr, nenoto*
SLACK.
If there is aov disease In which the CcygTmTTos Lire
Rtrcp in a sovereign. It is in Rheumatism and its kin
drld affections. The moat intense pains are almost In
stantly alleviated—enormous awe lings are reduced
Cases, chronic, or vice iou*, of twenty or forty years*
standing, lave been cored bv os.
CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP
Purges the system, entire y, from all the evil effects » f
.Menurv, removing the Bad Breath, and curing th**
Weak Joints and uhenrnaiic Peins which the itse of
Caloinells s uro to produce It hardens Spongy Gums.
ai;<» secures tho Teeth as firmly as ever.
CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP
ULCERS, PIMPLES, BLOTCHES,
And ftP other difficulties of this kind, which so much
disfigure ihe outwurd nppoarnnee of both tunles end
females,often making tlittun disgusting object to tln iu
se ves and their friend*.
FOR ALL FORMS,OF ULCERATIVE DISEASES
Either of the Nose. Throat, Tongue. Spine. Foretina*!
or wexifp. no remedy has ever proved Its aqua .
Moth Patohcf- upou tho femalo faco. depending upon
% diseased action of the Liver, arc very nnpYm.r.nt «•>
the young wife and mother. A few bottles of Cphsthu
ti'-s Lira .Stmcp will correct tho secretion and rctnov-
tho deposit, which is directly under the skin.
Diseases of tho Liver, riving rise to Languor,
. fn. Indigestion. Weak btomach, or an w rotated or
cancerous *y>nditiou of that organ, aooornpauied wnth
burning or other unpleasant symptoms, will Ho relieved
bv tho iiao of
CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP.
Ah a General Blood-Purifying Agent, the Lin 8tus
auuula unrivalled by any preparation in th© world
THE RICH AND POOR
Are iAble to the same diseases. Nature ami Fdenee
have made the Constitution Live El*uv for the benefit
of ell.
PURE BLOOD
Produces healUuv men r»nd women: and If the eonati-
tutlon is neglected in youth, disease and ear y drain le
thoreau t. Don<<tde*ay when the means ore so near
at hand,and within the reach of »L
CONSTITUTION LIFE SYRUP
WILLIAM II. GREGG, ?1. V
Sole Proprietor, New York.
MORGAN & ALLEN,
Wholesale Druggist*, Agents.
nov3&-3m *W Cliff Mroot. Now York.
Memphis & Charleston
cn.vaciE of schedule. .
On and after Wednesday, the 6th Inst., the«r.ms
on the Mcmpbi, and Charleston Ballrood will run
DALLY, as iollows:
EASTWARD TRAIN’S.
Leave Memphis at 3:30 p. ru
Arrive at Grand Junction 7:‘J0 j>. iu.
Arrive at Corinth 10:37 p. m.
Arrive at Docatur 7:50 a. m.
Arrive at Stevenson 3:05 p. in.
WESTWARD TRAINS. *
Leave Steveoaon 10:00 a. in.
Arrive at Decatur 3:30 p. ru.
Arrive at Corinth lriM a. tn.
Arrive at Grand Junction 5:35 a. an
Arrive at Memphis S640 a. m.
The Connection by this Route la complete.
ALL RAIL 410) KO STAGING.
Faro Lc*s than by any other Route.
TrainB on Mississippi Central Railroad leave
Grand Junction ouTuci-.dnj-, There days and Batur-
dave.
'rndns on Mobile and Ohio Railroad leave Cor
inth going North and Sonth ou Monday, Wednes
day and Friday—Sou to at 1:40 a. c., and North at
5:30 a. m.
At Decatur regular connections arc made with
Nashville and Docatur Road tor Nwihvitlc, Louis
ville, etc.'
At StevenBon connections arc mede with trains
on the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad.
At Chat'anooca connections are made with train,
on the Eastern Tennwsec and Georgia, stid West
ern and Atlantic Railroads for all parts of Georgia.
Sonth and North Carolina. Virginia and the North.
W. J. ROSS, .mi’!, fiup’t.
C. L. AnDEBSON, General Freight and 'lieket
Agent. novflilm.
Augusta Constitutionalist and Montgomery Ad
vertiser, copy and send bill to W. J. Ross, 3n;/t.
Memphis.
Removal, Removal!
HERRINGTON & RICKS,
Copper, Tin and Sheet Iron Moat: fact man.
R espectfully annonneos that they have
moved their ware room and workshiT. frreu
the Neabit Foundry, to the corner of Fourth sod
Poplar street*, opposite Catholic rhrrcb.
Tlicv will keep on baud a complete a.-rortment of
manufactured articles in their line, such a»
STILLS, COPPER KETTLES, TIN WARF..
STOVE PIPES, ETC.. ETC.
Thev sre alio prepared to promtdly fill order* fer
SHEETING, ROOFING and GUTTERING, to any
extent. Terms reasonable, and all work warranted
to be executed In the most workmanlike manner,
oetas-tll*