Newspaper Page Text
SiHPPk pp»*,
M. UWIKELti, Editor Jt Proprietor*
•BO. T. S rOYABEiiA«soptate E«upt
Tuesday Morning, April 3, 1830.
J* Wko will be President?
Itt the prasent, state of political af-
falra this U a queatibn not easily solved.
There are many'contingenciea upon
whtcti its Bplutioh'depends. One of
those cohtihgOHoies, arid perhaps the
most important one. is the aetiott of the
Charleston Convention i and consider
ing how far wide of the mark have
heretofore been all calculations upon
tha results of ths deliberations of Dem
ocratic assemblages, previous to their
transpiration, we cannot now with any
degree of certainty predict the oolor Of
this mouse, whether white or black, that
will be brought forth in that body. If
thby throw aside in their lumber-room
the rickety CXneinnati Platform, as utterly
worthless for any purpose except as
bdilding material for a Squatter Sover
eignty administration, and reconstruct
another with sound constitutional tim
bers hewn out and put in proper shape by
the Supreme Court; and place upon it
ti»o right sort of a Southern man whose
principles are not as changeable as the
•kin of the chameleon, then the Dem
ocratic nominee, will meet with but lit
tle opposition in the South—in some
States, and Georgia one of them, none
at all, and in others what little there
may be, will not be very fohnida-
ble.
But if on the other hand the Cincin
nati platform is re-adopted, as an expq-
sitionof the principles up«in. which the
Democracy intend to enter the Presi
dential canvass; or if with a; platform
unexceptionable to the' Southern peo
ple they nominate Douglas, or any man
known to be committed to his heresies,
then a constitutional Union candidate
nominated at Baltimore will receive
this hearty mid'unanimous support of
the Opposition in the Southern States,
with the co-operation of a large portion
of the Democracy.
If the Southern Demoeratio Congress
men and leaden are dot denouncing
Douglas and his doctrines .merely to se
cure the success of their wing of the
party, and sre true to their avowed prin
ciples and the rights of the.South, they
will unit* withlho Constitutional party
which is being organized to carry out
thOM principlea an d defend those rights.
In that event we have strong hopes of
the election of our candidate in the
Electoral College; or failing there we
willfeither succeed in the House of
Representatives dr prevent any other
party from doing so. We can con
trol the eleotion there and intend to do
it.
But even if they prove recreant to
theif ^professions. and their plain duty,
the Constitutional Union candidate will
.at least carry enough of the Southern
■States, together with New J«»eyA«Jtd
perhaps Pennsylvania , to defeat the
election of the Charleston and Chicago
nominees. Then the election will be
thrown into the House, where it will be
decided by theyote of States, a minori
ty of all the Stated being necessary to
a choice. Thero tlie Constitutional par
ty holds the balance of power and they
will evince the same loyalty to the
6outh by firmly and forever refusing to
vote for a Blaok Republican or a Squat
ter Sovereign, as they did id'the olec-
. tion of Speaker; Their candidate or
none must be elected In the. HO^.—
We have little hope that the Democra
cy will vote, for. him especially as the
Vice Preti4eht> to.^e elected by the Sen
ate will be the President of the United
States if the Honse does not make a
• choice before the fourth of March fol
lowing... "From the two highest candi
dates before the people, the Senate by
a mqjority'of ail the Senators, chooses
the Vioe President; and of oourse he
wiU be a Democrat. . f #\
If then Douglas, or him man, be
nominated at Charleston, and the
Democratic nominee for Vlce.Jfreel-
dent will be the next President
United States. We hope therefore that
man will be one sound on all the vital
questions to the South; and in order to
secure harmony and aiiooess we are
inclined to think that he will be such a
man. He will be offered aa an induoe.
ment to the South to vote for the Pres
idential Candidate. Of course it will
be inconsistent to put two men, holding
views upon the question of slavery in
the territoriea diametrically opposed to
each other, upon the same ticket as
asndidutes for the first and second offi
ces in the gift of the people; yet this
very inconsistency strengthens our be
lief; for inconsistency is the only thing in
which Democracy iaconsUtaU.
Caved.
