Newspaper Page Text
2
* *
.4- • r '■'* ‘ •*** ** ’" ft ’
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be p
deraigne
conducted as
paragraph. *
It is unnecessary, <.
the change which has
place in the conduct of the
does nut affect its political charu
is now, and shall be, what it was a e ,
outset, of its career, a “Democratic Jour
nal,” devoted to the maintenance of demo
cratic principles; true to the Constitution
and the South.
H. A RAMSAY. i
WILLIAM KAY
The Daily Examiner.
We present our readers to-day with the
first number of the “Daily Examiner.’’
In converting our 7>»- W «/.■/// into a
Daily paper, we feel satisfied that our
own interest will uotonly be subserved, but i
that the interest of our patrons, particu
larly those who desire an advertising me
dium in Atlanta, will be doubly so.
In addition, this change is demanded
by the patronage which has recently been
extended to us, and by the daily increas
ing importance of our City. We have on- 1
ly to refer the reader to our advertising
columns for evidence to sustain both thes? ]
propositions,
It is true that in thus yielding to the calls
made upon us, we shall incur heavy nd-!
ditional expense. But, be it so; fur we
have full confidence that our enterprize,
as it has been thus far, will, 1i the end,,
be crowned with success.
The subscribers to our “ Tri- Weekly”
will, from this day, to the expiration of
the period for which they have subscribed,
be furnished with the ''DUy Examiner"
without additional charge. This we do, J
in order to carry out our contract with
.them, even though wo may incur a trifling
loss thereby.
To new subscribers, we shall furnish
our Daily” at the rate of Five Dollars ,
per annum, payable upon presentation of
our account for the same.
Our rates for advertising in the “ Daily” 1
will be found on our first page.
With this brief statement, we launch 1
our bark, trusting that it will be welcom
ed into whatever port it may enter, and
with freight and passengers that it may
always bo well filled
—~ —..
MOBILE ANO ATLANTA.
Recently we paid a visit to Mobile. Itl
was a business visit, and one resulting,
greatly to our satisfaction.
While there, we used every effort to I
represent the great importance to Mobile, 1
of securing the Grocery trade of Atlanta, |
and that of the surrounding country, em
bracing Cherokee, a large portion of Mid
dle, Georgia, and Tennessee.
,In this effort, every facility was afforded
us by the gentlemanly and able Editors o
the Register, Tribune, Advertiser, and
Evening News, who, through the column ß
of their respective journals, and by per-f
sonnl effort, did all they could to advance
our object, and to establish an intimate
and advantageous commercial intercourse
between Mobile and Georgia. [We here
take occasion to tender them our acknowl
edgements "or their courtesy and kind'
ness.J
That wo, with such influence, succeed
ed in our effort, in part at least, some evi
dence is presented in our advertising col
umns to-day.
To our merchants therefore, ami the
readers of our paper wherever it circulates
in the sections of country referred to, we
uumineti 1 a nptioe of the Mobile. advertise.
meatv. • They will perceive that Mobile is
prepared to supply, and upon the most
accommodating terms, all, in what may be'
termed the “Grocery Market,” in hard
ware,&c. that the trade of Georgia requires.
To eneonrage «uch trade, there are many
reasons We will confine our rmnarks,
however, to on? nr two that wo conceive j
important.
For years our Merchants have been or
dering their Groceries, Liquors, &c., from
the North—particularly from New York.
« *
* ;U *
* Mcr-
v- . stock, ;
e disposi- |
erchant®.—
g- " spond, and by
• .9 with Mobilej.
* ’•* .heir interests, but
•, .• regard for Southern
Institutions, and the 1
> .them trade.
* - .rsue this subject, and mul- i
. it upon argument, to sus-
B ject we nim at. But this is
I * ry ’ Th e n,erc^ant > upon a
**4 ‘9f business, is always his own
j as to the market he will order from. I
j can only advise, and in doing so, as
.re do in this case, we must be satisfied, i
. that the information upon which we
base that advice, is of such character as to
stand the iestof “Mercantile investigation”
than which no other investigation can be ,
more rigid. We have weighed all this re
sponsibility, and urge our Merchants to
j give the Mobile Market a fair trial.
