Rome tri-weekly courier. (Rome, Ga.) 1860-1881, April 07, 1860, Image 2

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Jaywpfr iQ>mm om* M. DWINELL, Editor A Proprietor. GEO. T. STOVALL, Associate Editor Saturday Morning, A; ‘Pril 7, 1800. .'(Jsssili.; _j-' The Administration on Congressional Protection to Slavery. The following paragraph appears in a late issue of tl le Washington Cornliiu- J^Whal is the use of quarrelling for protec tion t What boots it . whether or not ‘C6h|ir6B protects slavery in the Terri- Southern Slaveholders will not run ; risk for the barren privilege of ren ing one or two years in the Territories. They have more common sense than to do bo foolish a thing as to, carry their slaves into a Territory, where there is a reasonable probability that the State Constitution when formed, will exclude slavery. In no point of view can the South be benefited by congressional in tervention., , S _. ' In reply to the foregoing we will give the language of Senator Fitch of Indi ana, which we have quoted on two 60* oasions before. Speaking of excluding slavery from the Territories by unfriend- ; ,ly Territorial legislation or no&Mtfop, i.t mother words by the' absence : of pro tection, by Congressional legislation, if necessary, he says, “Whether it be in . Dakota of the North, or Arizona of the South, the bold adventurous frontiers men of'the West, whose moveable* ip- ! elude no luxuries whose necessaries are readily supplied by the axe and rifle, 1. will go into the Territory, possess them selves of ita Le^^We, qnd "bxofude Southern property, whUe , the owni of that property are packing up . household goods and' preparing chattels for removal." ’' " - And as we have intimated before, the vast surplus foreign population the North, with their interests and] judioes inimical to slavery will join tb men in their unconstitutional warfi | upon Our rights. Wo believe that where slave labor is lucrative there it will even-' tuatty go, and more than this, we be- ( lieve that when enough cotton growing land is settled and cleared, impera tively to demand more labor than the Southern States can supply, that labor will be furnished by Africa: but if by Popular Sovereignty the slaveholder with his slaves be excluded from the Territories, where nature invites him, the Interests of the South and of the world will be retarded indefinitely.— For althoughin Arizona or any other territory in the South* the Southern planter maybe satisfied that his slave ' capital would yield him a remunerative per dent, still if he has hot that protec tion in the full enjoyment of the use of his capital, which the Cohstitution^guar- ’ antdey to liim he will not “do so foolish / a thing as to carry his slaves , there," and as a matter of course he will not go ' there hiniseif. - Then the Territory will be left entirely to the control of aboli tionists, who as soon as their . numbers’! wiU warrahtit will adopt an anti-slavery constitution and be admitted as a sover eign State into the' Union. They will immediately send fresh recruits to the traitorous host of Blaok Republicans now desecrating the halls of , Congress. Their next step wiU be to elect an anti- slavery President, if they do not suo- oeed next fall.’ and if this,Union has a protracted existence after that event, ; it will either be that the Blaok Repub licans dare not carry • out their avowed designs, or we are most grossly and de plorably mistaken in the spirit of tho ;Southern people. ,1, . The argument of the Washington Constitution may have soma force when applied to “a Territory where there is a reasonable probability ' that the State Constitution when formed will exclude slavery,” but utterly devoidof itwhen ap plied to a territory where there is a rear sonable probability that the State con. stituton when formed^ (oleralt slavery, if the people who form that Constitu tion are not interfered with in the.exer- cise of their righto,and if they are.reoeive that protection which is the .primary object of all free governments. It is for the reasons given that we do ' not fear the Wihnot Proviso .so much os we do the doctrine of Squatter Sov ereignty. They are both alike uncon stitutional, and if permitted to become settled , policy of the government, af our, riahto; but pne is remote in its operation, the other immediate. Congress cannot, for years to come, enact a low