We published a few days since a let
ter from Penfijld to the ChriiUan Index,
signed H. H. T., giving an account of
the discovery of a Cave on the planta
tion of Kirk Langford, near that place,
eontfdning'the'fossil remains of various
animals. TheGreensboro Planters Week’
ly pronounces it an “unmitigated hoax,”
and says:
Kirk Langford is a ••Brother” of the
drinking persuasion, and about the
only cave he has ever explored, has
been some well that needed cleaning
out.
We have learned, that Prof. Tucker,
of Mercer University, is quite outraged,
as he well may bo. at the audacious use
of his initials, by the person who con-
thelnd thia w °nderful information to
We publish below an account of a
diabolical and partially successful at
tempt of a negro woman to destroy her
self and her three children. From the
ooineidenceof place and name with the
cave hoax we are induced to suspect that
the Locomotive, from which We learn the
foots, may also have been imposed on.
Devilish Act of a Negro Woman.
We learned through a gentleman
from Penfield, on yesterday, that a
negro woman belonging to James
Lankford, of that place, becoming tired
of life, threw three of her ohildren into
a well, said to be 65 feet in depth, and
then jumped in herself.
“Curt.” Lankford went down after
them, and found her still living and not
seriously injured; when he reached her
she attempted to drown him, and it
was only by main force that he subdued
her and brought her up; the children
were all dead.
She is confined in jail and will no
doubt be hung as a murderess.
She assigned os a reason for the rash
and in-human act, that* she wished to
die, and didn’t want to leave any of
her children behind.—Atlanta Locomotive.
LaGranok Female College Burnt.—
On the night of Wednesday, the 28th
ult., the LaGrnnge Female College
together with nil the furniture, Libra
ries, Apparatus, Ac., was consumed by
fire. These were the buildings erected
by Mr. Montgomery, and purchased
some two years since by the Methodist
Church at forty thousand dollars. The
Insurance expired a few days before the
burning, and the whole is an entire
loss.
The citizens of LaGrnnge held a meet
ing on Thursday, and, in a spirit of
generosity that is most praiseworthy,
subscribed $12,000 towards rebuilding
the College. The regular exercises of
the Institution were to bo resumed on
the 2nd inst.
U. S, Aims Coximo to Georgia.—The
steamship 8. B. Spaulding, from Boston,
brought 990 hundred oases, containing
two thoimmdU. 8. rifles for the Aasenel
at Augusta, Ga.
The Spaulding haa on her forward
| brass cannonade, taken froin the
- a Spanish ship San^Pejfro,
Mysterious Disappearance.
The Murfreesboro Newt of Wednes
day relates the following strange cir
cumstance which ocourred in Bedford
county, last week:
On Wednesday morning the 21st
inst., Andrew J. Lytle, a young man
about twenty-five years of age, and who
resided with his mother, Mrs. M. A.
Lytle, near Unionviile, in Bedford
county, Tennessee, went out to work
accompanied by a negro girl. He gave
the negro some instructions what to do
during his absence, and returned to the
house. He then with a pen and' ink
wrote on a paper what disposition he
wished made of his property, said no
one need search for him, that he would
be seen no more. He loft the paper on
which he had written, with his watch,
an ambrotypo likeness of himself, and
some pocket ohange upon the table,
and has not been seen since.
Diligent search has been made for
him, but in vain. No cause for his
strange conduct is known. His friends
are impressed with the belief that lie
has committed suicide. They request
the publio to take some pains in search
ing for him, and will be thankful for
any information they may receive. He
was twenty-five years of age, five feet
nine inches in height, inclined
stoop shouldered, with
sandy whiskers.
A Democratic Broadside for the
Douglas Men.
The Charleston Mercury, whose De
mocracy and devotion to the South will
hardly be questioned, fires the following
broadside into the piratical Douglas
craft 1 that are insidiously sailing in our
southern waters under the flag of‘the
Democratic party:
“How any man can rail at Southern
men supporting Wilmot Provisoists,
and yet tolerate himself Squatter Sover
eignty, is an illogical marvel, quite
striking, even amidst the varieties of
the various politics of these United
States. Freesoilism has two expedients
to keep the South out of our Territo
ries—both invented by Democrats.—
The Wilmot Proviso, by Wilmot, of
Pennsylvania, and Squatter Sovereign
ty, by Casa. The first has, as yet,'ac
complished nothing; but the last—
Squatter Sovereignty—has wrested Cali
fornia from the South, and is now tri
umphant In Kansas, in the emancipa
tion of four hundred slaves belonging
to Southern slaveholders. Now, that a
Southern man should hold in horror
political association with the - Block
Republicans, who are in favor of the
Wilmot Proviso, and yet tolerate Doug
las with Squatter Sovereignty, the only
practical expedient of Freesoilism yet
put into operation to the injury oi the
South, is a mystery we suppose totally
incomprehensible to a plain unsophisti
cated man. We agree entirely with
the Richmond Whig, that if the Demo
cratic party in the Charleston Conven
tion does not distinctly repudiate the
robber-policy of Squatter Sovereignty,
the Democratic party can with no pro
priety ask the support of a single South
ern Whig in favor of their nominee.—
We go further, and hesitate not to say,
that so far an the rights of the South in
our Territories are concerned, Douglas,
with Squatter Sovereignty, is just as
objeotionable as Seward with Wilmot
ProvisoiBm. The South should torn
with contempt from both.”
