Newspaper Page Text
gyawra-yy- • '
Hamtta >tacate.
FOIi PRESIDENT,
HON. JEFF. DAVIS,
-ITC )TH VIC Jdl- L* L< H.S lE> ® NT,
HO NASA. H. STEPHENS,
Electoral ?Tick?t.
STATE AT LARGS,
_ ▼ ... of Cobb,
ALTERNATES.
_ r. i .... .of Thomas.
J-B- Alexander • Gordon.
W. II < Dabney
DISTRICT ELECTORS 1
-“J
«■ T P Garvin- of Richmond,
g’ x. c. M. Hammond (’f Clarke.
7—o. C. Gibson of bpauhhng
g.’_ Herbert Fielder n * \ oi ~
9. 11. H. Cannon ° 0 ? C*a"s'
10. H. F. Price ot Ga99 ‘
alternates: .
I—J. L. SIKOLtTON «£ nTCn
2. J. S.’Dyson ofThcHnas
3. J. M. Mobley ™
5.-J. S. Hook of Washington
f,.— lsham Fannin of H o ’/’?”
7.—J. T. Stephens ••••“/ Monroe
9. -JR. Banks ;A' ,* '?
10. F. A Kirdy ...of hattooga.
-— — _- c<
TIOV F. J. GARTRELII
MARIETTA GEO.,
FRIDAY MORNING NOV. 1 1361.
Tcaution to extortioners.
We hear much complaint from other
communities, as well as from our own
j eople, against the soulless monopolist
and extortioners, who are taking ad
vantage of these trying times to clinch
themselves, by demanding the most ex
orbitant prices for provisions and other
family commodities. On ’his subject
the Mayor of the city of Augusta pub.
lishes the following:
A CARD TO THE PUBLIC.
It is currently rumored upon our
streets, and generally believed, hat
•numbers of our merchants are engaged
in speculating in the prime necessaries
of life, and that there are now in our
city considerable Quantities of proAision
and other articles which are being held
back for still higher prices, li corms
within my notice that these repor ts are
causing the manifestation of murh feel
ing and I deem it my duty to appeal, in
the most solemn manner to all who may
lie engaged in these attempts to control
the prices of articles of necessity to ab
stain from a cairrse which cannot but
result in great distress to all the poor •
er classes of our community. Common
patriotism demands that all of our cit
izens should make sacrifice fort e com
mon good, and not that advantage
should be taken of those least able to
suffer. I sincerely trust that whilst
these troublous times shall exist, our
merchants and trailers will be sat
isfied (as they were before) with living
profits.
Robt. H. May, Mayor C. A.
The fidlowing, from the Suffolk (Va.)
mS’km, is quite as applicable to this
latitude as that for which it was writ
ten
The people of Virginia have hereto
fojp dealt largely with the Yankees
and have, in their business transactions
imbibed many Yankee notions, which
arc continually being developed. the
disposition to speculate upon he neces
sities of the people at a time like (his,
bye harging two prices for every thinjy to
nidi is purely Yankee in its origin. Ihe
principle with many is, get all you can
for what you have to sell, and if you
find one in straitened circumstances,
push and siiueer.e him all you can.
This is not Virginianiah, it is all \an
kecish, and now when every thing is
changing this class of alien enemies
should be forced to desist from such
wickedness, or else go North that dog
may eat dog together.
There is much complaint and some
excitement in this section in relation
to thia matter. It*may be asw ell for our
people to examine into the grounds of
this camplaint to avoid doing injustice
to classes or individuals. Where ad
vantage has been taken of the neces
sities arising from the war, there the
censure should attach and there only.
We cannot say l ow far, if a’ all, our
Merchants are liable to this censure.—
They arc all engaged in the Retail
trade and in most instances, if not all,
buying from wholesale dealers, they
•re obliged to sell in accordance with
their prices.
It was recently estimated that the stock
of Salt on hand in the Confederacy was
fully equal to a year’s supply. Conn
try Merchants can only buy this stock
at between $6 and $7 per sack. I’he
whles.de Merchants and «/»• -n
have bought it up an 1 have thus in
tlie ed more injury upon the Southern
cause than “ten thousand men armed by
shallow Lincoln.'’ So too, with Coffee
•nd other imported articles.