prohibiting slavery ip the territories, but a Territorial Leg islature can and will do a#. as soon os it is brought into existence by the or- ga \Ve repeat what wo before said, that where slave labor is profitable there it but if we to*;,to or Georgia & Alabama Railroad, . .. On yesterday proposals were received by the Board of Directors, for the Grad ing, Masonry and Bridging df the Ga. & Ala., Railroad, from Rome to Big Cedar Creek, a distance of thirteen miles. The proposals of Messrs. John D. Gray & Co„ were the most favorable and will he accepted by the * Board,— They take the contract for the entire work, and agree tohnyo it oompleted and ready for the superstruotion by the first of January next, In that event, Col. Pennington will have the rails put down, and the cars running over the road within twelve months from now.— We have not done a great deal of “blow ing" for this road, because we knew it was not needed. Enough bona fide, paying stock has been subscribed to build it to theState line, and. the stockholders are in earnest about it. The enterprise will be pushed forward with energy and dispatch," and we Will meet the . Ala. t Tenn. Rivers R. R., at Jacksonville so soon as they reach that point. As. an evidence of the reliability of our com pany, and the confidence it has estab lished abroad, we mention the strong Competition between the best add larg est contractors in the South, for the work on yesterday. The Indian war whoop, whioh only a few years ago waked the silence of Vann’s Valley, will soon be echoed baok by the scream the Locomotivei -Slavery in Connecticut. We oopy from an old number of the Connecticut Courgnt says the Journal db Messenger the two following advertise ments: From the Charleston Courier. Redpath at Work—A Warning. A friend sends us the following note accompanying a copy, of the Pittsburg “This is an abolition paper.and scarcely. circulates out of the City of Pittsburg,: but in this case it tells the truth. There are many Redpaths.” The paper thus referred to, is the Pittsburg Dispatch, of Monday, 26th March, which contains the following ar ticle: •'Another John Brown Haul—The South Forewarned!—It seeins to us incredible, fflLJS after, .the disastrous result of the Her- gj, name d CLEMENT, about a mid- dMng stature, very black, has a remarka blewist in his gait as he walks, suppos- TO BE SOLD.—A Negro girlfobout 18 years old. She is strong, and very heal thy—understands all sorts of business in a family. Enquire of the Printers. Again: , . TWENTY JDOLLAHS JtEWARD.- Run away from the subscriber in Red-. Saturday night last, a Nzoro .t a meeting of the Constitution al Union men of Muscogee county hold in Columbus, resolutions were passed approving the organization of a Const!- stitutional Union party for the purposes set forth in the address of the Central Executive Committee, and appointing the following delegates to the State Convention on the 2nd day of May: Col. Hines Holt, Judge G. E. Thomas, N. L. Howard, Jackson Odom, Judge Bryan, Maj. M. W. Perry, C. Ogletree, Watkins Banks, J. B. Oliver, Benj. Clarke, F. M. Biggers, Judge S. R. An drews, Col. R. L. Mol M. W, Thweatt. ^ j the Union will not tho struggle. In order to save d legislation to exclude t territory, but must inter- X wlionover it may bo no. »■)>» ~TjT‘ ., Othr stt, Col. J. A.'L. Lee, Giorgia Papers for Hunter.—Since the March Convention has switched Georgia off the traok in the next Presi- ential race, the Federal Union, CassviUe Standard and Southerner db Advertiser, prefers Hon. R. M. T. Hunter, of Va., than whom, the former says, “out side of Georgia, qo man will be more acceptable to the South, or more worthy the honor of the nomination for the Presidency." CSyTho Rome (Go.) Courier, an Oppo sition paper, tells the same stoiy about the late Georgia Convention. “Tho Cobb Democracy were badly de feated, and the Stephens alias Douglas Demoeracy won the day. It will not at all surprise us to see the Georgia dele gates vote for tho Squatter Sovereign fn the Charleston Convention. Cobb's chances have vanished into thin air. Douglas’s loom up into fearful reality. The December Convention took a bold and fearless stand. The March- Con vention have backed down." The “December, Convention” was lo cal, personal and sectional; the Maroh Convention stood for the coma.—Mobile Cause wl»y ?.. Recause tho December Convention stood for Cobb. The Senate Defied.