Fugitive Slave Case in Philadelphia.
—A young negro, named Meses Horner,
was arrested at Harrisburg, Penn., on
Tuesday last, and taken to Philadelphia
charged with being a fugitive slave,
claimed as the property of Charles T.
Butler, of Virginia. The case was taken
before Judge Calwalder, of the United
States District Court, and, after exami
nation, the slave was remanded bock to
liis owner. Great excitement prevailed
in the vicinity of the Court House on
the announcement of the rendition of
the slave to his owner. A large crowd,
composed chiefly of negroes, congrega
ted immediately after the decision of
the Judge, and, on the fugitive being
taken to a carriage, surrounded the ve
hicle and made desperate attempts at
a rescue, by which the carriage was
broken down. The police urrested
twelve of the rescuers and escorted the
slave to prison. A writ of habeas corpus
returnable to Judge Allison, has been
served on the Marshal.—Choniclcdb Sen
tinel.
Direct Trade between Belgium and
Tns Southern States.—A Paris paper
states that the Duke of Braband gave a
private audience on the 3d of March to
a deputation from the Belgico-Ameri-
can Company for the development of a
direct trade with the Southern States of
the American Union. His Royal High
ness expressed great interest in the ob
ject of the company, and hoped that
the institution which promised so many
advantages to Relgiun industry, would
meet with success.
Horrible Case of Poisoning.
The New Orleans papers contain ac
counts of a most horrible poisoning
case in that city, in which && entire din
nerparty comprising some twenty ladies
and gentlemen and ohildren, were poi
soned. After the graduation of the
medical students of roe University of
Louisiana, on Tuesday, a dinner was
given by Mr. T. L. Lemley, prominent
lawyer of New Orleans, in compliment
to Dr. Hunt, one of the graduates. At
this dinner betide Mr. Lemley and his
family and the young doctor, were pres-
sent as guests a number of ladies be
longing to different families in the
neighborhood. At night, all those vjrho
had partaken of the dinner became sick
at their different residences; on Wed
nesday many of them got worse; on
Wednesday nighta little boy died; and
on the following day the suspicions of
the physicians were confirmed to their
Satisfaction that the whole of tho sick
persons were suffering from poison.
It seems that arsenic was administer
ed by Mr. Lemley’s cook in the Char
lotte Russe, which was not only par
taken of by all at the table, but by sev
eral friends in the neighborhood, to
whom portions of it were sent, and
who were also poisoned. The cook, a
morose, ill-tempered mulattress.and her
son have been lodged in jail.
' Some fifteen of the sufferers were at
last accounts, dangerously ill, several of
the young ladies not being expected to
to be
light hair, and
- American Bullies in England.
The prize fighter, Heenan, who is now
in England preparing for a fight with
Sayers, the British “champion," is like
ly to draw quite a delegation of the
“fancy” from this country. The press
are also to be represented, and one or a •
more illustrated papers are to send ar
tists, if they have not already done it,
for the purpose of presenting to tlieir
readers every feature of this savage on
set, in whioh neither combatant is ex
pected to desist until one of them shall
he so mutilated and disabled that he
can no longer stand. It is a disgrace to
this country that we have such trained
masters of the ring, and » disgrace to
oirilisation that so large a portion of the
community on each side of ths Atlantic
will wait with listening ears for tiie first
tidings of a contest worthy of the most
barbarous period of the dark ages. It
is incumbent on every oitizen who prizes
the perpetuation of those sentiments of
enlightened morality and refinement on
which our free institutions are founded,
to frown on every attempt to elevate so
brutal a practice to the character and
of a profi
8®“The Philadelphia Conference of
the Methodist Episcopal Church, lias de
cided by a large vote against the intro
duction of Lay Representatives in the
General and Annual Conferences. This
subject was the order of the day last
Saturday, and gave rise to an animated
debate. Tho Rev. John P. Durbin, D.