Merchants have their duties, their ob
ligations - to the community in which
they transact business, which they can-
H»*l viu with impunity. Their bus:-
THE MAR I EIT A S E AT. IAV EEK L Y ADVOG AT E.
ni’6B is an agency which they under
take between the producer and consuin
mer In ordinary times they are ex
pected to realize, out of this agency
whatever there is of honorable profit
incident to i’. When calamity befalls
the community whose business they
transact, it is iheirWuZy to extend all
the advantage which their skill com
mands;for its relief. They must buy
•nd sell community on the best
terms possible or subject themselves to
censure. We do not know that any of
our merchants are thus censurable
we know that some of them are not.
For our manulactors we cannot speak
so favorably. Cotton and Leather fab
rics have all greatly advanced and some
doubled in value, over last year, though
Cotton was then 10 to 11 cents and now
at from 7 to 8, and hides with a like
difference.
T t is nofan answer to say that the
demand for these fabrics has greatly in
creased. The fact is the supply in this
as in Coffee, Salt, etc., has been cut off
by the war and the speculator is as
much justified in buying up a stock of
salt in view of this failure of supply as
the Manufactor is in increasing the
price of his goods in consequence there
of. They bo h act upon the same prin
ciple —they take because th* y can get
it—a id they get it because our people
have voluntarily engaged in a War for
Southern independence which makes
them temporarily dep iideut upon those
: classes.
I We are friendly to Southern Manu
facturing industry—but, this is all
wrong, ami is working an immense deal
of injury to (he Southern cause. It is
disgusting to a people, who have ten*
de red life ami property for independence
to find their own people speculating
upon their patriotism.
We tell the Manufactiiror and the
Merchant that there is suffering abroad
in he country requiring ('ve-y branch
of business to look at ths public necessi
ties above all other consideiations. —
There are various ways in which this
suflering can be alleviated. Moder ate
profits, in all enterprises, is one of the
most obvious, and the purchase of abun
dant supplies of such articles, produced
in the Confederacy, as afford cheap ar
ticles of fu< d. M e find that it. New
Orleans, last week the following weie
the prices of the new crop of Sugar and
Molasses :
Sugar—lnferior 2| a 3c., common 3
a4- fair to fully fair to 5’ Mo
lasses— Inferior to ordinary 18 a 20c.,
prime to choice 22 to 24.
With a boun'ifiil supply of Sugar and
Molasses on such terms the demand tor
bacon would reduce the price of tha
article to living rates.
If we mean to go through with this
war slice ssfully every interest—every
class—must makethat object paramount.
We must s’and shoulder to shoulder —
heart linked in h« art—in the army and
at home—for the accomplishment of an
object which cannot command less than
the energies of a united people.
Consumers must reflect, in justice to
the manufacturer, that there is an active
demand, at a distance, tor his fabrics,
which, though it does not justify Lis
advance in prices, under existing cr
cumstanci's, may suggest some extenua
tion, for his course of action.
. •.
W ITHDRAW AL.
To the People of the Sth District:
Many friends in whose fidelity I have
full ’confidence seem to desire that I
should decline the race for Congress.
A war*' of no charges against tm* public
or private. and wi h assuranc* s of large
majorities in seveial of the counties,
and a large vote in nearly all of the
district, 1 yield, am’ ask the [ample to
eh'Ct a representative without any ref
erence to my name. I feel truly grate
ful to mv friends ihroiighou th*' district
for their generous aid ami proffered
support, ami respectful to those wh->se
preference was for others, tor the kind
manner in which they treated me per
sonal!?, and dealt with my character,
which * vurs<- on their part tended to
keep out all b tnvrncss from the canvass,
ith a constitution too frail for ser
vice in camp and fi dd, lor which dis
pensation ot U Gracious I’rov dence I
cannot find it in my heart to mtirmer,
and fit**' fr >m iesentmeu’. towards all
mankind, save my counti’s enemies, 1
shall t-' the utm<*st of my f»-eb!c prwris
ami lim <*-d means, combine to aid in
the gloi ms cause whenever and wlut*'-
ever 1 find an opportunity io do anv
txuod. Kesp’tly vi-ur *»bt. S’rvt.