J&”We regret that a few of onr Mo
bile advertisements arc crowded out of our
issue to-day. Wo shall insert them in onr
next, calling special attention to them.
TO OUR MERCHANTS AND READERS IN ATLANTA.j
In presenting the “ Daily Examiner” to
the merchants, and our readers generally, i
in Atlanta, we beg leave to make a few re-'
marks.
To the former, we have to say that their ;
interests, and their pleasure, have, in a
great degree, been consulted in the change
i which we have made. They will perceive,
upon referring to our columns, that our ad
vertizing patronage, from Mobile, Charles
ton, in Atlanta, and its vicinity, demand
ed of us, not only the enlargement of our
i Tri-weekly, but increased facility for ad
j vertizing. We therefore determined upon 1
twu things at once — first, to enlarge our
sheet, and second, to publish it daily. By
so doing, we must confess that we counted
largely upon the encouragement which we
should receive from our merchants. ShaV
we fail in this just and reasonable expecta'
I tion ? We trust not ! We hope, therefore,
while we are presenting to you so large a
list of advertizements from abroad, you
will advise our numerous readers, in the
same manner, of your wares, your mer- 1
' chandize, and your enterprise. For this
purpose, we offer you both our daily and j
weekly, the circulation of which combined
is far greater than that of any paper in
1 the interior of Georgia, and nearly equal
I to the oldest and most prosperous paper '
l in the State. Come up, then, with your '
advertizements ! •
To our readers, generally, we say, all
that can be done, shall be, to make onr
paper equal to any in the State. We are
yet but a few' months in existence, and in
tend to live to a good old age, striving to .
improve as we grow older You too can
aid us in our enterprise. If each subscri
ber to our tri-wcekly, would but secure us
another to our daily, it would, to say the
least of it, encourage us in an enterprise
| laudable in itself, and of public utility. '
I May wo expect this ? But whether or not,
wo shall do our part, and trust that our j
' exertions may merit all we intimate or
I hope for.
TO OUR READERS.
We expect to give in some forthcoming
• numbers an account of our trip to New
Orleans, with glimpses of what we saw in .
the Crescent city.
fc-ifThc State Road train failed to con
nect last night, owing to some obstruction
at the Chattahoochee Bridge.
’ PORK TRADE.
Notwithstanding the advance rumors
about the quantity of pork in the country,
we are inclined to think from the large
numbar of hogs passing upon Bail Roads,
that the supply will be equal to the de
mand. So much for panics! *
We admire women because of their
beauty; respect them because of intelli
gance; and love them because wo can’t
help it.
REVEREND EDITOR KNOWLS.
We had the pleasure of taking Brother
Knowles, of the Recorder, by the hand a
dav or so siuee.He did'nt look Whig-LA or
. Constitutional-ttiA, hut he look remarkably
Method-übL We arc always happy to see
our brethren, and we hope Bro. Knowles
will make it convenient to call and see
■ our city again.
I |
AT MACON. ,
readers the subjoin
».ac Scott, President of
Mr. Scott is a native
the highest integrity, and
first financiers in the South. —
3 Merchants Bank would sustain
under any and all circumstances,
people of Georgia have never doubl
et. Mr. Scott is a large stockholder tn
the BaUk, as well as several of his neigh
bors; hence, he has more, to lose than
any one else by a financial error, for
he suffers both in purse and reputation.—
It is the sheerest humbuggery in the
world to attempt to discredit the bills of a
Bank because its stock, to some extent, is
owned by non-residents of the State. If
we mistake not a good deal of the stock?
iof the Augusta and Savannah Banks, is
j owned out of the State, and unless we
greatly err, much of the stock of the
Bank of the U. S. was owned on the
: other side of the Atlantic. This crusade
is made for selfish purposes, by the '■’•Pole
\ Cat Banks” (in contra-distinction to
I “ Wild Cots,”') of the State, and we
i hope the Legislature of Georgia at its
. next session, will enforce restrictions upon
some of the offensive clan, and f>rce them
to do a fair legitimate Banking business.
