Newspaper Page Text
VOL. 1.
ROME, GEO. y TUESDAY WORMING. NOVEMBER 13,
® l)c Sri. tPeckb) % Sonricr
PUBIj.tSQED' SVERV
tUESDAT, THURSDAY & S.\TtJR!>.VT HORN'Gh
By M. DWINELL.
AD FOUR DOLLARS A YEAR.,
Invariably in advance.
Terms of Advertising in Tri-Weekly.
PER SQUARE OP TEE LIKES.
One insertion
.....$1.00
Two insertions
.1,50
Each additional insertion,....
0,25-
One Month...............
.4,00
'Two Months
8,00
Three Months,'......, .....
7,59
Six Months
10,00
Twelve Months
......15,00
A liberal discount will be made to those
Who advertise larger amounts.
Obituarico o r more than five lines oharged
the same as advertisements.
■Notices of Mirrianes and. Deaths, not ex
ceeding Five bines in length, ate published
gratuitously in the Courier. The friends of
■ the parties aro requested to sond in these no-
tieos nccomnanied with a responsible name
and they will be published grtth pleasure.
^Irofessiowi CqirOs.
ft. p. IfAnVBT, . . . i . . . DUNLAP SCOTT.
HARVEY & SCOTT,
^JbHNEYB AT LAW,
ROMif, . .■ • • • • GA.
A. D VANCES of money can usually be hod
r\ upon g.yd claims left for. collection.
Romo,' June L—1y.
Z. B. HARGROVE,
- ATTORNEY A T £ A W.
home, - - ■ •- - -;**•.
Ounce—-Over Fort A Hargrove’s now store.
• febl9—ly
&hwh»-W».
CANFIELD, BRO, & CO..
Ho. 119 Baltimore si, oornor Charles,
BALTIMORE, Ml).,
ibppftTERS AND DEALERS' IN
Watches. Jewelry,
SILVER AND PLATED WARE,
BRONZES, CLOCKS,
Military and Finoy Goods generally
'A Co. Invite attention to their rich
and extonsivu rtork of Good), not. inferior to
any othor establishment in -their line. One
Of their firm-Vi.iting, Europe annually ena-*
bios them by a careful selection from the best
sources to offer inducements to purchasers
both in style and prioo second to none.
Wat -hes of the best makers end in overy
variety. Military Companies furnished com
plete. angn-iwlv
GEO. T. STOVALI,,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
NO HUMBUG,
But the Boor Man’s Relief,
AND TOft
RICH WAITS FRIEND 1
Harris’ Twelve Pointed Double
MOULD BOARD \
P is O W .
T HE MERITS OF THIS
Plow ovor others', for
the cultivation of both Cot,
ton and C >rn arc many, but 1 shall mention
only its lending merits: With four wings,
two small and two targe, it can be oonvertod
int. SeteWdlfferent Plows, all of which are
very necessary for the cultivation of dif-
firpntcrops. And another very important
feature Is durability. A Ploiv completed
will lasta man from two to five years, accord
ing to the soil he cultivates, and will only
cost about Three Dollars to put It up. An
Agency will soon be established in Rome,
and then planters will be Invited to calhand
sec for themselves. Address.
B. F. REYNOLDS.
mar20lrltf. Kingston, Ga.
• GA.
,.‘tL practice in the eountios of Cherokee
Ga. Ogee oyer N. J. 0 uberg’s Clothing store
REvabEEdsi—Hnderwood A Smith, Rome
T. R. R. <JW>b, Esq., Athens. Ga. jan27
Go.
'—"I’rtOS.'d. VERDERY,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CEDAR TOWN, - - - GA.
Will practice in the counties of Floyd,
P.1k, Paulding, Carroll, Haraldson and Cass.
Sariet attention paid to collecting. jan20-ly
J.jw. H. UKDBnWOOD. ..... C. H. SMITH.
UNDERWOOD Si SMITH,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
ROME, . .... ..... GA.
Practice In Upper Georgia: also In the
Federal District Court of Marietta.
j»o20’59-ly ' ■
C. H. SMITH,
NOTARY PUBLIC.
