Newspaper Page Text
®}c Constitutionalist
AUGUSTA, GA..z
Friday Morning, October, 1, 1875.
SUPREME COURT DECISIONS.
Decisions Rendered in Atlanta, Oa.,
September 28, 1875.—1i0n. Hiram
Warner, Chief Justice—Hons. L. E.
Bleckley and Janies Jackson, Judges.
Bell vs. Hawks. Motion, from Clay.
WARNER, C. J.
This was a motion to set aside a
judgment in Clay Superior Court. It
appears from the record before us that
on the 9th day of December, 18G1, the
plaintiff obtained a judgment against
the defendant for the sum of $118.35
for his principal debt, with interest and
cost of suit.
Afterwards, at the March term of
said Superior Court, 1869, the defend
ant in said judgment made a motion to
set it aside, on the ground that the
consideration of the debt on which said
judgment was obtained was for the hire
of a negro slave. On the hearing of
that motion, the court rendered the
following judgment: “It appearing that
the consideration in the above stated
case (the names of the parties and
judgment being stated) was for negro
hire; ordered, that said judgment be
set aside as well as the ft. fa. from it.”
At the March term of said court, 1874,
the plaintiff in the original judgment
made a motion to set aside the judg
ment rendered in 1869, setting aside
his original judgment obtained in
1861, on the grounds that said order
and judgment of 1869, as appear on
the face thereof, were based on a
ground wholly unknown to the law, but
were in violation of the Constitution of
the United States and the Constitution
of this State; that the court had
no j urisdiction to set aside the j udg
ment of 1861, on the ground stated in
the order and judgment of 1869; and
because the order and judgment of
1869 were passed and rendered without
any notice to the plaintiff of the mo
tion therefor. On the hearing of the
motion to set aside the order and
judgment of 1869, the court sustained
it and ordered that judgment to be set
aside. Whereupon the defendant in
the original judgment of 1861 excepted,
and assigns the same as error. There
was no error in setting aside the judg
ment of 1869, on the statement of facts
disclosed in the record. My individual
reasons in support of the judgment of
the court below will be found in the
case of Prescott vs. Bennett, 50th Geo.
Rep. 266, and in my dissenting opinion
in the case of Tison vs. McAfee, 50th
Geo. Rep. 234, and in my dissenting
opinion in the case of Fannin vs. Dur
den, not yet reported, (see pamphlet
decisions of last terra, page 94) and
will not be again repeated here. —
The plaintiff in error insisted
on the argument before us, that
inasmuch as the original judgment was
rendered in 1861, and more than seven
years having elapsed from the date of
that judgment before the motion to
set aside the judgment of 1869 was
made, the judgment of 1861 had be
come dormant, and for that reason the
motion to set aside the judgment oi
1869, should not have been allowed.
The reply is, that the statute prescrib
ing the time within which judgment
liens shall be enforced or become dor
mant, is a statute of limitations, and
the statute of limitations was suspend
ed uutil the 21st of July, 1868, and
therefore, the judgment of 1861, was
not dormant when the motion to set
aside the judgment of 1869 was made
in 1874. But it was not the judgment
of 1861, the plaintiff made his motion
to set aside, but the judgment of 1869,
and the seven years had not run from
the date of this last named judgment,
until tiie motion to set it aside at the
March term of the court 1874. We re
cognize the rule that notice should have
been given to the plaintiff of the mo
tion to set aside the judgment of 1861
when it was made in 1869.
Let the judgment of the court below
be affirmed.
R. E. Kennon, for plaintiff in error.
Jno. T. Clark, for defendant.
Jackson, J., having been of couusel,
di l not preside in these cases :
Lester vs. Piedmont and Arlington Life
i usui mice Company. Motion for new
trial, from Sumter.
Piedmont and Arlington Life Insu
rance Cos. vs. Lester. Motion in arrest
of judgment, from Sumter.
BLECKLEY, J.
1. A verdict in a case founded on
contract, where no issuable defense is
tiled on oath, is illegal. The court must
take the responsibility of rendering
judgment without a jury. Under the
< Constitution an issuable defense, on
oath, is required to put the case before
the jury, or to give them any power
whatever to deal with it.