D., spoke warmly in favor of the change.
Preparations tor Death.—Rufus S.
CLrk, who died in Southampton, Mass.,
last winter, some weeks before his deuth
ordered his coffin to be made, superin
tended tho work, told what trimmings
he wished to have put on it, clioso the
depositors, nnd even the horse and dri
ver he wished to convey him to his final
resting-place. He purchased a pair of
gloves for the driver and each of the de
positors to wear on the occasion, and
paid thirty dollars for his coffin.
A Great Political “MACntNt.”-
Mayor Wood, of New York, is one of
the most indefatigable men alive. Af
ter attending to the multifarious duties
of his .offioe at the City Hall, he leaves
town every afternoon to make speeches
to tho Democrats, fifty or sixty miles
ay in Conneoticnt, and returns home
by the first train next morning. He is
the greatest political machine of the
day- _■
dignity of a profession.—N. Y. Jow. tf
Goino Bight to Work.—We learn
that application was made yesterday
morning by the Provisional Board of
Directors of the Macon ft Augusta Rail
Road, to secure the services of Mr.
Geo. H. Hazlehurst, of this place, to be
gin at once the preliminary surveys of
routes contemplated by the aotion of
the Augusta Convention of the 28th.—
This shows a commendable earnestness
and promptitude on the part of the
SoariL—vMtuzin Tele.
*@“The Democracy 9f North Carol!
naare running a FVjr—for Presidential
W
J®“A “Memorial Window” is to be
placed in St. Anne’s Church, in Dublin,
in honor oi Mrs. Hem ms, the poetess,
who was'buried in that church. Memo
rial windows have become tho prevail
ing fashion in England. It is in this
manner that Macaulay and Stephenson
are to bo commemorated in Westminis
ter Abbey. This fashion will of course
like all others of European origin, find
its way, in time, to this side of Atlantic;
but as yet we cannot boast of a memori
al window.
The Distribution or Plants.—The
Patent Office announces that the toa
plants for the South have mostly been
forwarded to their destinations, and all
the grape loots, of varieties both foreign
and domestic, which were on iiand in a
condition fit for removal, have been dis
tributed. Measures, however, have
been taken to procure additional sup
plies, and, when ready for distribution,
notice thereof will be given.
ggy-Children bring up their parents
very severely now. We see it stated
that a man failed the other day, only
because he couldn’t pay his son’s bills.
This may serve to effect some ono of
the cases of parental cruelty that used
to occur in the dark ages.
JK8“Dr. Hines the notorious swindler
is now being tried at Memphis for ob
taining goods under false pretenses.
Ddbertisetycijfs.
ICE!
ICE! ICE!
W E wou’d respectfully Inform the PuMie
tbnt our Ice House is now stocked with
tho best quality of ice, which con be furnish
ed all the 8ummer.
Families supplied from oar Drug Store.—
Pare taken in packing for transportation' by
Boats, Railroad or Hicks.
FARKLL A YEI8ER.
aprS—Iwiwtf
Medical Association
OF GEORGIA.
rflHE annual assemblage of the Medical
I Association of Georgia for 1S60, will take
place in the city of Borne, on the 2d Wednes
day in April next.
A. G. TnOMAS,
aprilStwlt Seo’y Med. A. of Ga.
‘^*5===«
Would call the attention of the public to their Stock of
SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS !
T nE DAY FOB PUFFS, BLOWING, Ac., Ac., HAS PASSED—ALL WE WANT, ALL'
we ask is, that ths PEOPLE will call and see for themselves. We are now propos
ing to establish a
MERCHANT TAILORING BUSINESS,
In eonnectien with the Dry Goods trade, and have fitted up Booms for this purpose, in tho
Upper Story of our Magnificent Store House, on Broad Street, and will be prepared, at any
time, to SUIT Gentlkmcn. Goods from
Other Stores made, and at the lowest possible rates.