Commissioner Of Deeds for. Alabama and
Tennessoe. a«g3,
T. W. ALEXANDER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
. ROME, . . . GA.
febl0'57
W. B. TERHUNE,
ATTORNEY at law,
*' ROME, : . OA.
Omot—In City Hail Building. ,
•aorS-ly
DRS. GREGORY St FARELL,
BROAD ST., ------ ROME, GA.
OrriCB—First doer below Choice Hotel.
optlOtwly
Dr. B. M. STRICKLAND,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN,
OFFICE at the Drug Store of Baker,
Echols k Strickland. .
Ream over McGuire A Pinson's store.
Rome, Ga., July I t, tiriljr.
MUTUAL INSURANCE
. COMPANY.
ROME, - - - - - - GA.
Orf ice—At Rome Railroad Depot.
W. 8. COTHRAN, Pres’t.
0. H. STILLWELL, Beo’y. july28
Dr. J. T. DUANE,
RESIDENT DENTIST,
‘ ROME, GEO.
'. Rooms ovor Fort A Hargrove.
XT AS been engaged in the
t~l practice of Dentistry in
Europe and the United States
for the last twelve years; and will guarau
too to those that employ his services, entire
satisfaction,. in both, the operatl
meohanioal branch of the business.
Particular attention given to regulating
childrens toeth.
■£37“A11 work performed at reasonable
charges. maylT—twly.
DAVID G. LOVE,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
PENMAN,
Colleotor and General Agent.
MfF-Offioe in Drug Store of Biker A Ech
ols. febn-trily.
A. J. BEARDEN,
AMBROTYPIST,
* Hoies; aA. ■:
JanSl.lMO; - . . [Trily.
COTHRAN, JEFFERS & CO,
. —8UCCKS30R8 TO—
JEFFERS A COTHRAN,
actors A Cenalsslon Merckaats,
CENTRjffc WHARF, * .
OSA RIBS TON, SOUTH CAROLINA
HENRY L. JBFFER8, J °** *•
September 7,—ly.
Seventh Tear in the
quires
-A /a»t age re-
fait work
E. M. SEAGO,
PRODUCE BROKER
General Commission Merchant,
Office in Seago'i Block, No. 15. Alabama St.,
ATLANTA, GA.
S ELLS all Goods on arrival at 24 percent.
Will make returns within throe days from
receipt of Goods. Will purchase, funds in
this city. -Now York, New Oriesns. Philadel
phia. Baltimore. Boston, Nashville, Cincin
nati, Saint Louie and Louisville at 21 per
cent.; on sums of $1,000 or more at 1 per cent,
in this City. The citizens of this City, or
strangers in this City, On snms not less than
$100. at 1 percent.; on smaller sums at 21
percent
Respectfully refers to Bankers and
Merchants of this'City, mar20trily.
DeFORF.ST, ARMSTRONG, Sc Co.
DRY GOOD MERCHANTS,
$0 aud 82 Chamber! St. N. T.
W OULD notify the Trade that they are
opening Weekly, in new and beauti
ful patterns, the
W.AMSUTTA PRINTS,. Also the
AMOSICEAG,
A New Print, which excels evory Print in the
country for perfection of execution and de
sign in full Madder Colors. Our Prints are
cheaper than any in market, and meeting
with extensivo saie. Orders promptly at
tended to. Feb2'(10.trily.
itsinese Cqlrdfs.
KINGSTON HOTEL,
KINGSTON, .... ... ... GA.
T>*SSENGERS can get a good warm. sUp-
JL per eft the above named Hotel, immedi
ately opposite the Tioket ofReo, on the left
hand side of. the Ra'lroaffgoing down. Sat.
ilfactlon given or.nc Charge,-
Jf3J~ Strict attention to passengers agoing
to Romo. T. R. COUCHE, Prop’r.
-twtf.
VERANDA
Boarding House I
In sight of tho Depot—sumo side of the
8treeL [fehlltrily] S. G. WELLS, Pro.
GRAHAM HOTEL,
CAVE SPRING, GA. '
J. A. GRAHAM, Proprietor.
THE REGULAR STAGE OFFICE.