2. A letter introduced as evidence
need not ali be read by the party who
introduces it. It is all in evidence, and
either party may read from it such
parts as serve his purpose — Bth Ga.
Rep. 318.
3. If, construing the declaration al
together, including a copy of the writ
ten contract declared upon, whether
such contract be embodied in thefdec
laration or annexed to it, the amount
claimed by the plaintiff and the time
when it was payable, can be arrived at
with reasonable certainty, the want of
direct averments on these points will
not be cause for arresting the judg
ment.
4. To subject an insurance company,
under the statute, to damages and at
torney’s fees, a demand for the amount
due on the policy, and a refusal to pay
sixty days before suit is brought, must
be plainly averred. In the absence of a
distinct averrment to that effect, the
judgment, as to these items, will be
arrested.
Judgment affirmed in the first case,
and reversed in the second.
N. A. Smith, for plaintiff in error in
the first case, and for defendant in the
second.
R. F. Lyons, contra.
Carmichael vs. Greer, Lake & Cos. Com
plaint, from Macon.
BLECKLEY, J.
1. A letter saying that the writer is
interested in a firm, and requesting his
correspondent to sell goods to the firm
on time, is evidence to charge the
writer, as a member of the firm, for all
goods so sold and delivered, on the
faith of the letter, until notice of disso
lution.
2. A retiring partner, to protect him
self against responsibility for future
purchases by the partnership from a
house with whom the partnership has
dealt on credit, must give notice of his
retirement, and the burthen of proving
notice is on hkn.
3. Credit extended to a firm on the
iaith of representations by a person
that he is interested in the same, will
create a debt against him as a partner.
4. The letter relied on in the pres
ent case imports, on its face, interest
as a partner, and not liability as a guar
antor.
5. Representations, not admissions,
are the main elements in this case; and
refusal to give in charge the law of ad
missions does not constitute material
error.
6. To constitute one a partner as to
third persons, it is only necessary that
he should hold himself out as such to
those trusting the partnership; it is
not necessary that he should, in fact,
be interested in profits and losses.
7. Where the question is as to the
liability of the defendant as a partner,
growing out of credit given on the faith
of his representations that he was in
terested in the firm, it is not error to
repel evidence that another member of
the firm, in the absence of the former
and without his consent, used and
signed the firm name in other trans
actions.
8. The verdict is not contrary to law,
or to evidence, or to the charge of the
court.
Judgment affirmed.
Loyd & Goode, by brief, for plaintiff
in error.
No appearance for defendants.
Brown vs. Oattis, et al. Claim from
Quitman.
BLECKLEY, J.
1. If several attorneys represent the
losing party in the trial, and all of them
but one, on a motion for anew trial,
file an affidavit to their ignorance of
the iucompeteucy of a juror, and there
is no explanation in the record why a
similar affidavit from this one is omit
ted, it ought to be presumed that he
knew of the juror’s incompetency. In
respect to such a matter, knowledge
by any one of the party’s counsel is
equivalent to knowledge by the party
himself.
2. The admission of evidence not ob
jected to is no cause for new trial.
3. If the court, without objection, ad
mit in evidence the declarations of a
person respecting his title, where there
is some evidence that the declarations
were accompanied with possession, but
where other evidence in the case tends
strongly to negative the fact of such
possession, it is not error for the couit
to leave the final decision of that ques
tion to the jury, under appropriate in
structions.
4. Proof that the original of a record
ed deed is in another State, the
house of a person residing there, not a
party to the suit, sufficiently accounts
for its non-production to admit the re
cord of it in evidence. Under such
facts, there is no presumption that no
tice, if given to the adverse party, to
produce the original, would be avail
able, and, therefore, such notice is un
necessary.
5. There being strong evidence against
the verdict, and the court below hav
ing granted anew trial, this court will
not interfere.
Judgment affirmed.
A. Hood, Wm. Harrison, James H.
Guerry, Guerry & Son, for plaintiff in
error.
