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Tiie Mariella SeiniMeeklj Advocate.
VOL. 1.
.Tije IjJqHeffq
IS PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY, ON MONDAY AND TIIVRSDAY, !
BY
ELTnSTT.
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Advertisements respectfully solicited.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
C . D . PHILLIPS,
Attorney, and Counsellor at Lair,
MA R IE TTA GEO R GE I.'
Feb 22, 18G2 b'
N. ‘I.ELSTKK,
ATTO RN E Y A T LAAV ,
MARIETTA, GEORGIA.
WILL practice law in Bine llidge Circuit, and in Hie
Supreme Court of the State ; also in the District
Court at Marietta. marl.
d AVID IHWIN. < I'EE.M.EK BVTI.Ett
IRWIN & BUTLER.
ATTORN STS AT LA
MA RIETT. I, GEORGI. I
Business coni <h d to their prof >. ional management in
the following counties will be faidifuliy transacted. ;
viz: Camptcil, I’aiilding. i’olk. C<jld>, ( hciokee, 1 <»>-
syth, Lumpkin, Fulton :.nd Villon, Also, in the Lis j
trict Court at M niet i, am! at th<- Snj.i.im- Court at j
Atlanta. nm ■ I i
F. M. MYERS,
Aitor sa e y a t Xs |
NTaiict I :i, (I c<
WILL ATTEND TO All. It INI. UNIT: I ' I'l D'IoIIIS CAU E <
/fr/f/vw™.-—-Denlimad & Wii d:t. Marietta, Ca , A
J. Hansell, Marietta, Ca , Irwin & 1. ter, Mariett i.
Ha., Hon. Sol. Coin'll, S.iv. nn ih, S. Yai Levy, Sa- .
vannub. no\2". ti
CICERO C. VV l>N,
COLLECTING LAWYER,
MARIETTA, GEORGIA
Yl/ILL trive hi entire attention to the c ’’•■vti< n
▼ T of all claims ent listed to his care.
Octi 9 ly
A . A . * 1 *2. F A ,
S’ .?T jL.'JBB’,
Miiriid t:i, < <r orgin.
Mar. 9, ’GO b’
N. B. GREEN,
Attorney I'otsEimcUoi* at ILawa,
Mariol (a, < ’o., ( in.
Will practice, and ;; i\. ' rom pl at tent ion t o all 1 m ; m --
confided to 11is prolessional car in t.■ I)i sri: mi<. ac j
of UIK U. S. at .Marietta the :-i ri:i;m: Coi r. r >.f <> a.,
at Atlanta., the Sudekioi: and Ini i uioi; Court Hot the
Blue Ridge Circuit, and the comities adjoining Cobb,
of other Circuits.
ESPECIAL A rrr.NTli’N <ll VEX TO (ill c.'! Lie 1 ION or Dl'.'.rs,
AND rnr, si;ci ttiNG or ai ' mxnni.i: of claim-.
Brom pt and etlicieiit al t cut i• >n w :l*. b ■ :,i\ i n t o . ...
manner of business in the* out >s. '. I>i ■ .ii. .1J i’* I ■
county of Cobb and adjoining eounti. a
Pill 1.1.1 PS X. in R K 11 A L T r.!L
AT TO R N EYS AT LA W.
MA KI ETr A GA,
Will practice in Fulton. I’otldin : i■ H the .
ties of th- Blue Kid-re i omit ; in Supremo Court,
and District court of the f. > . at Marietta
Wm. PHILLIPS .1. T. Bl KKll XI I Ell
Jan I ''
BL F A W.
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
.11 XRIETT 1. <«LOli<«2 1,
dilligently attend to any basin a eo f. I ’M
to his care hl the counties, of Cobb, Ch. ' ’a< e,
Milton and Paulding.
a’LAIXH collected a- • »o:-. . •it canid \ .aw,
and the monev promptl> pat 1 over.
June 20th,
ANDREW .1. 11 kNSELL,
Attorney, Counselor A Solicitor,
Marietta, Cobb County, Georgia,
Fit \C tic rs r'l V I.AIt l V t N ITI R
/ ■ ©
Os the United States,
At Maiictia. the Supreme Court of
Georgia, and the >uj>e. or i . ;.;i. : the
C..m tie' :
Cobb. Foa-mi. I'unn.