There is n Livery Stable kept in connection
with this Hotel, where Horses and Vehicles
are kept for hire. jnnHtwtf
FORT & HARGROVE,
OFFER FOR SALE A
LARGE ASSORTMENT. OF,
Groceries & Staple Goods,
adapted to Planter's use—
For Cash,
Consisting of
Sugar, Coffee, Salt, Molasses,
Nails, Negro Kerecye, Blankets,
Linseys, Negro Shoes, Stripes
Shirtings, Osnaburgs,
jnaylS-ly. Factory Thread, ke... Ac.
J. B. MURPHY
RESIDENT DENTIST,
es, and has fitted up an office, over the store
of McGuire £ Pinson, where ho is prepared
to execute all operations appertaining to Den-.,
tietry, in tho most approved manner.
Ho would also call the particular attention
of those in want of Artificial Work, to his su
perior style of toeth, net on gold plate; for
beauty, strength and life-like appeaeance,
they are notsurpassed. As an impression has
been made that ray prices for dental opera-,
tions are higher than the usual rim of Den
tists, I beg leave to bay that they are the same
as oharged-by Jlentists at Augusta, Macon
andSavannan.'Fdr Artificial Work my char
ges are as follows:
Entire Sets Uppor and Lower from$100 to $251
Half Sets, Upper or Lower, from 50 to 150
Temporary Sots, Upper and Lower, 25 onch.
Partial Sots in proportion to the above.
As I am well pasted in all the Into improve
ments of tho day, 1 feel confident that I can
meet the wants of at* who may need the sop-
vices of a Dentist, and if referenccsaro want
ed; as to their utility in answering the purpo
ses of nature. I can give-them In abundance,
from those who have tested my skill, for the
last fourteen years. In this, end adjoining
States.
J. B. MURPHY.
Rome, Sept- 14, 1859.-tf.
6gfdg- ‘
TJEING desirous of selling put her Wlntsi;
NEW'YORK
COST PRICES,
of a com
cmtklota
, Nov. 2d, tq whi
stock will ■ take
fhioh the
oot30tw*wtf
place
ladles are invitod.
tFtheTladiesT
HISSES NOBLMSTOGim
Hare just received a large
assortment of .
Fall and Winter
MILLINERY
GOODS,
Which we will sell at the lowest prteoe possi
ble. Come and judge for yourselves,
octll : - ’
4
2ETNA INSURANCE CO.
HARTFORD, CON.
INCORPORATED 1819 !
CHARTER PERPETUAL.
Authorised Capital, ...f.:....$1.600,000 00
Paid up Capital 1,000,000 00
Assets....... 2,080,423 80
E. G. Ripi.ev, Pres., T, A. Ai.BXANnen, V. P.
T. K. Brack, 8cc'ty. A. A."Williams. Adj’r.
W. S. COTHRAN, Agt., Romo, Ga.
,pril5tri1y.
Extract from a Letter ol Hon. B.
, Moore, ot Raleigh N. C., Upbn th
- Difficulties of Disunion. , L -j i
AAmong all tho injuries complained o
by tho South to justify disunion not one]
of thcn^wiU lercdrtiecd ot mitigated by the
event.- -
V. That ono which now, for the first
time in the history! of the Government,
is demanded: namely, that Congress shall
pass a slave code for the Territories, will
never bo board of in the new Republic;
for no more slave territory, nor territory
of any hind, will bo added-to the Souths
em Republic. All hopes in Ccntral|
America will perish, if mot by emigra
tion-thither and settleihent of tho op
ponents of^ slavery, yet by ittte destitu
tion cf maritino strength in tho nen
Republic 1 end, if they perish- by nei
ther of ti ' -i-
of these, they wifi Be crushed
neath the universal British protection tc
bo extended by England alike to.Cen ;
Iral America and our Southern Reput
lio. All hopes of Cubp will vanish, an;
a Spanish squadron between the idol
and the Belize, Will, 1 fear, appear
muah more formidable armament th ,
now it seems. On the downfall of Span-
th' *
J«w
England,
will giye her a naval supremaoy along ]
the whole ooast of the new Republic
that will lay every strip of i(s canvass at
the foot of the-British lion.
rendition if fugitive'slaves. This:
-igbt to demand it.. V
PHjENIX INSURANCE GO.,
HARTFORD. CON.