B. S. Worrill, Goode & Toney, James
Wimberly, James T. Fiewellen, for de
fendants.
J. G. Stephens vs. S. D. Bostrick, de
fendant, and A. H. Tucker, claimant.
Claim, from Lee.
JACKSON, J.
1. A mortgage executed in May, 1873,
of six bales of cotton, growing and be
ing grown and produced on a planta
tion in Lee cJunty, known as the Jesse
Tucker plantation, and cultivated by
the mortgagor, said bales to average
500 pounds each, to be covered with
bagging and bound with iron ties, and
“to be delivered in good order and
condition at the warehouse of Welch,
Bacon & Cook, in Albany, Georgia, on
or before the 15th of October next,” is
sufficiently specific in the description
of the particular bales mortgaged.
2. If it be proved to the satisfaction
of the jury that six' bales of the crop
of cotton so grown, ginned and packed
were delivered at said warehouse, the
cotton will be sufficiently identified
as that described in the mortgage,
and will be subject to execution issued
thereon.
. 3. Such an instrument properly exe
cuted and recorded, to secure the pay
ment of a promisory note given for ad
vances to make the crop, is a valid
mortgage, and may be foreclosed under
section 3371 of the Code, and it is error
in the court to dismiss the levy there
on, because “the affidavit of foreclosure
is not made in compliance with the
statute on foreclosure of liens.”
4. A mortgage may be of part of a
growing crop, if the part mortgaged be
so described as to be identified by parol
evidence, and whether so identified or
not, is a question for the jury under
the proof.
Judgment reversed.
Thomas R. Lyon, by R. F. Lyon, for
plaintiff in error. D. H. Pope, by Jack
son & Clarke, for defendant.
Richard Gwinu vs. S. S. Mitchell, de
fendant, and J. J. Smith, claimant.
Claim, from Sumter.
JACKSON. J.
1. Where the fact exists in the
knowledge of the levying officer, that
there was no personal property to be
found whereon to levy the execution,
it is not error in the court to allow him
to take the entry nunc pro tunc.
2. Wiiere such entry of nunc pro tunc
is made at the term of the court pre
ceding that of the trial, unless the judg
ment allowing such eutry bo excepted
to at the term when rendered, under
section 4254 of the Code, it will not be
considered by this court in the bill of
exceptions certified at the trial term of
the claim case.
3. A mortgagee may purchase the
mortgaged land sold under a tax exe
cution, and if the sale be fair, and there
be no fraudulent collusion between
him and the mortgagor, the Sheriff’s
title to him will be good against a
judgment creditor whose lien is older
than the mortgage, especially where
the tax execution is older than the
mortgage.
4. Where, in such case, the mortga
gor has had the land set apart as a
homestead, and by proceedings in
chancery and direction of the chancel
lor, has mortgaged the same to the
mortgagee, and the mortgagee, after
his purchase at the Sheriff’s sale under
the tax execution, takes a deed from
the mortgagor and his wife, with the
approval of the Ordinary, to clear
away all cloud from his title, he is
not estopped on the trial of the claim
case from denying title in the mortga
gor subsequent to the Sheriff’s deed.
Judgment affirmed.
B. P. Hollis; DuPont Guerry, for
plaintiff in error.
N. A. Smith, for defendants.
Patrick K. Shields vs. Mayor and Alder
men, of Savannah. Injunction, from
Chatham.
JACKSON, J.
Where the complainant alleges in his
bill that he has been in possession and
enjoyment of certain lands in the city
of Savannah for thirty years, and that
the city officers have notified him to
remove his fence therefrom within five
days, or it will be done by them forth
with, as an encroachment upon astreet,
and where the bill states further that
said land has never been dedicated, or
occupied, or used, as astreet, and where
there is no answer filed, or cause by
affidavit shown by the defendant why
an injunction should not be granted,
but the facts stated in the bill are ad
mitted by demurrer, the court should
grant the injunction.
Judgment reversed.
Rufus E. Lester. Meldrim-& Adams,
for plaintiff in error.
W. S. Basinger, by Jackson & Clarke,
for defendant.