While upon this subject, we may as well
say, that the Merchants Bank redeems
all its issues at the counter, or Mr. U. L.
; Wright, the efficient Agent at this place is
always ready to give other Bank paper for
it. The truth is, Isaac Scott has offered
' more Commercial facilities to the people,
than the President of any Bank in the
State, and he ought to be and will be
sustained. That’s our position.
[For the Daily Examiner.]
MERCHANT'S BANK,
Macon, Georgia, Dec. 16, 1851.
H. A. Ramsay, Atlanta, —Dear Sir:
| The people in your section of Georgia
need feel no uneasiness about the solvency
of this Bank and its present management.
I Some selfish parties in Augusta and else
where have attempted to discredit our
issues, upon the ground that most of the
Stock of the Bank is owned by parties
I residents in the Northern and Western
States. It is true that a majority of the
Capital is owned by gentlemen who reside
out of the State. But they are men of
character, means, and business capacity, ■
and in order to enable you or any one else
who’feels au interest in the Bank to ascer
' tain all about these parties,! hand you here
in a list of their names, residence and re
ferences, and shall fee’ obliged if you will
make enquiries or cause your friends, to
do so, about them.
Respectfully yours,
ISAAC SCOTT, IWt:
H. A. Tucker & Co., Bankers, Chica
go, Illinois Thia firm is composed of the
following gentlemen:
Hiram A. Tucker,
Walter S. Gurnee,
John Frink,
* John BM erriek,
Refer to the Governor of the State of
Illinois, and to Duncan Sherman & Co.,
Bankers, New York
Wadsworth & Sheldon, Bankers, 29
Wall street New York.
Refer to the American Exchange Bank
and the Bank of the Republic, N York.
~ WASHING TON.
[Special Correa, of the Daily Examiner.]
Washington, Dec. 11, 1854.
We shall be able to form some opinion
as to what kind of a Session we are to
have between this and the fourth of
March, by the work that may bo done this
week. Whether it isto be a working, or
a talking, or a do-nothing Session
thing we are already fully convinced, that
the Administration will have large major
ities for all the leading measures it has
proposed or may submit during the Ses
sion. The election of Senator Bright, as
Vice-President pro tern, was intended as
.much to compliment the President of
the United States as to do honor to the
distinguished man upon whom the choice
fell with such gratifying unanimity.—
There is, probably, no journal in America,
that publishes ns many Washing Roor
backs, without a shadow or a semblance
of foundation, as the New York Herald
—So soon as the Washington employees
of that political “night cart" learned that
Gov. Bright was chosen to his present
high position, they forthwith repaired to
the Telegraph Office, and dispatched the
intelligence to New York, adding that this
election was a victory over Franklin
Pierce, whilst they knew,[and if they did
not know’, any of the pages about the
Senate Chambci could have informed
them, that the relations between the
President of the United States and the
Vice-President pro. tans. are and have
always been of the most friendly and har-■
monious character. This print seeks eve
ryoccassiun, by calumny and falsehood, to
vilify and degrade our institutions and
our sta esmen, in the estitmation of for
eign countries, where its principal circu- j
1 ition is formed.
The different Executive Reports which
you have, doubtless, received before this,
will .exhibit the most prosperous and
healthy condition of the Administration of
our public affairs. The report emanating
from the War Department should, at
once, arrest the attention of Congress.—,
Our citizens are butchered on the Western
frontiers by marauding bands of Indian
depredators. Our Government is insult-'
ed, and law, justice and morality alike
disregarded by the mormon banditti,
whose headquarters are kept at Salt Lake
City; and, yet, we ai e without the neces
sary means to protect the former, or chas
tise the latter. It is to be hoped that
Congress will take into immediate and
i serious consideration the recommendations
of the Secretary of War, and vindicate
the honor and the dignity of American
Citizenship.
The most laborious, and perhaps, the
most lucid report which accompanied the
j Message, is the Post-Master General’s.—
This officer is engaged, almost day and
night, in regulating and popularising this
important branch of our Government. At
' no time a sinecure, under the administra
tration of Judge Campbell, the General
Post Office may well be styled, the work
shop of the Executive Department.