CMNX.d, ChekoKß lALLDINO.
WuirrtKin, Milti'n
l also attend promptly tn secnrimJC and collecting
Salms in any ot ihe:uljoiumg < mmm
Marietta ’ <» l
MARIETTA, GEORGIA, THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 15, 1861.
AIISCELLANEOUS.
Dr.
REFORM PHYSICIAN,
OFFERS his services to the citizens of Marietta and
surrounding conn try.
Office North side of the square over Page & Haley’
Store. febß-tf
R t 8,18 Es T BIM T1 ST.
CI RATEFUL to the citizens of Marietta and vl
cinitv for a liberal patronage during the past
ten years, is still prepared to perform all operations
either for preserving the natural, or inserting artifi
cial teeth in the most*approved manner.
He solicits calls from those who have very bad teeth,
as lie is using a preparation forfiUing the most deli
cate teeth, no matter how badly decayed, if not oth
erwise diseased —and rendering them serviceable for
years. It is about the same color as the teeth and
will never change or discolor the teeth.
IWers to Citizens of Marietta for whom he
has operafed during the past ten years.
TKRMS.” Cash, unless by special contract.
Office, South side of public square, over the Post Office.
Marietta, Jan., 183
W P. nt'GIIEY, B. A. BANDALL,
“HUGHEY & RANDALL, ~
House, S’gn and Decorative Painters,
(FRAIN KltS,
Glaziers and Paper Hangers,
A LSO
HV.-'D r.,- Zn Fresco and Landscape Painting
a’ aet a ? co rg ii a,
Al! work neatly executed with promptness, and at
very reasonable prices.
jlypt Instruc'ion given in Landscape Painting ons
liberal terms.
REFERENCES:
JOS .in TICKER, I HAMMETT .t GROVES,
A. Si. EONSDMION, | W. A. FRAZER.
Shop iii second story of N. B. Green’s new build
ing, rear the cjurt house.
Fresh Garden Seeds!
WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED
11U >; >0 PAPEI ?S FI IESII G-A RI) EX ■
100 lbs. GARDEN SEEDS IN BULK,
•25 bushels EARLY PEAS AND BEANS I
A FINE LOT OF ONION SETTS,
All of which will be sold Cheap by
HAMM Elf & GROVES.
(’. J. S II EP A R D ,
AS the Old Stti’fci <>£ J. El. JlrCliulouk.
OAS how on hand a large and
well-selected assortment of family supplies, to
which he invites the attention of the citizens of Ma
rietta and the country, the one priced system will
be strictly adhered to. JLs terms will be Cash, or
equivalent, that is, Country Produce at Cash prices,
or short time to prompt pat iug customers. Bills due
on presentation, fpf His determination is to sell
good articles at low prices and will expect prompt
payments. 3
: <i ■ 1 ■ j'.> JL.
SHOES.
HAX’ING been heretofore unable to accommodate
a!l my customers, I desire now to inform them
md the public generally that having laid in a good
lot of the best Fnneh’Stock, and also having em
ployed competent workmen 1 a n now prepared to
supply ail who will favor me with their patronage,
with the best Shoes and Boots that can be m ide. 1
intend to keep constantly on hand a few choice ready
mad Boots and Shot s, and will endeavor to make it
to the int rest of Southern men to buy Southern made
B ots ;md >hoes. All work warranto 1.
r r t c i' s :
Water proof and Quilted bottom Boots SIO.OO
■ • •• •• Footing 6.50
Fine Calf XVelt Boots stitched 8 to 9.00 i
•• Pump Sole do Bto 9.00
Footii 50.50 to $6 00 j
Kip Boots $5.00 to $7.0“
•• I'liotim.r, I 0.50
<] ICCS $2.50 to §6.1’0
S’ on on Powder S: r;ng street at foot of Railroad
PHd'c. R.W. GABLE.
!’. S - Repairing also done with neatness and dis
pitdi. Marietta. G.t., Jan. 22, Is 1
L.
CHEAP CASHSTORE.
Jl ST UFA tWllt)
V' T the well known >t;in l< f the Su’ ' filer, NortL
Ea.-t earner of Public Square the very
i»en! Stock' of Good a
1 have ever purchase 1, which will be sold as I oofrw
CASH as they can be bought anywhere. Prom ptcus
tomers can have till Christmas.