In Italy they are laughing rather
happily at the German monument to
Arminius, and they propose in reply a
monument and inscription as follows ;
To Drusus Tiberius Nero, surnamed
Germanieus, who triumphed over Teu
tonic barbarism, after having defeated
and put to flight Arminius, and having
aveDged like a good soldier the legions
of P. Quintilius Yarus, massacred
through treachery.
Patronize Home Enterprise.
I AM PREPARED to build to order, and will keep in stock—
iii
One and Two Horse Wagons, Carts, Drays, Cotton and Gr<|gery Trucks,
One and Two Horse Harrows and Wheelbarrows.
Also, One and Two HorsejWagon, Cart and Dray Harness: ■
One Horse Wagons a Specialty; k
And have now in store THE LARGEST AND BEST STOCK of the atojf over offered in
the market, all of which I will sell as LOW or LOWER than the sanX class of Goods
can he laid down from any other market in 1 he country. “
I desire to call the attention of Builders to the fact that I am prewired to furnish
Wood Work for the above at short notice and low prices. if
Give me a call before buying. £
.1. 11. LOWRY,
sep26-ihtclm Corner Campbell ai?l Ellis str >ts.
IMPORTANT TO THEs
BOOT, SHOE AND HAT TRADE.
yjyj’E are now prepared to supply our friends and the trade generally with
BOOTS, SHOES, HATS AND TRUNKS,
u
At Greatly Reduced Prices. *
p
o r ?
I
Our Wholesale Department
Is complete, and we will sell to the trade at NEW YORK JOBBERS’ PRICES
Our Retail Department |
Is well supplied with Miles <& Sons’ Boots, Shoes and Gaiters; Ziegler B' s’ Ladies’ But
toned and Lace Boob*, Shoes and Gaiters; Dunbarr A Co.’s Children* Buttoned and
Lace Boots; Boilers & Co.’s Children’s Buttoned and Lace Boots; and fdj l lines of other
desirable goods. &
£
Small Profits and Large Sales is ou| Motto.
No trouble to sh w goods. An examination of our goods and price* invited.
CALLAHER & MULHtfNIN,
sepS-suw&flm 289 Is road street.
JOB DEPARTMENT.
rPHIS DEPARTMENT of our office has been completely r<i lovated, and
X enlarged by the addition of
NKW AND FIRST-CRAMS
MACHINERY AND MATE RIAL
And we are better prepared than ever before to do;
EVERY DESCRIPTION 0E JOB YORK,
From the Smallest Card to the Largest Po:|er.
Among the great variety of JOB WORK we are prepared tojjjlo, might be
enumerated the following : ■
BUSINESS CARDS, DODGERS,
VISITING CARDS, GUTTER SNIPES
WEDDING CARDS, MEMORANDUMS
DANCE CARDS, RECEIPT BOOKS
RAILROAD TICKETS, POSTAL CARDS,
BALL TICKETS. WEDDING INVP iTIONS,
SHOW TICKETS, PARTY INVITATIONS,
ELECTION TICKETS, DEPOSIT SLIPS, §
SHIPPING TAGS, NOTES, I
NOTE CIRCULARS, DRAFTS, 1
LETTER CIRCULARS, BANK CHECKS, 1
ENVELOPES, BANK NOTICES, 1
BILL HEADS, SOCIETY SUMMITS,
NOTE HEADS, SOCIETY CERTII* CATES,
LETTER HEADS, DRUGGISTS’ LAIfBLS,
INVOICES, PRESCRIPTION BLANKS.
ACCOUNT SALES, SCHEDULES, I
MONEY RECEIPTS, TIME TABLES, |
SHIPPING RECEIPTS, BILLS OF FARE,*
COTTON STATEMENTS, CATALOGUES, 1
POSTERS, PAMPHLETS, 8
HAND BILLS, SOCIETY BY-LA\|s,
PROGRAMMES, BADGES, 1
DATE LINES, LAWYERS’ BRIEj S.
We have facilities for doing work in ANY COLOR, OR V! RIETY OF
COLORS that may be desired, or in Francis & Loutrell’s Celebrat and COPYING
INK.