—A dispatch from Washington City, dated 28th ult., states that the Sergeant-at-arms of the Senate had returned from his expedition in search of oontumaoious Harper’s Ferry conspirators and witnesses, and' he re ports that John Brown, jr., is in Ohio and,defies the Harper’s Ferry Commit tee and Congress. The Sergeant re ports that the friends of Brown will not permit him 4o be taken. This is con firmatory of the previous report that a secret polltloal society had been formed in Auhtahnla county, Ohio, whose object per’S Ferry, invasion, that any man set of men, however radical in anti-sla very sentiments, should contemplate a like incursion into the slave States with the intention of inviting an insurrec tion. Such men must know that not only the municipal authorities are on the- alert,' but that the people of the Free States will sternly frown upon any attempt to disturb the social affairs of any State. While they oppose the ex tension of slavery into new Territory, and; look forward to a time when through the operation of peaceful and constitutional agenoies, it shall be abol ished in the States where it exists, and with the consent of the people thereof, they will not countenance any attempt to do away with it by violence. That such rashness is contemplated, however, we regret to say is more than probable. Indeed, we Have the open declaration of James Redpath, an ip- tense anti-slavery man, and the biogra pher of John Brown, that the perilous experiment of Harper’s Ferry will soon be repeated. In a speech made by him at Jefferson, Ashtabula county, Ohio, on the 23d March, he declared the inten tion of his own camp followers in the following language. As he is one of those men who second their words by their acts, the Southern States should be on the alert for an immediate incur sion: Aaron D. Stevens is dead. His bravo life was _ choked out of him for presu ming, without asking Senator Mason’s permission, to believe. in the Declara tion of Independence, and, thus be lieving, for still further daring, (to use his Captain’s word,) “to put that thing through,” or, in the words of God o« rendered by Isaiah, for attempting to “Proclaim Liberty throughout all. the land unto all the inhabitants thereof.” Many of you knew him; shall he die in vkin and unavenged f To those of you who are friends of the slave-driver, 1 have nothing to say— my duty is with men whose hearts are too large to be sufiboated by the dust raised by party mountebanks, and whose gaze is too steady to be dazzled by_ the glare of the false and- fatal r ndor of the Despot’s Court. To of you who are ready to imitate Step this need only be said: “Be prepared; bide your time; erelong you will be called.” For I tell you, men <f Ashtabula, that the strang ling of John .Brown was not the death of fus cause ; and that ere many moons revolve, the slave wiU be offered succor again. Six months / before the blow at Harper's stated that it would be made, and even indicated by whom; and again, I give the slave driver a solemn warn ing to set his house in order, for Ms doom is pronounced—“he shall die and not live.”— Money will be needed to execute these plans of liberation. Those of you who approve it may aid it by your money. ' A Lair Picked up oh the Snow Plough of a Locomotive I—Narrow Escape from Death ! A singular accident occurred on Mon day evening last on the Central Railroad at Waterloo, says, the Roohester Union, by . which a lady of that village had a gratuitous ride before a locomotive, and narrowly escaped a terrible death by being crushed beneath the wheels of the engine. As the mail train, due here at 11.30 last night, was coming into Waterloo at 8.40, Mr. Wright, the en gineer of tho locomotive “General Gould,” saw a lady running along one of the streets towards the train. Not supposing that she intended to cross the track ahead of the train, he kept on his way running slowly, perhaps five or six miles per hour. The lady, prob ably deceived somewhat by the speed of the train or the distance it was from her, attempted to cross the track ahead of the engine, but did not succeed.