It is impossible to prediet how parties
: in Congress will be formed and classified,
. during the next Session. Much will de
pend upon the success with which Kndto
; N’othingism will progress during the long
j interval. One thing is certain, the South
■ must unite—and it must repudiate North
ern fanaticism, in all the Protean shapes,
it may assume. The entire Southern del
egation being united, (and who would
falter or hold back when his country and
his fireside wrs at stake,) and backed by
| the faithful and unwavering Democracy of
the North, all the isms that fanaticism
. can engender would prove ineffectual in
, working any serious mischief. Let such
Southern journals as are now either too
timid or so much deluded that they are
afraid to denounce fanaticism in some of
its new anftes remember the fable of the
countryman and the viper
Mr. Giddings has made the Message
a pretext for one of his abolition haran
gues. He has long ceased to attract any
notice in the House, and is scarcely wor
thy of being reported in a newspaper.—
His speech was a repetition of the same
old song which he has been humming now
so many years to empty benches.
In the revision of the Tariff which will,
doubtless, occupy no unimportant part in
the proceedings of the next Congress, it is
to be hoped that the free.trade policy of
England will be deeply and carefully
■ studied. It has already produced the
’ most sensible effects upon the trade and
commerce of that country. We should
urge upon Congress the necessity that
now exists, in view of our increasing and
daily expanding Commerce, of a Buereau,
connected with the State Department , ex
clusively devoted to our Commercial Re
lations. As it is, unless a special call is
made for some particular documents, these
valuable papers, coming from our Consuls
and Diplomatic agents in all quarters of
the world, are permitted to slumber on the
shelves of the Department. I heard an
intelligent gentleman connected with that
department, remark a few days since, that
. there were now on file in their appropriate
Bureaus voluminous documents worth
their weight in. gold to the shipping and
commercial interest of the country. It
may be asked, why are not these papers
sent into Congress by the Secretary of
State, or spread before the country? The
answer it at hand —such papers or indeed
diplomatic despatches of any kind are
sent into Congress when a call is specially
made on the President for their produc
tion, and even then, copies only can be
sent in, as the originals must remain on
file in the Department.
To do this requires more force than the
Department is allowed by Congress, and
to employ extra force, extra appropriation
is necessary. The creation of a Bureau
of Commercial Relations, required by law
to make an Annual Report to Congrese,
would remove all difficulty, and supply an
annual fund of information to all the in
dustrial interests of the country’ that
would be worth twenty times the expense
of keeping it up.
Northern monopolists might oppose
’ this measure, as their great wealth ena
bles them to keep agents in the different
capitals of Europe by whom they are well
informed upon every movement of
commercial or industrial enterprise. But
. it is the duty of the Government to spread
before the people all the information
which it can obtain, officially or other
wise, that may “cause one blade of grass to
grow where none grew I 'before.”
BRUTUS.
ANNUAL REPORT Of’tH? COMMISSIONER OF
PATENTS.
Patent Office, Wednesday, )
November 1, 1854. $
Sir:—l have the honor to report to you
that the business of the Patent Office is
now in a more satisfactory condition than
at any previous period since my connec
' tion with it.
The number of causes undisposed of in
the office on the first day of January last,
was reported to be five hundred ami eigh
; ty-two. That number, however, was as
certained through an erroneous method of
; computation. By an actual couni, the
number of cases at that time was ascertain
, ed to be eight hundred and twenty-three. ■
A correct mode of computation was then j
introduced, so that the exact condition of
the business of the office can hereafter be
readily calculated from the monthly re
ports.
This arrearage in the business of the
office, though much less than it had been 1
six months previous, was such that several
months always elapsed after the making
of an application before it could be dispos
ed of, which was a source of great dissat
isfaction to all applicants for patents.
During the first three months of the
present year, the increase in the business
of the office was such, that no sensible
diminution in the arrearages was effected.
In order to accomplish so desirable an ob
ject, it was deemed expedient to place
several of the assistant examiners in the
terformance of the duties of principal ex
daminers. In that manner the end sough
is now almost and will soon be entirely
attained.