I ;
Call at our office and examine specimens of 1
1
FIKTB JOB WO3 IZESL.
WE KEEP THE
Best Stock of Papers and Cards in the Market,
And always guarantee our work to give perfect satisfaction in > cry Respect
We are supplied with the 1
L, ARGJEST WOOX> TITPE
M
of any office in the South, and are therefore enabled to do this i [ass of work
better than can be done in this city. \ \
Country Merchants can send their orders to this office, a| 1 have their
work promptly attended to, and save money thereby. ;
msiimiw PIIJIIMI CpPANV.
43 JACKSON STREEII
Fruitland Nurseries, Augusta, Ga.
PJ. BEBCKMANS, Proprietor. Orders
• for Trees, Plants, Bulbs, Seeds, etc.,
eti., left with the undersigned will be promt
ly attended to.
GEOEGE SYMMS, Agent,
No. 221 Broad Street,
septl-6m Augusta, Ga.
NOTICJj.
OWING to the retii me* of Mr. Adam
Moffat from all busincS? in this city,
the firm of Adam Moffat . J Cos. ceases to
exist on and after the 30th st. Mr. L. L.
Zulavsky is authorized to aßin all matters
of liquidation. ADAM SIiVFFAT & CO.
The Cotton Commission lusiness here
tofore conducted under tw above tirui
name, will be continued El the sole ac
count and in the name of til undersigned.
sep29-3 L. L KULAVSKY.
J. 0. Mathewson & Go.,
%
AGENTS FOR THE
Montour, Randleman
AIN D
imEDGIiVILM COTTON MILLS!
0
WE BEG TO OFFER THE TRADE THE PRODUCT OF THE ABOVE
MILLS, consisting of —
SHEETINGS,
SHIRTINGS,
YARNS,
OSNABURG3,
PLAIDS, STRIPES,
PLAINS, &c., &c.
0
POWDER ! POWDER ! !
WE ARE ALSO AGENTS for the HAZARD & DUPONT POWDER MILLS
and beg to offer the different grades of POWDER made by the above
Mills.
SEED GRAIN!
WE PAY PARTICULAR ATTENTION to our selections of SEED GRAIN,
and beg to offer the following varieties selected for that purpose :
WHEAT,
RYE, BARLEY,
RED RUST PROOF OATS,
PURE BLACK OATS.
WE ARE CONST AI. "PLY RECEIVING CONSIGNMENTS OF
BACON,
FLOUPw
WHEAT,
CORN,
OATS,
AND OTHER LEADING ARTICLES, WHICH WE OFFER TO THE TRADE.
J. 0. Mathewson & Cos.
sep2.3-tf •
CARPETS! CARPETS!
O ir Senior having visited New York and purchased a full stock of all
Goods embraced in our line and at prices cheaper than we have been able
to ootain sine > the war, we now offer to the Public a great many l aading
articles at ante-bellum prices, namely:
BRUSSELS CARPETS at sl.lO to SI.OO per yard.
BODY BRUSSELS at $1.75 to $2 per yard.
THREE PLYS at $1.35 to $1.50 per yard.
INGRAINS at 50 cents, 75 cents, $1 and $1.25.
FLOOR OIL CLOTHS from 50 cents per square yard and to the Finest
Imported English Goods.
A full assortment of WINDOW SHADES and In all sizes and colors for
privaie houses and store use from $1 to $5. Also to hand, and now open,
the largest stock of W INDOW, CORNICE and PICTURE FRAME MOULD
INGS ever exhibited in this city. Also, anew stock of NOTTINGHAM
LACE CURTAINS in endless variety of New Patterns, varying in price from
$2 to sls each Window.
5,000 Rolls Wall Papers, Borders and. Paper Shades.
Call early and make selections.
From this date our price for making and laying Carpets will be 10 cents
per yard.
JAMES (i. BAILIE & BRO.,
05 BROAD STREET.
sepl2-tf
K SAVINGS BANK,
TVO. 233 BROAD STREET,
Cash Capital SIOO,OOO (with Stockholders Liability A
TRANSACTS A
General Banking, Exchange and Collection Business.