— She was struck by the small snow plough or pilot, and fell upon it in sueh a manner that she rode quite safely for ten rods or more. The engineer, the instant that he saw how summarily he had takon up a passenger, shut off steam, reversed, and by the application of the brakes, stopped the train as soon as possible. He ran to the lady and found that she was not so much inured, but that she was able to walk and speak. She was somewhat disconcertet) by the accident, but expressed the belief that she had received no serious iqjury. It was a miraculous escape from a dreadful death. . * s&ojur« mmmm, Would call the attention of the to their Stock of ! rjlHE DAY FOR PUFFS, BLOWING, jto, Ac., HAS PASSED—ALL WE WANT, ALL I woank is, that tho PEOPLE ing to eatabliah a I and Bee for themselves. Wo are now propos ed Jo be occasioned by one log being shorter than,the*.other; bod on and took with him a butternut greatcoat with a white cape, striped blue and whitecoat and trowsers, a pair of home made coroed breeches andjacket. Any person that will take up and secure said Negro, so that the owners can have him, shall deceive tho above . reward, and all reasonable charges paid by LAZARUS BEACH. N. B.—Said Negro was seen in Wood bury on Monday evening and is sup posed to have steered towards Boston State. Redding, Sept. 30,1784. ggyTexaa, says the Now Orleans Pic ayune, has become the favorite point sought by the adventurous and enter prising of all the States. Population is Increasing with unexampled speed:— Lands are rising in value with every year. The resources of this magnificent State ore rapidly developed. Her cot ton productions show extraordinary progress. She has already produced su gar to tho extent of thousands of hogs heads, and teus of thousands of sheep and cattle, and the time is not distant when-her product of wool will surpass the most flourishing of tho older States, and the amount oflier stock that is sent to a Southern market exceeds that furnished by the great valley of the West. Another Congressional Squabble.— Washington March 31.—A scene between two Congressmen, which occurred this morning, occasioned some excitement. Mr. Van Wyok meeting Mr. Hindman, on the Avenue, held out his hand in friendly recognition, when Mr. Hind man refused to take it, making use of the words, as reported: “You scoundrel, you have delivered a speech not only insulting to every southern man, but to every gentleman," at . the same time making a movement with his left hand towards Mr. Vun Wyck’s face, as if additionally to insult’him. $40,000.—The officers of the W. A A. R. R. have paid into the State Treasury $40,000 nett earnings for the month of Maroh. Well done. ©“Mayor Wood is reported as hav ing said ; “If money witl earry Connec ticut for the Democracy, 1 will buy the whole State.’’- , MERCHANT TAILORING BUSINESS, In connection with the Dry Goods trade, and have fitted up Rooms for this purpose, in the Upper Story.oi our Magnificent Storo House, on Broad Street, and wiU be prepared, at any time, to SUIT Qehtlkmon. Goods from Other Stores made, and at the lowest possible rates, OUR STOCK OF CLOTHS, GASSIMBES, ITAL. CLOTHS, BANG UPS, &c., &c, CANNOT BE EXCELLED. Thankful for the many evidenees of confidence, heretofore extended, we are anxious- to enlarge our business so as to enable us to furnish all varieties of Goods at lots rates than formerly, as we aw Convinced that a small business will not pay, and what we yield in prices t > the consumer, must be made up in quantity sold. mnr27witrilm. " SLOAN A HOOPERS. ICE! IUEI ICE1 'B would respectfully inform tho Public that our lee House is now stocked with the best quality of iee, which can be furnish ed all the Summer. Families supplied from our Drug Store.— Care taken in packing, for transportation by Boats, Railroad or Hacks. FARELL A YEISER. npr3—twtwtf « HAVING RECEIVED THEIR Spring and Summer mm®, NOTICE. A LL persons having claims against the/ assortment of BONNETS. RIBBONS Ala. Planters’or Oostonaula Steamboat AND FLOWEBS. and everythjng be- Companies will please hand them in imme- ’ ‘ ’’ dlately to GEO. R. WARD A CO., Agts. For Hire. 1 rv NEGRO MEN and 2 Women, either AO bv the day or month—apply to apr5tw3t. GEO. R. WARD A CO., Agts. Plantation for Sale. The Subscriber offers for sale his Plantation, 10 miles below Romo in Floyd county, on Coosa river, tfipWSBW containing 175 acres—80 of which is iu a fine state of cultivation.