I 1 will call attention particularly to my purchases of
illvavvand scrviieable goods -as Linseys Ne. Also
' to a" Well svletted supply of
Hc22dy-Madc Clothing
Aml to a large stock of
1> DOTS and S II 0 E S,
of which I have nvetved thhiy nine ease< tb.G week.
Cali and pilee my Goods. E- bENNEII.
W . H. HUNT.
w f TTP K.VJFJ .IT f. .fir,
M \RIETT GEORG I\.
.A PAP3R POS TH3 S’SOFS.H.
MERCHANDISE.
FANCY aw STAPLE '
Dry GroocLs,
SHOES, BOOTS, HATS, CAI’S,
China and Class Ware,
HABBWAI? E,
Family Groceries,
Saddlery Leather, Fabrics, &c., &c.
rffl HE Subscriber has just received and will keep
JL constantly good selections in the above branches
of trade and will sell at _L o W Prices.
gF° T E RMS GASH!
janG’6o D. M. YOUNG.
A. ISAACS,
"Wholesale a’nd retail Dealer in
MILLINERY and FANCY GOODS,
RIBBONS, FEA TIIERS,
FLOATERS,
Head Dresses, Embroideiies, Blor.des, Ruches,
Perfumery, Ac , Ac.,
Connelly's Iron front Building,
White ElaH Street,
ATLANTA, (ftORGIA
Mrs. A. ISAACS.
Fashionable Milliner,
(Connelly’s IRON FRONT STORE,)
B'7o’/e Hull, near Aluluna st-'cct,
Atlasita, Georgia,
y j
A large assortment of Bonnets, Head Dresses, Ber
tha Capes, Embroideries, Dies Trimmings and Fan
cy Goods constantly on hand.
O’ Bonnets made to order at short notice.
Oct 5- ly.
lamily sUppliesTl
QQIIE SUBSCRIBER oh« rs ti e public, in the upper
| Store. Sewell range, Cher'-kee Street, a full stock
I< of GROC’ERH'.S, embraE;)-■ every article u nally
kept in that Hue, such as
SUGA R-S,-nli ki 115 -
COFFEE. :ii’ : ■:
MOLASSES, SYRUP,
TOBACCO, YARNS,
Act, Ac., A.
C ouatry F rod nee
taken in Ba'ter, on liberal terms.
Having purcha-'' I the : tore and goods of Mr. B. S.
Johnson, lie also oiler- a l.ii'.e stock ot tlllOCLilll.S
at that stand, on Cheiok e Street, an I Mr. HAMES
will take pleasure in waiting < n customers.
July 27, '59. tf] E. PAGE.
FAMII TORE. '
GiIOVES & BUTNER,
r B \g Opened in the Post Ch ice Di iliuxg a
ijL¥AR!IIT% FA JI BLY STORE!,
in which will be found EVERY A.. lICLE in the
GROCERY LIN E,
Liquors excepted—besides a great variety of other
articles. They will sell for
CASH A.X 1> SMALL .PROFITS.
If you want good
COFFEE, TEA, SUGAR.
MOLASSES, FINE HAMS, I.ARD.
SYRIA’. TOBACCO. YARN,
or anything in that line, give us a call, and we war
rant satisfaction.
We will also ke< p Foolsea } >, Tuettci’
Pnpcr, Pens, Ink, and other articles of ■
Stationery.
CoTintuv Produce
Os all kinds, taken in barter on liberal terms.
July 14th, 1859- ly |
I >uick< ‘i S, IB ll )S &c.
0
Well Ropes,
Bed cords,
Flow Lines,
PAIXTEI) Bi t RETS
AND TI BS.
CEDAR BUCKETS .<-1 TUBS.
WELL BUCKETSamI WHEELS.
SIEVES and RII >1 >LES,
TEA KETTLES.
COFFEE MILLS.
Brooms. Cotton Tw.ne ami I* actury Thrcaa.
Fit sale by * VLi>- ROOT A SON.