BERBER* F. ELDER.
Cedar Town, Ga Oct. 24tli I>GL
The Leesburg fight, is said to have
dispirite-1 the north as much as Reward’s
let er. The t 'ta 1 of killed an 1 would
•d of thv Cunfedvratv* wan 13)J.
LETTER FROM VIRGINIA.
7TII GEORGIA REGIMENT.
Correspondence cf the Advocate.
——
Camp 7 hi Geo Rf.g’t. )
Army of the Potomac, s
October 21, 1861.)
Mr. W. M. Jefferson :
Dear Sir .---Since my last no fighting
has occured of any interest in this army,
yet incidents have appeared, and move
ments been made that would convince
the most skeptical that we are upon the
threshhold of big events.
In my last I described to you the posi
tion of our army stretchin?- from Lees
burg on the nor heast to the Occoquan
on the southwest, in a semi-circle, its
line and the Potomac River in its bend,
forming an immense parabola, within
which the enemy were enclosed. The
7th Regiment performed five days of
arduous picquet duty fiom the 9th to
15th, but, although, they were in the
immediate vic'iiity <>f the Yankees,
whose drum beats were distinct day and
night, nearly all around our Regiment,
then* was no attack, made, ami not a
gun fired, save upon falsi* alarm and ac
cident. The 7 h was relieved on the
15th by Col. Anderson’s 11th Geo. Reg’t.
and we have heard that the enemy drove
them in—in less than an hour after our
beys left. Quite a distressing accident
occurred n our Regiment on the last
day of their picquet duty, resulting in
the immediate of one negio team
ster and severely wounding of another.
The musket ot private Downs of our
company was th*' unlucky weapon that
didthe mischief, the lock aec’ilentlj stii
ing a stump sufficiently hard to explode
it, as Mr Downs was moving out to go
upon duty. No Marne is attache 11 to
Mr. Downs, whatever, ai.d none more
seriously regrets the sad affair than he.
The negro killed belonged to a gentle
m m ol this State and was appraised at
$1300,00 which sum the Confederate
States will have to pay. The wounded
negro is a free man, and will ge well
with perhaps the loss of a leg 111 luck
never comes single i’ is said, and the
Regiment had hardly got into camp at
Fair’s Cross roads, ere another paintul
accident occurred, l y tin- explosion ot
a musket severely wounding Mr. Kim
brell, a privateof Co., I), and narrowly
missing several others. Kimbrell was
shot in the leg which h is already been
amputated and he is since dead. This
war is an aw.ul business, and owing'
to the senseless carelessness oi men, one
is alwavs in,danger, sometimes 1 think !
there is more danger in our own camp
than there wouU be in the battle held. |
Alter dark, the evening of the 15lh,
we received orders to strike tents, pack
up, and be ready to move. I’lie scene
of a Regiment packing up to move in
th** night is altogether indiscribable and
you will never appreciate it tally until
You meet up with an opportunity of
w!tm*ssiiig it. At hall pas ten o’clock
the wagon train moved off, the Regi
ment shortly following and soon the
•spot which had been alive with the
ceaseless move of a thousand men, \v.ts
as lom ly as a conr. ry grave yard, save
where the smouldering remains ot the
camp flies fitfully glared in tiie bright '
moonlight. These night marches may ,
lie all very line for novel writers to talk
about, it may lie very romantic to ’he
fancy of romantically (that’s not in
Webster’s Unabridged) disposed indi
viduals, and ‘fracks" may consider it
quite an item to see in the dim moon- ;
light, long lolumns of men, with nius- :
ket ami bayonet fitfully glistening fn
L.i na's pa e rays, but 1 assure you that
to the men who “tote” the aforesaid
muskets and bayonets, there is very lit
tle ot romance in th-- affair —e.mtrarily
it is to them, an affair of mini under
foot. Such was our experience. W e
soon found that the whole Army was
in <king a refrogade movement, of some
sewn miles, in the centre. So that at
the present time our form of half a para
bola has assiumtl the shape of a \ the
ceutn* having fallen back much more
than either of 'he wings. The true ob-!
ject of this move I have no means of
coininunicating, but it is supposed to f
be to induce McCiellan o come out ami
light us, and as he is fanions for cut- ;
ting through the centre, it is Mtipposcd
that our Generals are going t*> gratify
him as Hannibal did the Roman Consul
at Capua (I believe; and if be will only ■
press on our c- litre it is all we want.