Instead of six principal examiners, each ,
with two assistants, we have since the Ist |
-of April, had practically eleven principal
- examiners, each with one assistant. Most
t, of the rooms are now entirely filled up with
I their work, and all will probably be so by
> the first day of December next. We have
> already, since the Ist of January last, is
i sued upwards of sixteen hundred patents,
and within the year the number will prob-
> ably reach the nineteen hundred, which
> will be about double the number patented
• last year. Applications are generally act-
I ed upon within a few days after they are
i made, and I have no doubt that the
: arrangement by which this result has been
■ produced was judicious, and has proved
I satisfactory to the parties interested. I
. think it, should be continued as the only
method of disposing of the increasing bu
i siness of the office with the proper promp
, titude and despatch.
About one year since I had the honor
. to invite your attention to the importance
: of several proposed amendments to the
i patent laws. The reasons then given for
. the alterations suggested remain in full
, force now, and the recommendations then
.' made are now repeated.
[ | The amendments of most immediate
; i and pressing necessity are those making
provision for taking testimony—those in
relation to appeals, and those prescribing
1 a new rate of fees.
Many questions of great moment are
frequently pending befoie the Patent
i office, depending for a correct decision
upon the testimony of witnesses, and there
' is no power provided to compel a witness
to give testimony. Nothing is more com
mon than for a witness to refuse to attend
i an examination, or to refuse to give testi
mony after he has attended, io the great
[ perversion of the ends of justice and the
object of the patent law.
The law now allows any person who ap
peals from the decision of the Commis
sioner, to select which of the three
Judges of the Circuit Court he chooses,
before to bring the appeal. The
Chief Justice of that Court will probably
never again be able to entertain an appeal,
’ so that bringing an appeal before him is
tantamount to its postponement during the
term of his natural life, and even after his
death there may be some question as to
whether the delay will be at an end. By
an abuse of this law a case has been sus
pended in this manner for near two years,
; and is threatened with indefinite post
• poncment, to the great detriment of the j
j party who is probably entitled to the pat
ent.
The rate of fees was fixed at a time
when the real value of money was much !
greater in proportion to its nominal
value than at present. The pay of
the clerks and laborers employed in the
I office has been very much increased by
j Congress, and in various other ways the j
expenses of the office have been greatly
augmented, while the fees ha\e remained
unchanged. In addition to these causes,
the force of the office has been considera-1
bly increased during the present year, in
' order to dispose of the accumulation of
, business above referred to.
The consequence of all these causes has
been that during the current year the ex
penses of the office has been continually
exceeding the revenue, and such will con
tinue to be the case until an augmentation
of those revenues shall be provided for.
The permanent augmentation of the ex
amining corps, or rather such a reorgani
zation as will place all its members on a
proper footing, is a subject worthy of con
sideration. The assistant examiners who
arc performing the duties of principal ex
aminers, may justly expect, at no distant
day, the compensation' attached to those
duties and responsibilities. It would not
only be highly gratifying to me, but would
be nothing more than justice to them to
have the means and the authority to make
their compensation commensurate with 1
the grade and character of their actual
services.
A bill was framed by the Senate Com-
• mittee at the last session of Congress, pro
viding for these and many other amend
ments, or rather, it amounted to a general
reorganization of the whole Patent Office
system, including tae above named provi-
| sions as a portion thereof. The passage
of that bill, or of some other which shall
at least embrace the features above allud- <
ed to, seems to be an object of prime im
portance to the proper administration of
the affairs of this office
I beg leave to commend these matters i
to your favorable consideration, in case
. you deem them of sufficient consequence
to merit a place in your annual report.
L lemitin, sir, very respectfully, youis,
&c. CHAS. MASON.
Hon. Robt. McClelland,
Secretary of the Interior.
HOTEL ARRIVALS.
trout house —Saturday, dec 16.
John F Bremon, New York; II Ml
Crane, do.; E II Bass, Marietta; C L;
Barbour, Atlanta; A 31 Kimbrough, do.;j
R Geddes, Griffin ; J II Levingston, Ox- {
I ford; C 11 Tobias, Charleston, SC; J Hl
Williams, Cassville; T AV Jackson, do;
N A Jackson, do.; E L Thomas, New
ton ; John Rawlee, Paducah, Ky.; Wm.