— AtBjtRuaeres on the llomo and Ccdor Bluff Road, with Dwelling, fine Gin House, good and well arranged Cabins, Stables, Orchards, Ac., with 220 acres cleared—the bind is 11 miles from tho river. For further informa tion apply to the subscriber, ^ ^ Missionary Station, Floyd! eo., Ga. npr5w0m PURE ICED SODA WATER! ffTHE subscribers respeotfully inform the X Public, that their Soda Fountain is open- edrorthe season, and will be liberally sup plied with Ice, and a fine assortment of the Choicest Syrups. Congress Water on Ice. april7tn2m. FARELL A YEISER. I I I i t I ROME LIGHT GUARDS! Y OU are hereby commanded to attend call meeting of your Corps, On MON DAY NIGHT,9th inst, at tho City Hall, for the Election of a Second Lieutenant to fill the vacancy of A. M. Kerr, resigned. By order of Cnpt. MAGnrmr.it. apr3 J. T. MOORE, O. 8. wm to protect the Harper’s Ferry gang from arreet, and that John Brown, ir., was among them. Does anybody be lieve either that the President wiU en- foroe the laws in this case,- or that any other than a Northern Democratic Pres ident woold negleot to enforce them?— «9>We laara, says the Commercial, that Richard & Wi est Liberty, Ohio. the Cincinnati Realf has editor Press, published at S©“Lettbe Democratic party.asitas- sumes to call itself,,go on, if it dare, to nominate Douglas on the Squatter Sov ereignty, Non-intervention, Cincinnati platform, or to nominate any sympathiser with Douglas on that platform, and it will have besides the Union party, the whole power of the present Democratic ad ministration to contend with, as we have the best authority for saying. The pre sent administration is folly and conclu sively committed, as is. also the Union party, against the heresy of popular, sovereignty, and in favor of the Dred Soott decision, and it is bound to fight all who favor the first or oppose the last let them be Democrats or what not.— We shall meet you'at Phillippi, good Domooratio friends, be sure of that.— Chron. db Sen. J&“A stranger, meeting a man in the streets of Boston a few days since, accos ted him with— “Here, I say, I want to go to the Tre mont House?” The deliberate reply was: “Well, you may go, if you don’t be gone long.” Pox’s Moths*.—Ike mother-in-law of Edgar A. Foe, the poet, is in Alexandria Va., over 70 years old, and in tho most distressing poverty. Mrs. Summerhays W OULD respectfully call the attention of the Ladies to her choice and carefully selected stock of MILLINERY AND FANCY ARTICLES, consisting of— ChiPi Pamela, Fancy & Plain STRAW BONNETS, Leghorn, fancy and plain Straw HATS for Children and Misses. Plain and Fancy Crape and Silk Bonnets. MOURNING BONNETS in every stylo. A large assortment of Spring and Summer Ribbons at every price and quality. FRENCH FLOWERS and RUCHES. SPANISH NETS for the hair—a very fash ionable article. Black Lace Veils. Blaok Lace Capes—a new and beautiful style. HeHdresses of various styles. ■ Skirts, for Ladiot and Children. \ Jacket Corsets. ’ Ladies will find these Goods, not only nowest and choicest materia’s, but oheapor than can bo found elsewhere, and no pains will be spared to please. *twtf npritwtf 1TNA insurance CO., HAfiTFOBD, CON. INCORPORATED 1819 ! CHARTER PERPETUAL. Authorised Capitol,...'. »J.500,000 00 Paid Capitol ®® Assets........ 2,030,423 80 E. G. Riplrv, Pres., T, A. Amsxakdxb, V. P. T. K. Brack, Sec’ty, A. A. Williams. Adj r. W. 8. C0T1IRAN, - — - tpril5trily, , AgL, Rome, Go. PHOENIX INSURANCE CO IIABTFORD, CON. CAPITAL $400,000! CHARTER PERP’TUL II. Kkllooo, Beefy., S. L. Loomis, Prest. W. 8. COTHRAN, Agi., Rome, Go. npril5tri1y. TO THE LADIES I fflSSMOBLK&STOIMEL Farm tom. apr5tw*wlm to Rent or Sell. On Johns Creek near Floyd Springs, containing 820 acres—• about 100 of which is cluurud. and 80 first quality creek bot- Apply to GEO. T. STOVALL, Romo, Gh. Change of Schedule- Office Rohe Railhoab, > Romo, March 31, ; 18R0. } O N and after Sunday tli« 1st day of April tho Morning trams will leave-Rome daily at 7} o’clock, P. Mi., returning at 44 o’clock, P. M. Evening Train leaves Koine daily (Sundays excepted) at 74 o’clock, P. M., and roturn next day at 04 o’clock. A. M. W. S. COTHRAN, Gen’l Sup’t. longing to the Milinrey business. Opening on Saturday. mnr22triw. CITY EXPRESS. C A. SMITH, har- • ing established an Express Rome, Wagon, i n >, is prepared to do- promptly all light liver promptly all light packages and carry passengers and Baggage, in and about the city, at reasonable rates. Crdcrs may be loft at liis Confectionary Store,or at the Rail road Depot. marl5tri. Dissolution. T HE firm of A. G. A A. J. PITNEB, has this day been dissolved by mutual Cbn- sent. All persons indebted to the firm are requested to. make immediate payment, as A. J. Pitner the junior partner, oxpects to leave this plaeo in a few mouths, and their busi ness must bo wound up before he leaves.