Up to this lime we have seen nothing
of the enemy but, wc understand that
they are slowly advancing and erecting
lortifications as they com**, and from
citizens who are moving back la'liiuJ
our lines for safety, we this evening
learn that their picquHa Lave approach-1
cd Fairfax C. IL, but their advance has :
not yet made its appearance there.—
Upon evacuating on the night of
15th our forces biirned up Fairfax Sta
tion, which s considered as very proper, i
because the denizens there-abouts are 1
of that class who make fair weath *r on
both sides, and will'be sociable with
either party, and Virginia Ike will !
fleece Yankee or Southerner in selling
their little provisions and mean whiskey. '
I here “stop the press” to say that it is
my standing conviction that these Vir-'
ginians are the most modest people in
tin* world, for they never do ask more
than ten prices for anything they have
to sell.
The 7th Regiment is now" encamped
in the edge of Centreville, a place that
Mr. Russell has made notable by writ
ing its humble name fo r the columns of
the “Thunderer” —where the ladies and
gentlemen of the “Grand Army’ made
preparations for such a fine pic-nic on
the 21st July, and they did truly dis
play good fast** in their selection of a
spot for the enjoyment <>f a> regular .jol
ly time, because the scenery around
Centreville is as beautiful and pleasant
to the view as any 1 have seen in Vir
ginia.' Looking t > the ■-■on hern wes
tern and northern luirizon ; we have
what landscape painters always delight
to get in ’he back ground of their pic
tures—a range of mountains—the Blue
Ridge rising peak upon peak, ge ting
each more distant until the farthest
summits melt and dissolve into, that
ethcvial invisibility so charming either
on canvass in God s own gieat pan
orama. B-’tween t ose mount tins and
Centreville lies it vast campaign ol
gently undulating country whilst to the
east ami southeast the view goes off
over that same geirly rolling land until
at the distance of live or six miles, it
sirike the pine hills in Fairfax Co. The
view is a glorious one on all sides, and
although I am not a general nor a son
of a general, this, to my eye looks like
a noble country —a splendid locality Im
two mighty armies to meet upon an 1
wrestle for the rod of empire and the
palm of victory. Whether such an
event will take place, is on ■of the
things belonging ye ! to futurity, but
taking the ground that “coming events
cast their shadows before,” one would
almost surely imagine, he [ erceived
some appearance of that shadow from
the busy and ceaseless notes of prepara
tion that fill all these plains. One thing
i.-» very certain and that is, that upon
some portion of the country. I have .
attemi ted to describe, the sei'nes of the ,
21st July will shortly be re-enacted on ;
an improved enlarged and more tieim n- ,
dons scale because it is morally imposi- j
Me that two such hostile armi *s can i
long remain in such close proximity !
without a collision. The battle may '
not be within ave miles of cur positi m '
and it may happen that the ball will
open right here, which would be more i
in accordance with the wishes of our ,
commanders as here we have any I
amount of room unobstiucted by fences '
so that we could get at them with the '
bayonet. It is the design of the Geor- I
gia Regiments to give them cold steel, ■
and if they make their attack here, the ;
bloody 7 h is much stronger and better i
prepared tor the business than she was f
on the 21st July, and our flag which al- ;
ready has eighteen bullet holes in it, 1
will be sure to go where it will be bet
ter riddled.
The men that fight under that fl ig '
represent the En pire State of the South
and under such leaders as Gartreil
• ’ooper and Du woody they will as fully ,
“illustrate” Georgia >8 any body ot
men La ever followe d one standard. — ,
The success and fighting qualities of
any Regiment depend greatly upon
their leaders, and this Regiment can j
boast oj us leuihess and indomiiitable a i
set of lender-* as any in the service of;
the Confederate States.