OUR STOCK OF
CLOTHS, CASSIMERS,ITAL. CLOTHS, BANG UPS, &c., &e,
CANNOT BE EXCELLED.
,Thankful for ths many evidences of confidence, heretofore extended, we are anxions to
enlarge our business so as to enable us to furnish all varieties of Goods at less rates than
formerly, as we are convinced that a email business will not pay, and what wo yield in
prices t > the consumer, must be made up in quantity sold.
mar27watrllm. SLOAN A HOOPEBS.
TO THE LADIES I
MISSESNflBLE&STOIOTL
HAVING BECEIVED THEIR
Spring and Summer
GOODS,
WOULD CALL TIIE ATTEN-
tlon of the Ladies, to their new and elegant
assortment of BONNETS. RIBBONS
AND FLOWERS, and everything be-'
longing to the Milinrey business. Opening
on Saturday. mar22triw.
$
Price of
SAWED LUMBER.
OWING to the increased price
of every article of homo con
sumption, we, as a portion of
the laboring class, feel that we
the present low prices of Lum
ber and Sawing, therefore,
We, the undersigned, shall on and after tho
1st of February next, put tiie price of Lum-
bor at our respective mills, at SI 25 per 100—
Hauling and Kiln-drying not included.
Remember our Terms are INVARIABLY
CASH
JOB ROGERS,
L. R. A 8. D. WRAGG,
J. G. MORRIS.
Other Dealers in Lumbor are invited
to join in this movement. jnn24twtwtf
GREAT EXCITEMENT I
GRAND SCHEME FOR
APRIL, 1800.
GEORGIA STATE LOTTERY
«. McKINNEY & Co., Managers.
Authorized by Special Act of tho Legislature.
25,828 PRIZES.
MORE THAN 1 PRIZETO EVERY 2 T’KS.
CAPITAL PRIZE
$60)000,
TICKETS ONLY $10.
Halves, Quarters and Eighths in proportion.
To bo Drawn Each Saturday, in 1800, in tho
city of Savannah Ga.
CLASS C# to bo Drawn April, 7, 1060.
CLASS 07, “ •• 14, 1800.
CLASS 88, •' “ 21. 1860.
CLASS 09, « « 28, ISM.
CLASS 65, “ “ 31. I860.
Beware of Mineral Poisons.
OR. J. BOVEE RODS’
CELEBRATED
VEGETABLE^ MEDICINES
HIS~
Imperial Wine Bitters
For the cure of Incipient Consumption, weak
Lungs, Weak Stomachs, Indigestion, Dyspep
sia, General or Nervous Debility, Piles and
all diseases requiring a Tonic, are unsurpas- .
sed. They are madu of a pure 8herry Wine,
and aside from their medicinal properties, '
they nre a most wholesome and delightful
beverage.
His Brandy Cathartic
Is a sure remedy for rostiveness, liver com- '
plaint and dyspepsia. They are pleasant to
the taste; sure in their operation; and aa a
cathartic, entirely, effectually and positively
supercedes the use of Fills, so nauseous and
disagrcable to the taste.
His Imperial Gin Bitters
Aot on the Kidneys, Bladder and Urinary
Organs, and are a superior remedy for dys-
icpsiu, connected with liver complaint in all
ts forms.
FOR FEMALE OBSTRUCTIONS,
They are truly valuable, made of pure Hoi- -
landj Gin, pleasant and agreeublo to the tasta
nnd may be well termed a necessary Female
Companion.
Ills Cathartic Syrup
For Infants, Children, aud delicate Females,
is certainly one of the most desirable and
valuable medicines in the world. It is a per
fect substitute for calomel, acting on the liver
removing all obstructions in the Bowels, eur-
’ ig costiveness, indigestion and dyspepsia.— ’•
(though it is ns sure nnd effectual in its op- ■
erations as calomel, yet it is so deliaious to
tha taste, that children will cry tor it, and it
is ns gentle, innocent and harmless as ths
dews of Heaven. Thousands of mothers
throughout tiie land will bless the discoverer
of thin invaluable medicine.
CHARLES WIDDIFIELD A CO.,
v Proprietors,
849 A 631 Broadway, New York.
So’d by Farell & Yeisor. m ir20-trily
TO RENT.
T nE largo and commodious Store, opposite
tho Choice House, formerly occupied by
McGuire A Pinion, and in the most desirable
part of the town for business. Apply to
martltritf. D. B. HAMILTON.
