THOMAS & CHARLES ELLIS, 



IMPORTERS OF DRY GOODS, HARDWARE, CUTLERY AND GUNS, 

 E Street, Opposite the Exchange Bank. 



.RICHARD HILL, Jr. 

 GENERAL AGENT AND COLLECTOR, 



OFFICE No. 183, MAIN STREET, CORNER BELOW THE BANKS. 



AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS. 



The subscriber would call attention to his stock of Agricultural Implements, consisting of 

 Ploughs, Straw Cutters, Cornshellers, Corn and Cob Crushers, Hoes, Spades, 

 Shovels, Axes, &c. &c. which he will furnish as good and sell as low, as they can be had in 

 the State of Virginia. C. T. BOTTS. 



SECOND VOLUME SOUTHERN PLANTER. 



THE subscriber will pay $1 25 apiece 

 Planter, if delivered in good order. 



for 



a hundred copies of the second volume of the Southern 



C. T. BOTTS. 



LAMP AGEMCf. 



SUCH has been the Subscriber's success in this department of his business and such is the increasing 

 noloriety he is obtaining as an Agent for the Sale of Real Estate, that he does not hesitate to recom- 

 mend his services as mutually beneficial both to those seeking to buy and to sell. 



With his extensive knowledge of the wants of persons desiring to purchase, derived from the various 

 applications that he is daily receiving, it is almost impossible that any one desiring to sell should fail 

 to reap from his services five or six times as much as he charges for them. Those charges are as for- 

 merly— when the property is sold within 12 months from the date at which he is employed, if the sale 

 amounts to ten thousand dollars, he is to receive $100 out of the first payment of the purchase money — if 

 it amounts to less than that sum, he is to receive $30. If at the end of 12 months the property remains 

 unsold he is to receive $10. 



gjf Information furnished those desiring to purchase, without charge. 



C. T. BOTTS. 



in Henrico for Sale, 



THE subscriber is authorissd to sell a tract of Land, belonging to Mr. G. M. Keesee, lying in the 

 County of Henrico, about 18 miles below Richmond, and about 4 miles from James River. The 

 tract contains 566 acres, is well watered, and furnished with inexhaustible beds of the very richest Marl. 

 A large proportion of the farm has already been brought to a high slate of improvement by the use of this 

 marl and the remainder is equally susceptible of it. The buildings are commodious and in good order. 

 The whole may be purchased for the very low sum of six thousand dollars. C. T. BOTTS. 



HORSE POWER. AND THRESHING MACHINE. 



THE subscriber is now engaged in manufacturing what he natters himself will prove the best horse 

 power that has ever been offered to the public. It is taken from a northern model, but is much 

 strengthened and improved. It is intended for two horses, although it may be worked with four. The 

 horse power and threshing machine complete will be delivered in the city of Richmond for $120. It will 

 thresh well and cleanly from 100 to 150 bushels of grain a day. C. T. BOTTS. 



Farms for Sal®. 



A SPLENDID estate of 1000 acres on the Chickahominy, 7 miles below Richmond— 500 acres of 

 prime mud land, as well adapted to the growth of grass as any land in Virginia. There are on the 

 tract three dwelling houses, one of them very superior, having been erected at an expense of $7000. 

 This tract is heavily timbered with ash, oak and pine of the finest quality, and there is on the premises 

 an excellent saw mill, from which an active, enterprising man could make three times the cost of the 

 place. The situation is perfectly healthv. 



Also a tract of land in Fluvanna, of 635 ac^es, belonging to Mr. B. M. Jones. It lies upon the Ri- 

 vanna, about 13 miles from Charlottesville, and within one mile of the Union Mills. It is admirably di- 

 vided into cleared and woodland, into meadow and highland. As a tobacco plantation it hardly has ic.» 

 superior in the county. The buildings are in excellent order, and the health of the place proverbial. 



. C T. UOTTS. 