Ihe army is concentrated here just '
as close as possible and in fact two
do a: tor conveni* neo as our 'cuts are •
almost intermingled wi h those of Gcl. ,
Jackson’s Brigade. It is a grand si-ht ;
especially at night, to look over the |
miles of iigh R, and one can aluos’ ini- j
agine that he looks upon some vast city, :
and unconscicusly examines lor the j
domes and spires oi its churches. There j
is very little “church” here, however,
tithough Uncle Jolmy Fry exhorts
every night in some of the companies, j
Were it not that I dislike ever to ex- ’
press anything disresj>ectful to the j
clergy I w.-uld express my opinion oi I
the majority of chapl iins in the service. :
The health of the whole army has im- :
proved wonderfully of late, and by the '
return of the sick from hospitals, ali our
Regiments have filled up and I am
proud to announce that the 7th is now
the biggest Regiment in this Brigade.
Sickness is somewhat upon the in
crease since that march the night of the
15th, but as we will not probably have
any more such marches to make shortly,
it is pr< baM<* that th*' status of health
will resume its upward tendency.
I am able to report' to you the details
of an engagement as brilliant as any
that has marked this war, and you may
entirely rely upon the accuracy of the
information I give. I 1 occurred on the ;
21st, (by the way 21st seems to be a j
lucky day for us - Vide 21st July) at
Leesburg and I suppose it will be called
the b ittlc of Leesburg.
Gen. Ewell with his Brigade of four
Regiments was ordered from this place
' to Leesburg on the 20th and marched
and at 4 o’clock P. M., 21st he met the
' enemy—twelve Regiments strong—and
■ after a.“short and sharp” engagemen',
he drove them pell mell into the Potom
ac, capturing six pieces of artillery and
520 prisoners including 19 Commis-
. sioned Officets, and includii.g among
the others killed Dr. Baker, Senator
from Oregon, and successor to Gon. Joe
’ Lane. It is reported that, Gen. Ewell
' has 200 more prisoners, but 1 will not
' vouch for ti at bee iuse I have not seen
them, bur the 520 are all correct be
cause they are here and part of our
Regiment is guarding them Two of
i them were shot last night trying to es
i cape.
The weather has been very variable
of late, very warm for the season and
quite changeable with much rain
i It is supposed he’e that the Leesbu g
fio-hi has entirely ruined our chances
: for a battle at this place. How that
1 will be we will all know by waiting.—
• Hoping y«. u cxciiS'. this loose dis
' ultory epis le which J»as been written
' by snatches in a heavy press of other
■ tmsiness, with respects ot the Moun-
I tainevrs” to all friends,
J am, Yours truly,
D M- PhOcroß Hughey.
[COMMUNICATED.]
COL. IAJCIUS J. GARTRELL.
This gentleman is a candidate before the peo
ple of the Bth District, for a seat in the Confed
erate Congress. Regarding bis eligibility us
settled beyond all dispute. I propose briefly io
discuss the question as to wnat probable con
struction our enemies would [ lace upon his de
feat, if such a tiling were to occur. It is well
known that the politicians and newspaper edit
ors oi' the North, have insisted and continue to
insist, that the people of the South have been’
led astray by prominent men. They will have
it that the common people, if let alone, were
true and loyal to the Union, and that even now,
if the leaders ot the rebellion were pul down,
the yeomanry would gladly submit to Lincoln
and his government. We know that this it false
and that there is hot the slightest foundation for
such an assumption, yet we uo as welt know
that it n s been, and still is. proclaimed to the
world. It was upon the strength of this very
idea, that they raised and equipped armies. It
was upon this idea, that they borrowed money
to carry on a war against us. Il is with this
idea, that they have ke t d the people of the
North deceived, and with it, even the gove"n
irents of Europe have been, to some extent mis
led. Under this delusion, unopened boxes of
arms weie brought along with- l.meoln's grand
army to Manassas fl.tins, to be placed in the
hands of Union men, who, as they thought, pan
ted fora chance to be freed from the power and
dominion of rebel leaders. Now. in all frank
ness and candor, let me ask : Would not Col.