— The business will be conducted in the name and style of A. G. PITNER, at tho old stand, whero the notes and accounts of the firm will bo found for a short time. jon3—IttwA wtf NEW DRUG STORE! NO. 3. CHOICE HOUSE. [House formerly occupied by MoSt. Battcy.\ P. L. TURNLEY, 'lT7'OULDrespectfully inform hist VV friends and customers, and NOTICE. T HE Stockholder of tho COOSA A CHAT TOOGA R. R. R. COMPANY are hereby notified that an Installment of Fifteen per cent., on the stock is oailod for, payable on tho 10th ef June next. Also Fifteen percent additional, payable on the 1st of August next By order of the Board of Directors. A. B. CULBERSON, apc5w?m Sec’y A Tres’r. Medical Association OF GEORGIA. FT1HE annual assemblage of tho Medical X. Association of Georgia for 1860, will take place in the city of Rome, on the 2d Wednes day in April next. A. G. THOMAS, apri!3tw4t Seo’y Med. A. of Go. customers, public generally, that ho is now cpeni’ng a very large and at- tractive Stock of Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals Dyestuffs, Perfumery and Fancy Articles.— Also, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Liquor for Medical uses. Also Seeds of nil kinds, both Field and Garden, (Southern Raised).— Glass. Putty, Glue, Brushes, and in fuel, every thing in hut line or that is usually kept in a jflrst Class Drug Store. Having had several years experience, and by giving bis personal attention to tho busij ness, bo hopes to merit a share of publie pa tronage, and to be able to furnish his eua tomors reliable articles, at as LOW PRICES, As any houso this side of Avgusta, Ga. Re member tho location. The wants of tho country shall bo supplied. febll.'OO. TO RENT. rrVHE laTge and commodious Store, opposite A tho Choice House, formerly occupied by MeGuire A Pinson, and in the mast desirabli part of the town for business. Apply to marSltritf. D. B. HAMILTON. NOTICE-LOST. L OST or mislaid, a certain Note, given by W. R. Smith to W. B. Cothran, for ad vance on Cotton, dated sometime about tho last of the year 1856, or beginning of tho year 1857, for two hundred dollurs. Tho said Note having been lost or mislaid the finder will roceive the thanks of all concerned by the full WIU IUUUITV WIU Luniine VI VW..V.OIUUU returning the same to W- R. Smith or re i subscriber, as said note has been paid in I by the maker, to mar27trilm. ARCH. DAVIS. CICERO A. SMITH, DEALER* IN CONFECTIONARIES AND FRUITS, ROME, GA *T8 Ju>t receiving a large and well seleotod X stock of Confectionaries, sueh os Candies, Raisins, Figs, Dates, * citron. currants, Preserves, Pickles, •Macoaroni, Vermrcilli Gr’n^Mnger, Allspice, Eetohups, cinnamon, Oranges, Lemons, Almonds, cocoanuts, *8454* Twenty-five different brands of choice Cigars, also a lot of fins Chewing Tobacco. TERMS CASH. mar22trftf. For Sale or Rent. T HE House and Land, 14 miles from Rome, recant-, It occupied by Mrs. Marsble.j This settlement eontoius about 274 acres of Land, Dwelling hum er improvements, Fruit Tices Ac. R. J. Jonxsox, or io mur30w2m. FRANCIS BENJAMIN [ House and otb- :■ Ac. Apply , Chemicals Garden Seeds. . O F all kinds nud vnrlotjm, warranted to be the kind that wilwsprout, for sale TURNLEY, No.3 Choice House. Kerosine Oil and Lamps O F THE BEST QUALITY, FOR SALK cheap by febil. TURNLEY, No. 8 Choice House. Price of SAWED LUMBER. OWING to tho increased price of every article of homo con sumption, we, as a portion of the laboring class, feel that we cannot live at the present low prices of Lum ber and Sawing, thcrofore, Wo, the umlersigued, shall on and nftor tho 1st of February next, put the price of Lum ber at our respective mills, at $1 26 por 100— Hauling and kiln-drying noj included. Kemombcrour Terms oro INVARIABLY CASH JOB ROGERS, L. R. A S. D. WRAGG. J. G. MORRIS. Other Dealers in Lumbor are invited to join in this movement. jan24tw*wtf J. C. BAKER R. W. ECHOLS new/" ' FIRM iM BAKER & ECHOLS, DEALERS IN DRUGSAND MEDICINES, Colognes andFktoring Extracts, OILS, PAINTS, &C. GLASS, POTTY, DTEIST TJFFS9 FINE CIGARS, LICtUOBS for Hedlosl Sui- poses, Ac., &c. &c. Rome. Oa. Feb. lSIh. [triwiw If.)