Webb, Franklin; A Greaves, Augusta; ;
I Thos Dupree, New York; John Andrew
& Lady, Rock fork, Ill; C W Hogan,
Madison; N W Pitman, Lithonia; GL,
McClusky, Madison; R W Burmas, G R .
R; C Spooner, C S Whitsei, H P Whit-'
sell, II L Caswell, New York; R Tomlen-1
son, Charleston, S C; A Van D’Mark,
Cohen, N Y; Briwell Traley, Sparta; Jas.
Maitty, New York; A E Butts, Georgia;
A P Weld & Lady, Boston, Maos; J S'
Williams, Decatur; John Krause, N Y;
D Messend, Texas; De Foneslei, Ger
many; A C Jolmersdler, C A Crowell,
New Y’ork; R J Cowaits & Lady, Moulton;
Wm Tell Skellon 2 Ladies & Servant,
Wm Harris, Miss Dobbs, Miss Northorp,
Merideth; Rev G E Smith, Coweta; D R
Butt, Merriwether co; W R Dean, W Mc-
Kenzie, New York; Dr J P. Logan, Va-
P M Shelby, Rome; G M Hook, Chero-’
kee; R II Gober, do; Thos Eaker, N. Y;
, G M Hook, Cherokee; M Stevens, Nash
ville, Tenn; C B Magruder, Thomasville;
Capt C II Hamilton, Adairsville, R D
i Taylor, Early co; J S Long, Baltimore;
R T Fielding, Tallahassee, Eratus Smith,
Tallahassee.
MARRIED,
In Meriwether county, on the 7th inst.,
by J. M. Brassell,j. i. 0., Mr. T. M. G.
i POWERS, of Atlanta, to MissM. E. AL-
LEN, of the former place.
DIED,~
In this city, of Consumption, on the
15th inst, ELLEN, wife of John Cons
dine, a native of County Carlow, Ireland,
aged 29 years.
A Job Printer Wanted.
immediately, at this office, u
V V GOOD Job Printer. None other need ap-
p’y-
IV E are authorized to annouce the name of
V T M.S. YOAKUM,ns a candidate for the
office of Tax Receiver, for the County of Fulton,
on the Ist Monday in January next.
December 14, 1854 46twtde
RATES OF EXCHANGE IN ATLANTA-
Reported and corrected tri-weekly by
U. L. WRIGHT.
Exchange on Northern Cities, } percent.
“ on Savannah, | per cent.
“ on Charleston, | percent.
i WHOLESALE PRICE OF GROCERIES IN
ATLANTA.
Corrected tri-weekly, by E. W. Holland Son,
Wholesale Commission Merchants, Atlanta.
No. 1 Rio Coffee, 12| to 13. cts. per lb.
Salt per Sack, 2.50
Star Candles, 28 cts. per lb.
N. O. Sugars—Fair, hhd. 5| per lb.
“ Prime, “ 6jc per lb.
“ Choice, hhd., 7c per lb.
N. O. Syrup, bbl., 30c per gallon.
Extra Raw Whisky, 65c per gallon.
ATLANTA A-’KICM ClitjttKX’i'.
Collated from, the reports of J. R. Wallace 4
Brother*, J. E. Williams, and J. J- Lynch.
Bacon Sides 10b to 11.
Pork neat, 6 J to 7 cts.
Hams 13 .
Shoulders, to 10.
Lard, per bbl. 11 to 12 cents.
Corn, per bushel 80. t■> 90 cts.
Meal, 85 to sl.
Salt, per Sack, 275 to 250.
Sugar per Hhd., 6} to 7.
( Coffee, 12| to 13J.
Clarified Sugar, 8 to 10.
Mackarel No. 1, in Kits, 4,50.
“ “ 2, none,
“ “ 3 per Barrel, 9,50 to 10,00
“ “ 4, “ “ 8,00 to 9,00.
; Cheese, 15.
Bagging, 16 to 18.
Rope, 12 J. to 14
Manilla Rope, 20 to 22 A.