Gartrell's defeat give encouragement to this
idea, and add to its plausibility ? Let us briefly
examine Col. Gartrell's antecedents not for par
tv purposes ; not to show with what political
p.rty he has been acting ; but simply to show
wh tt has been his position upon ttie great issue
involved in the controversy between ’ho North
and the South. Nor will I say that Col. Gar
treil ought to be elected to congre.-s. simply on
account of thcf-e antecedents, independent of
any other qualification. My position is, that if
Col. Gartreil lie otherwise qualified for a seat in
Co .gre s. (as all admit .' that these antecedents,
together with the construction which our ene
mies would put upon his defeat, give additional
force to the con id**ratious which * ' m favor
of his election. What art: his i.leccdents? .
Ib>w have tm* Northern people viewed mm and
bow will they view bis defeat, if it we;e to
transpire'.' From early rn mhood he has been
a prominent Suiiiheru Rights man. lie was
prominent am ingst those who muntained the
right and du’y of Georgia Co withdraw from the
Union. He was a prominent member of the oid
United States Congre.-s, during the memorable
conte-t for Speaker in 1859-60.1’en ting the elec
tion for Speaker he addressed ’he House on
that subject, and such was bis ability ami prom- :
inence as a speaker, and such the stalwart blows i
which he dealt upon the leaders of •Tlelperism” j
and the "irrepressible codflict” doctrines, that
t»e was inletnipted throughout his speech, by
Haskins of N w York and Hickman of Penn
sylvania. an 1 others who winced, and squirmed
under the influence and force, of the scathing
eloquence with w hich he denounced them and
their doctrines, it was in reply tot’ol. Gartreil 1
that the cowardly Hickman announced "that the ,
North had eighteen millions of men. to where
the South htd eight: that the North had a 1 the
arts to assist them : that the Northern people
were inured to industry : that they could manu
facture more arms and ammunition in ninety
days than the South was able to buy : that more
men in the North would v-’lautarily enroll them
selves under the banner of the "Constitntion
and the Union’' than could raided hv ex»n- |
scription in the South, and that a dissolution
of the Union would not be tolerated.”
People of the Bth District, it was in rejoin-
Her to this odious comparison, and eowardlv
threat f Hi knian. that Lucius J. Gartreil
stood forth the pearless champion of your
rights and yur character. I' was in rejoin
der to thiß threat that he challenged Hick
manto meet liini upon the battle-field and
try his steel with Southern chivalry. It was
in rejoinder t<> this threat, that he «tw"un ed
to Hickman and vile crew of Black Republic
cans, ‘‘that when the time came the South
would welcome the valiant knight from Penn
svlvania. With his eighteen millions of rueu—
that when they came d >wn upon the S ut h
everyman and matron', and every fair daugh
ter of the South would he ready to receive
th ein —tha; every plowshare would be turn
ed into a .-.word—that every plow-boy would
stand ready to drive I ack rhe Northern mer
cenaries—that even the slaves would be ready
to meet them and defend the homes of their
masters and mistresses.”
That time did come. The mercenaries did
come down upon the South, and Col. Gartreil
at great trouble and expense organized a reg
iment ot brave men and went to Virginia to
meet and <lri ?e back the invaders of hisconn
trv. lii the bifleof Mana'sas he made good
his announcement to Hickman, l ut the cow
ardly Hickman was not there.
In Cd. Gartrell’s regiment, there were
plow-boys that laid many a vandal low. Con
nected w th his regiment there were slaves,
rea ly to defend the liom. s of their masters
ami mistresses. For his regiment many a
matron and fair daughter of the South offer
ed up pravers to the God of truth a’ <1 justice,,
and when the battle was over, a thousand
tongues ap}'landed the ch valry and valor of
the Seventh Georgia Regiment. Would not
the. deteat of Col. Gartreil. under these .cir
cumstances, add to the plausibility of what
our enemies have said, and what they contin
ue to sav ? Let ns proclaim to the North
and to the world, that we approve the princi
ples, and reward the conduct of such men as
Lucius J. Gartreil. Let tis elect him by such
a majority, as will show that the pe pie of
the B’h district at least are true to the S >u'h,
and that all love for the Unior., and all desiro
for its reconstruction has gone from us
Let us show io the North and to the world
that we to*, are rebels, and that we are repre
sented in a rebel Congress by a rebel leader
of Soulh’erti rights, and a rebel fighter fur
Southern liberty. BULL RUN.