TERMS CASH • JyJ
ATI. \ N'T \ I X'l'
mg £ ir©^v D
,1. M. HOL BItO OK,
Whitehall Street. Aiiar.tu. Georgia.
milE-‘ttention of Pi u.; Farm, rs and Country
I Mer t "mint.--, ar er. .mi.. ‘ tie- Urge am.
variv*d assortment ■■ H •■'. <'.ip<. &c., that: is kept
constantlv on hand at IB »LBR‘ lOK'S HA 1 MANI
FACTORY 'i: x>-.. C.int.iH n Hat-
ma le to <•: ’.er, and :- nt ’ E- r< - to any portion of
the country. , : ...J 1}
;DUW FINE SUGARS,
i For sale lv H AvMETT a ' HIOX Em
Nullification anti Secession.
Hon. Jefferson Davis in his last speech in the
Senate of the United States said as follows:
I A great man, who now reposes with his
i lathers, and who has been often arraigned
:or a want of fealty to the Union, advocated
the docti inc of nullification because it pre
served the Union. It was because of his
deep-seated attachment to the Union ; his de
termination to find some remedy for existing
Uls short of a severance of the ties which
bound South Carolina to the other States, that
Mr. Calhoun advocated the doctrine of nulli
fication which he proclaimed to be peaceful—
to be within the limits of State power, not to
disturb the Union, but only to be a means of
bringing the agent before the tribunal of the
States for their judgment.
Secession belongs to a different class of
remedies. It is to be justified upon the basis
that the States are sovereign. There was a
time whc.ii none denied it. I hope the time I
) may come again, when a better comprehension
of the theory of our Government, and inalien
able rights of the people of the States, will
prevent any one from denying that each State
is a sovereign, and thus may reclaim the
grants which it has made to any ajrnt whom
soever.
1 therefore siy I concur in the action of the
people of Mississippi, believing it to be neces
sary and proper, and should have been bound
by their action if my belief had boon otherwise:
and this brings me to the important point
which I wish on this last occasion, to present
to. the Senate. It is by this confounding nulli
fication and sccccssion that the name of a great
man, .whose ashes now mingle with his mother
earth, lias been invoked to justify coercion
, against a seceding State. Tiie phrase “to
execute the laws,’’ was an expression which
Gen. Jackson applied to the case of a State
refusing' t< obey the lav,s while vet a member
lof the Union. That is not the cast? which is
' now presented. The laws are to be executed
over the United States. They have no relation
to any’ foreign country.
It is a perversion of terms, at lea-t it is a
great misapprehension of the case, which cites
that expression for application to a State which
has withdrawn from the Unio:?. You may
make war on a foreign State. Il it bo the pur
-1 pose of gentlemen, they may make war
against a State which has withdrawn from the
! Union ; but there are no laws ol the United
States to be executed within the limits of a
seceded State. A State finding herself in the
condition in which Mississippi ha-judged, she
is, in which her safety requires that shcshould ;
provide for the maintenance other rights out j
of the Union, surrenders all the benefits, (and
they are known to be many,) deprives herself
' of the advantages (they are known to be great,)
Levers all the ties of affection, (and they arc
close and endearing,) which have bound her
to the Union ; and thus divesting herself of
' every benefit, taking upon herself every burden,
i she claims to be exempt from any power to
execute the laws of the United States in her
; limits.
1 well remember an occasion when Massa
i cusetts was arraigned before the bar of the
Senate, ami when the doctrine of coercion wa<
rife, and to be applied again-t her because of
the rescue of a fugitive slave in Boston. My
i opinion then was the same it is now. Not in
a-pirit of egotism, but to show that 1 am not
intluenccd in iny opinion because the case is ■
mv own. I refer to that time and that occasion
as containing the opinion which I then enter
taintd, and on which my present conduct i
based. I then said, if Massachusetts, following
her through a stated line of conduct, chooses
to take the last step which separates her from
the Union, it is her right to go, and I will
neither vote one dollar nor one man to coerce
her back, but will say to her, God speed, in
incmojy of the kind associations which once
existed between her and the other States.
Fureigx —The Charles.on Cour
ier is credibly informed that Gov. Brown, of
Georgia, has attached the Northern stock in
the Macon and M estern Rail Road, amounting
: to about $1,000,000.
: M arriage of Mi.-s Lane. —Mis- Harriet Lane
celebrated the close of her uncle's alminbtra.
tion by being married yesterday to Mr. James
Carlisle, the most brilliant lawyer in Wash
ington.
i Froth Hie Savannah News. ] .