5 Per Cent, allowed on DAILY balances, subject to
CHECK AT SIGHT.
Interest allowed on Time Deposits as may be agreed upon.
T. P. BRANCH, President.
J. T. NEWBERY,
CASHIER.
N. B.—Draw SIGHT DRAFTS on Great Britain and Continental Europe
in sums of £1 and upwards. jan!2-ly*
w. Daniel. I c. A - Rowland
33aniel cfc Rowland,
COTTON FACTORS,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS, and agents for the Celebrated Etiwan, Wando, Busey’s
) and Cotton Food Guanos, corner of Jackson and Reynolds streets, AUG US lA, GA.
Consignments solicited. ___ sepl2-lmd&c
Superb Black Silks.
. o
We have just received by Express a full Line of Lyon’s
MArVUFACTURED BLACK SILKS.
o
These Goods are of BONNETS <fe JAUBERT ANDRA’S
make, and Excel all Others in Richness of Finish and Dura
bility. Made Entirely of PURE SILK. They are Guaran
teed to give perfect satisfaction.
ALSO
A full Line of Lupin’s Superior 8-4 BLAOK CASHMERES,
Lupin’s HENRIETTA CLOTHS and BOMBAZINES, Tur
ner’s Superior BLACK MOHAIRS and ALPACAS.
NEW FALL GOODS ARRIVING DAILY,
All of which we are Offering at the Lowest Prices.
Call, Examine and be Convinced.
JAMES A. GRAY.
The Kitson Machine Comp’v,
LOWELL, MASS.,
RICHARD KITSON, President,
SAMUEL E. STOTT, Treasurer and Agent.
PATENT COTTON OPENERS
AND
LAPPERS, WITH RECENT VALUARLE IMPROVE
MENTS, SHODDY and WASTE MACHINES and
RAG DUSTERS, NEEDLE-POINTED
CARD-CLOTHING, Etc., Etc.
Kitson’s Patent Compound Opener Lapper.
—■ ■' 0 ■ ■
THE cotton is spread on this machine from the bale, and is mg' l c into a verv even
lap, at the rate of 300 t~ 400 pounds per hour. The laps are then Qnished on a
TWO-BEATER LAPPER,
WITH
KITSON’S PATFNT EYENER
Attahed, and owing to reccent improvements in this Evener, the laps wlien ready for
the card, only varies one quarter of an ounce to the yard. The cost of picking by this
system is only aboutone mill per pound on the cloth produced, and the picker house is
safer from fire than the card room.
S”Theie is al- o a great saving of room and power over the old system.
These Machines may be seen at the mills of the Augusta Factory, Langley Manufac
turing Company, and at the best mi is at Lowell, Lawrence, Fail River, Manchester
Lewiston, Providence, Kichmoi and, Baltimore, etc., etc.
The lollowing are a tew among many testimonials whicn wo nave received:
AUGUSTA FACTORY, Augusta, Ga. July 5,1875.
The Kitson Machine Lompang, Lowell, Mass.:
Gentlemen : We have been running your Compound Opener Lappers and Finisher
Lappers, with Eveners, tor more than one year, and frankly say that they have given
the most eminent satisfaction. We have no hesitancy in giving you our uuquaiitied en
dorsement, and cordially recommend your Machines.
F. COGIN, Superintendent.
o
OFFICE LANGLEY MANUFACTURING COMPANY, \
Langley, IS. (J., April 14, 1873. \
The Kitson Machine Company, Lowell, Mass.:
Gentlemen, f a?ve been running your system of Compound Opener Lappers and
Finisher Lappers, with Eveners, for m< ao th n two voars naet. at the Cotton Mill of tno
Langley Manufacturing Company, and I have found it to work the most satisfactory of
any opening and picking arrangement I have ever seen, w e have not weighed a pound
of cotton upon the picker apron since starting, yet we have had a remarkable regularity
of numbers. The staple is not injured by over beating, and it leaves the picker without
being curled or knitted; the seeding and cleaning is very complete. Over forty per
cent, in labor in this department is saved over the old system. One of the greatest con
siderations with this arrangement is its secur ty against fire.