MASIETTA FEMALE
< <> El. E« IC.
fTI IIS Institution commends Itself to tin l pat-
X ronage of the people of Marietta by its
undisguised' Southern character, its thorough
iuslrneiiod. exemplary discipline, its,
permanent design, its admirable locality for
convenience, study and e.xorctne, mid its moder
ate charges.
Particular information should be obtain
ed. not from Rumor, but by direct application
to T. B. COOPER. A. M.. Principal.
Sept. 3. 1861.
A. ISAACS,
Wholesale and retail Dealer in
Millinery and Fancy Goods,
RIBBOW. ' FR.VniERJ**
FLOWERS,
Ileal Presses. Em' roid-vtas, L“cr, Bionics,
Ruches Perfumery. Ae.. «te.
. n-’.. ll F-ent Bulldin#.
White Hall Street,
ATLANTA IJEIMJGI <
Hamilton, Markley Ar Joyner,
A_t lanta, < J-eorjjin.
A N 0
Hamilton, Markley & Joyner,
J'aLtetla,
July Ist. 1861
DR. JOHN L. HAMILTON, of Atlanta, and
T. C. MaHki.f.y and R. W. Joyner. of Ma
rietta, hereby give notice to the public that
they will carry on the
b R U G II uA I A E.B s
In all its branches in Atlanta and Marietta.
N. B. Boole Store in Marietta fonlinaeil.
In the District Court of the Confederate
States for the Northern District of Goorgi a
Ar Chambers. Dt’i Oc’nber 1861
ORDERED. That the first regular Term of
the District Court of the Confederate'Staten
of Americ f. for jhe Northern District of Geor
gia. be held in the town of Marietta. Cobb coup
ty. in said Northern District, on the second
Wednesday of December next, ensuing, at 10
o'clock in the forenoon of that day. of which
all persons interested will take due not! e
And it is farther Ordered That a copy of thi s
1 rder be published by the Clerk of said Coiipt,
in one public newspaper in each of the towns
or cities of \thens Atlanta. Griffin, Marietta,
and Rome, in said District, until the sitting of
the Court as above directed.
EDWARD L HARDEN- District Judge.
A true extract from the >finuty.s of the Dis
trict Court of the
Northern District of Georgia.
W. H HUNT, Clerk
Marietta, Ga.. Oct 12, 1861.
NEW GOODS.
TX’Elmve succeeded in getting in a good many
’» Goods, consisting in part of Linseys. Flan
nels, Brown ami Bie.relic I Domestics. Bed Tick
ing. Kers.-ys. Tweeds. Jeans. ( usimeres. Irish
Linneus. Ginghams. French and English Meri
noes. Calic >es both French and American. Mus-
In. Delaines. Linen cambric Handkerchiefs,
Spool Cotton. Silk and Flax Threads. Ac.. <tc.
all ot which will lie offered at very short profits
for Cash. Our terms now. are strictly Cash, as
it D impossible for us to buy Goods at all on
credit of a day's time.
NORTHCUTT & BRO.
War! WarFWar!! -
ON and after this day there will positive?
be no
Credit Giv'or
for goods or work at my store
All notes ami accounts tine me and not >it 1
by the Ist of August will be placed in the
hands of an attorney for collection.
W. A. FRAZER.
July 22d. 1861tf.
PLATED WAFTB.
Cl (INSISTING of Teasetts. Castors. Forks
i Spoons. Holders, (.'ups. Cake and Pie Knives
Ac,.«\c.. plated on the very best White Meta
with full weight of silver at
FRAZERS
"V'UTS.-—A large lot of Altnodns. Walonts
A Pecan and Brazil nuts hist received by
W. ROVHK A BUTNER ,