A Patriotic Northerner.
Such of our readers as have read the letters
of our Lowell correspondent, which have ap
peared from lime to time during the past six
■ months, will be glad to read the following Ict-
I ter, addressed by him to the Abolition Govcr-
- nor of Massachusetts. Had there been a great
> er number of such men in Massachusetts and
• throughout the North, the Union of our fathers
might have been preserved. Here is the letter,-
which speaks for itself:
To His Excellency" John A. Andrew, Governor
of the Commonwealth of Alassaehusetts.
Sir:—l hereby tender to your Excellency
the resignation of my office as a Justice of the
Peace for the county of Middlesex, in said
Commonwealth. The reason that induces me
to take this step is, that I cannot conscientious
ly hold a judicial office under the government
of a State whose Executive and Legislature seem
I to manifest an anxiety to involve the nation in
war by the hasty mi l unsolicited offer of the
military forces of the State, to be used against
the citizens of sovereign and co-equal States,
who seek no quarrel with us, who have never
trespassed upon us, nor menaced any of our
rights as equal members of the Confederacy.
It seem- tome that the recent legislation of
Massachusetts, in icgarJ to the militia, which
has received the approbation of your Excellen
cy, (and 1 believe was specially recommended
by you in your message,) is unwise and impo
litic, not to say reprehensible and criminal.—
Such legislation must have a tendency to in
duce and develop a spirit among the people
that will, if •unrestrained by more temperate
councils, le.id to an unnecessary, unprovoked
and suicidal war.
The caries that have led to the difficulties in
which the n ition is unhappily involved, and
which are now made the pretext for warlike
demoii traiions, are too palpable to bo mista*.
Icon. 'l'hi-y can neither by,.disguised nor wink'
(■'lout >f sight. \ few years ago emissarics’of
European monarchs scattered the seeds of a
dangerous lictesy throughout the Noith. For
a time its growth was so slow as not to attract’
general notice, :.nd yet its virus was constant
ly woikiugai.d gradually poisoning the pub
lic mind. Ambitious demagogues, too poor in>
intelle it or moral worth to mount to places of
power bv the legitimate step of statesmanship
and personal tneiit.discovered in that heresy an
element that they could turn to their advantage,
as tuned ii championship, and political aboli
tior.ism reared its hydra head.
When al olitioni-m brought forth its first ri
pened and only legitimate fruits, treason, rap
ine an ! murder at Harper’s Ferry, in the au
' luinn of 1859, its chosen champions still de
fended it, and men were to be found base
! enough to declare that “John Brown himself
was right. - ’
Such have I cn the teachings, acts and leg
i lation of Republican Abolitionism, that the
1 people of the Slaveholding States honestly, and
not without reason believe that the party
about to take possession of the Federal Gov
ernment is determined to rob them of four
thousand millions of dollars worth of property
of their homes, of their civilization, of all that
the heart hoi Is dear or makes life desirable. If
it be true, every dictate of patriotism, every
-entimen! of i hilanthropv, and every emotion
( f religion commands them “trumpet-tongued
to rc -istthe ‘deep damnation’ of such a rule.
I fit Le not true, it becomes the imperative du
, ty, as'well as privilege, of Northern Republicans
te disabuse the minds oftheir Southern brethren
of erroneous imprc--ions, by a frank and out
si,..ken debration of their purposes and policy-
This they refuse to do. On the contrary, mill
tarv ordei and the brandishing of swords give
living and unmi-tal:able proof that the appre
hensions of the south arc not groundless, and
■ that theßepublican party, rather than aban
don a r tten plank in a miserable platform,
arc Avillimz t<> add the horrors and cahnitics of
war to the disasters of disunion.
Respectfully your servant
M.Bradfobd White.
i Lowell, Feb. 12, 1
Mi- Slicd,lon. whose efforts to establish the
: h gitimacy of her father attracted so much at*
tcut'on in I. aid >n circle-, who pleaded lii«
case in ; ■ rs m, and who has struggled so ma-
■ ny v. : s in his behalf, is still not discouraged.
It w is s;q po-cd that the last decision against
- her was fma' ; bit the la<t steamer brings us
- new that -h h- r >s app-alcd to the House of
* Lords.
NO 1.