Rome Mutual Insurance Co
NOTICE.
T IIE ANNUAL MEETING of Stockhold
ers of the Rome Mutual Insurance Com
pany for the election of a Board of Directors,
will be held at tho office of the Rome Rail
road on Monday, Oth of May next.
C. H. STILLWELL, Bec’y.
msr27—td
MAGNIFICENT SCHEME.
1 Prize
$60,000 is
$oo.noo
1
20,000 is
20,000
1
10,000 is
10.000
1
5,000 is
4,000 is -
5.000
1
4.000
1
3,000 is
3,000
1
2,000 is
2.000
1
1,500 is
1,500
1
1,100 i*
1,100
$
1,000 are
5,000
10
600 nre
6,000
3
400 are
800
3
300 are
600
3
200 are
400
SO
160 are
7,680
100
100 are
10,000
100
95 are
9,600
100
85 are
8,500
Approximation Prises.
25,448 prizes, amounting to
$212,140
25,838 Prizes Amounting to 8360,040
WILL BE DRAWN THIS MONTH.
NOTICE—LOST.
gQrMni. Crawford says
one line in tho song “Kathleen Mnvour-
n en”f r the expects;urposo of c<a
founding the Cockney warblers, who
sing it thus;
The ’ora of the ’unter is 'eard on the'ill.
Moore has laid the same trap in tho
“Wood-pecker
A ’cart that is ’urablc might ’ope for it ’ere.
And the “Elephant” confounds them
the other way:
Ahelephant ’astily heats athishease,
Hunderhumbrageous humbrolla trees.
Tm Law School—will open Monday
next the 2nd day of April. Tuos. R.
R. Conn will deliver the opening lec
ture.
We have reason to believe that tho
aeoond session of this already distin
guished school will be inaugurated by
ths matriculation of a much larger
number than were in attenctoce last
session.
We sincerely hope so, at any rate.—
Athens Banner.
Ax Armt or Smokers.—It is estima
ted that there are two hundred thou
sand smokers in the eity of New York,
who consume two cigars a day, making
the total oofisumption four hundred
thousand per day. These, at an average
of.four cents, amount to five million,
eight hundred and forty thousand dol-
urs annually.
L OST or mislaid, a certain Note, given by
W. It. Smith to W. S. Cothran, for ad-
vuucc on Cottou. dated sometime about the
tint of the year 1358, or beginning of the
veur 1857, for two hundred dollars. The said
Note having been lost or mislaid Aha finder
will receive the thanks of all concerned by
retnri.ing the same to W. R. Smith or ro tho
subscriber, as said note box been paid in ful|
by the maker, to
mar27tri!m. ARCH. DAVIS.
Mlillinery.
A CARD
TO THE LADIES,
I WOULD respectfully call (he attention
of the ladies, to the choioe aasortment of
Millinery and Fancy Goods.
Which will be opened at my establishment on
Broad Street, during the first week in April.
Feeling assured that my Block will include
the vory newest styles and materials—-offer
ed at moderate prices. I hope to receive a
continuance of the kind and liberal patron
age hitherto extended towards me. Further
notice will be given of the exact day of open
ing ’ MRS. ^ITsUbfM ERHAY8.
mar24twtf
Omen Gao. A Ala. Railbcau O9.1
Roms, Ga., March 1, I860.' j
S EALED PROPOSALS will be received on
or before the FIFTH DAY OF ABRIL
next, for the Grading, Masonry and Bridg
ing, of the Geo. A Ala. Railroad from Rome
to or near Big Cedar Creek, a distance of
twelve miles.
Plans and Specifications will be furnished
by Col. C. M. Pennington, Chief Engineer.
By order of the Board of Directors.
1 JOHN H. LUMPKIN,
mariwlt Pros’l Ga. k Ala. Rlt Co.
Igos
following rates, which is tiie risk :
A Certificate of Package of 10 Wholes, $60
Do do 10 Halves, 30
Do do 10 Quarters, 15
Do do 10 Eighths, 7.50
LOOK AT THIS.
A SPLENDID DRAWING ON
The Three Number Flan!
Which takes plaoo on every Wednesday and
Saturday in 1860.