Tobacco, 15 to 75.
Candles, Adamantine 28.
Flour, 4 to 4|.
, Eggs, 15. to 20.
Beef, 3 to 4.
Iron American, 5 to SA.
I “ Sweeds, 5A to 6.
j “ Band,
i Castings, 4| to 5.
Steel Cast, 20.
“ German, 15.
“ American, Bto 10.
Nails,
Powder, Blasting, per Keg, 4.50.
Safety fuse, 50 cts. per 100 feet.
“ Rifle, per keg, 600. to 650.
Teas, 75 to 125.
Factory Yam 80 to 90.
I Osnaburgs, 10 to 11.
I Cotton Fair sto 7
Chickens 12| to 15.
Oats, 55 to 60.
Sweet Potatoes, 50
Fodder, 75 to 80 per cwt.
Hay, 1.00 to 1.25 per cwt.
Liquors.
Reported by J. 4 J. Lynch.
Brandy, (Cognac) per gal., 2.50 to 4.00.
“ (Domestic) “ “ 90 to 1.12
“ (Cherry) “ “ 75 to 1.00.
Gin, (Holland) “ “ 1.75 to 2.25. adv.
2 (Domestic) “ “ 60 to 70. adv.!
j Rum, (Jamacia) “ “ 1.00 to 3.00.
“ (Domestic) “ “ 60 to 70. adv,
Whiskey, (Com) “ “ 58 to 70.
“ ' (Dexter) “ “ 60 to 70. and adv.
“ (Monongahala) per ga1.,75 to 1.12
W'ines, (Port) “ « 2.75 to 4.00
I ~
Wolff & Co., Importers.
FIIHE undersigned respectfully beg leave toin
| form Merchants and Dealers generally that
they are receiving direct from France, England
and the continent, Brandies, Wines, Gins and
Cordials, and that they have constantly under
Custom House lock, the following standard goods.
Brandies, Jas. Hennessy & Co. Otard, Dupug
& Co., united vineyard proprietors; Jules Robin
&. Co. Dumon, Dumon Gunyer & Co., A. »Seig
nitte. Gins, stork, Fish, Swan, Schnapps; Port
and Madeira and Sherry Wines, of ordinary and
fine grades. Whiskey, Irish, Scotch, Rye and
Bourbon. Champagnes, of various fine and me
dium qualities. London Porter and Ale, cigars,
&c..a1l of which we offer on reasonable terms,
and at prices that will compete fully with those
of New York, Boston or Philadelphia. Our re
j tail department embraces the finest and choicest
stock ever offered to consumers in the South, and
enables us to fill all orders addressed to us with
i promptness and dispatch.
WOLF & CO.,
I Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Wines and Li
j quers, Mobile Ala.— Commerce street.
£49-dwly
THOMAS E. BASS,
(SUCCESSOR TO JOHN 8. GEYER.)
Broker, Auctioneer and Commission Agent.
d&wly. _ 46 ROYAL TTREET.
CIHOICE WINESAND LIQKUORS.—Bran
/dies—Sasarac of tha vintage of 1795, 1798,
1802 and 1805 ; Godard, vintage of 1828 ; Otard,
Dupny and other brandies of various species and
qualities.
WINES—OId reserve, Pathetinho, Side and
East India Madiers ; Duff Gordon and Harmony
& Nephew’s Sherry; Hcidsick and many other
brands of Champagne ; White Wine ; Claret in
casks and cases of all qualities.
Holland Gin; Jamaica and St. Croix Rum;
Scotch, Irish, Old Rosnokia and Old Rye Whis
ky ; Brandy Fruits and Fruits in juice ; Cordials
of every description; Broker’s Berlin and Gou
ley’s Bitters, and averything in the way of
WINES and LIQUORS, which will be sold on
as reaaonable terms as can be found, for cash or
city papers.
100 casks of PORTER and ALE, in pints
and buarts SEWELL T. TAYLOR
19 dwly. 15 Royal street ’
WASHINGTON HALL
Atlanta, Ga.
LOYD & PULLIAM, Proprietors.
T. M. G. POWERS. Book-keeper.