Yours, &e., M. F. FOSTER, Superintendent.
OFFICE MASSACHUSETTS COTTON MILLS, /
Lowell, February 20, 1874. j
The Kitson Machine Company, Lowell, Mass,:
Gentlemen : This Company have now in use twenty of your Finisher Lappers, with
Eveners, and ten Compound Opener Lappers. Some of these machines have been at
work for ten years or more, and have always given us satisfaction, doing a large amount
of work, doing it well, at a low cost tor labor and repairs. In our ‘ Prescott Mill, ’ where
we have two Compound Opener Lappers, and. lour Finisher Lappers, we have averaged
the past seven weeks 39,267 lbs. Cloth weekly. Yarn averaging about No. 22. Cost one
14-100 mills (.00114) per lb. of cloth. We consider them a tirst class machine in all re
spects. Yours very truly,
p F. F. BATTLES, Agent.
MERRIMACK MANUFACTURING COMPANY,
Lowell, January 23, 1874. >
The Kitson Machine Company, Lowell, Mass.:
Gentlemen: We have been using some of your Compound Openei Lappers and
Finisher Lappers, with Even ts, for nearly three years, and at present are passing all
our cotton through tiiem. The machines have proved satisfactory, and both in quantify
and quality of their work have answered the expectations formed of them.
Yours respectfully, JOHN. C. PALFREY, Superintendent.
(The above Company have in use eight Compound Opener Lappers and sixteen Fin
isher Lappers, with Ev> nors; ordered at different times.)
Send for a Catalogue to THE KITSON MACHINE CO vIPANY.
SAMUEL E. STOTT. Treasurer,
jyfi-3m LOWELL, MASS.
SCOTT'S IMPROVED COTTON Tit
WALTON "& O<Y
COTTON FACTORS, AGENTS,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
aug24oow2m ___ _
WILMINGTON, N. G, LINES,
SEMI-WEEKLY
Fast Freight Route to All Points South or East.
BALTIMORE,
Baltimore and Southern Steam Transportation Company
SAILING FROM BALTIMORE
Tuesday and Friday, at 3 P. 31.,
AND FROM WILMINGTON Wednesday and Saturday.
NEW YORK,
CLYDE’S WILMINGTON LINE,
SAILING FROM NEW YORK
Tuesday and Friday, at 3 P. M., and from Wil
mington Wednesday and Saturday,
GIVING through Bills of Lading to all points in North and South Carolina, Georgia
and Alabama. For North or East bound Freight, to Baltimore, Now York, Phil*
adelphia, Boston, Providence, Fall ltiver, and other Eastern cities. Also, to Livorpool-
Glasgow, Bremen, Antwerp, and other European points.
These Lines connect at Wilmington with the Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta
Railroad; connecting at Columbia, S. C., with the Greenville and Columbia Rail Road,
and Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta Railroad.
At Augusta, Ga., with the Georgia, Macon and Augusta, and Central Railroads, and
with their connecting roads, offer unequaled facilities for the prompt delivery of
Freight to all points. The Steamers of these Lines, on arrival in Wilmington, stop at
Railroad Depot, the Freight transferred under covered sheds to Cars without delay
and forwarded by the Fast Freight Express that evening.
No drayage in Wilmington, and no transfer from Wilmington South. Rates guar
anteed as low as by any other route. Losses or Overcharges promptly paid.
Mark all Goods “ VIA WILMINGTON LINES.”
For Further information, apply to either of the Undersigned Agents of the Line:
EDWIN FITZGERALD, Agent Baltimore Line, 50 South street, Baltimore.
WM. P. CLYDE & CO., Agents New York Line, 6 Bowling Green, New York.
A. D. CAZAUX, Agent Baltimore and N. Y. Lines, Wilmington, N. C.
E. K. BURGESS, Agent W. 0. & A. Railroad, 263 Broadway, New York.
JOHN JENKINS, Agent, Augusta, Ga.
A. POPE,
novs-ly Gen’l Wilmington, N. C., and 263 Broadway, New York