1 Capital Prize of. $23,000
1 Prlzo of 4,500
1 Prize of. 4,000
1 Prize of. 3,000
1 Prize of. 2,171 20
10 Prizes of $700 arc 7,000
40 Prizes of. 175 are 7,000
50 Prizes of. 125 are 6.250
259 Prizes of. 80 are 20,720
64 Prizes of. 50 are 3,200
64 Prizes of. 80 are 1,920
64 Prize* of. 20 are 1,280
5,682 Prize* of. 10 are 60,320
28,224 Prizes o£ 5 are 141,120
34,312 Prizes Amounting to • $281,481.20
Whole Tickets $5,
‘ Shares in Pronortion.
IN ORDERINGTickeUor Certificates,en
close the money to our address fur the tickets
ordered, on receipt of whioh they will be for
warded by first mail. Purchasers can havo
tickets ending in any figure they may desig
nate.
Tho list of drawn numbers and prizes will
be sent to purchasers immediately after the
drawing.
All communications strictly csnfidential.
Orders’far Tickets or Certifioates, by Mail
or Express, to be directed to
McKINNEY k Co„
mnr22tri. Savannah, Ga.
Dissolution Notice.
fTlIIE Firm of Turnley k Baker, was dis-
X solved by mutual oonseht of the par
ties, on the 1st of February inst.
Persons owing the firm, .by Note or Ac
count, are requested to call at tho old stand
and pay up. ' P. L. TURNLEY,
ffebl8—triw*w5w. J. C. BAKER.
BR. H. V. H. MILLER,
Has removed his Offiee to the Rooms over
Dqaran> ffiora. marlSdriOm.
TAR AND CHARCOAL,
[ N quantities to suit purchasers. For sale
by J. G. YErSEB,
inarlTtrilm Sup't. Rome Gat Co.
CITY EXPRESS.
C A. RMITif. h»v-
* ingestsbli-heil an*
ts; nss Wagoi.
I’.onie, is prepare- i- 1
liver promptly all
passengers and Bs ■ . .
city, at reasona!/
toft at liis Confsct. ...
road Depot.
kages and earry
in nnd about the
Crders may bo
re, or at the Rail-
niar!5tri.
NEW
DRUG STORE!
NO. 3. CHOICE HOUSE.
[Souse formerly occupied by Robl. Battey.]
P. L. TURNLEY,
ft
Che mi eels
YXrOULDrespeotfuliy Inform his
... 'HOhos nnd customers, nnd
public generally, that he is m*
now opening a very large and at- /•>
tractive Stock of Drugs, Medicines, ChSm
Dyestuffs, Perfumery nnd Fancy Articles.—
Also. Points, (N s, Varnishes: Liquor for
Medical uses. Also Seeds of all kinds, both
Field and Garden. (Southern Raised).—.
Glass, I u >ty. Glue, Brushes, and in foot, every
thing m ins line or that it usually kept in at
First Class Drag Store.
Having had zeveral years experience, and
by giving bis p irsonal attention to the buti
ness, be ho,ms to merit a share of public vmi
ironnge, nnd to be aide to furnish his euz
towers reliable articleD f at us
LOW PRICES,
As any house this side of Augusta, Ga.. Be-
member the location. Tho wants of tho
oouiitry shall be supplied. febll.’66.
Garden Seeds.
O F all kinds and varieties, warranted to
be the kind that will lyrout, for salo
y TURNLEY, Na.3 CLoice Heusm
Herosine Oil and Lamps
0” U aV E8T QUALITY > FOR SALE
febn. el>P TURNLEY. Ne. SCheire Ho....
Pure Train Oil.
t BARRELS Just received, and for salo
-ft ».,.»*
I Choice House.
A Fresh and Urge Stock of Southern Raised
Vkw - turnley,
fobu No. 3 Choice Howe.
T Dissolution.
HE Arm of A. G. k A. J. PITNER, has
this day been dissolved by mutual con*
,ent P erto “o indebted to the firm are
requested to moke immediate payment, u'a
LPitner the junior partner, expects to lenvo
this place in a few months, and their buzi-
n.»s must bo wound up before ho leaves.-
*»detytoof A.G. PlTNBR^aUh?okf.uSd}
be'Tound for^hoTt° f H
lan3—lttwzwtf |.
Varnishes of all Kinriq J J .
A MO. TURPENTINE for sale by
*mkti „ TURNLEY,
frMl. v No. 3 Choice Hom». .
I*f
tea mom M . v ...».