CAPITAL $400,000!
CHARTER PERP’TUL.
H. Keli.ooo, Sert’y., 8. L. Loomis, Prest.-
W. S. COTHRAN, Agt., Rome, Ga.
april5trily? '■ ■
W. & Atlantic (State) R, E
Atlanta, to- Chattanooga, 138 miles, fare (5—
Jonn W. Lewis, Supo’t.'
MORNING PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta^ at.. 10 20 a m
Arrives at Chnttanooga ...7 34 p m
Leaves Chattanooga at 3 25 a u
Arrives at Atlanta 1 40 r u
EVENING PASSENGER TRAIN.
Leaves Atlanta at night 8 15 a m
Arrivi-s at Chattanooga 5 30 a u
Leaves Chattanooga, at 3 00 r u
Arrives at Atlanta 11 32 a M
This r-iad o mrects-each way with the
Rome Branch Raiir >ad at Kingston, the East
Tenncss e ft Georgia Railroad at DalLm. and
the Nashville ft Chattanooga Railroad at
Chattanooga. mariltri
vnos: J. nsnnr,
:: O. w. r. LAMK1N.
PERRY & LAMKIN,
WHOLESALE AND
RETAIL GROCERS,
DODWORTH’S
MUSIC
m
STORE.
No. 0 ASTOlt PLACE, N. Y.
PUBLISHER
ANI> DEALEn -IX
FOREIGN AND AMERICAN
MUSIC,
Instruments,
AND MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
Songs and Compositions for the Piano Forte,
By Iho Beet Masters, •
Sacred and Orgae Music: Dance and
Military Music, for the Piano Forte,
8-mt by mail, postage free.
(Stamps mey be sei\t instead of obange.)
CATALOGUES OF MUSIC FOR
Brass Bands;
Quadrille Bands, small or large Oreheitras.
PRICE
List of. Brass Instruments,
Sent on application.
THE
“Journal for Brass Bands,”
A new publication of Band Music, is issued
on the lOth-uf each month; also, the ‘-COM
PANION,” containing Marches, Medleys, Ac.
The instrumental parts In these words are sep
arate and ready for performance.
HARVEY B DODWORTH,
sopll-twflm Director of Dodworth’s Bands.
Phelan’s
•Improved Billiard tables
AND COMBINATION CUSHIONS,
Protected by letters patept dated Feb. 19
1S5S. Oot 28,1858; Ds*. 8,1857; Jan.
12,1858; Nov. Ifi, 1855, and, March «
19, 1859.
The recent Improvements In these tables
make them unsurpassed In the world They
are now offered totheialentiOo Billiard play
ers os combining speed with truth, never be
fore obtaining in aoy Billiard Table. Sales
room* No*. 86.67. and 69 Crosby Street.
PHELAN ft COLLENDER,
sepll—trlam Manufacturers.
Superior White Lead,
A T v « r y l»w prices. Also, Linseed Oil
XX Oopal, Demar and Japan. Vanishes
auw^tha best quality and at lowest prieei.
par sal* by FARELL ft YEISER.
No. 4 Choice Hotel,
'ILL keep constantly nn hand,
well
YYT'U.i, keep
VV Selected assortment of Groeeries. Al
so. Provisions, such as. Bacon, Lard. Flour.
Meal’ftgo., Ao„ which we will sell low for
Cash, or country produce, at cash prices. We
fuel gra'efnl for past favors, and hope by
prompt attention to business, and fair deul-
inj. to receivo alihoral share of patronage.—
Oar motto will be qdick sails and short pro
fits. Give us a call before baying elsewhere,
Rome, Aug. 31, ’60.tf.
Family si Supplies
J AS. W. LANGSTON,
No. 2 Choice Hotel,
BROAD STREET, ROME, GA.
T HE Undersigned will keep a general as
sortment of Family Groceries consisting
of. -
FLOUR, BACON,
MEAL, LARD,
SUGAR. . CANDLES.
SYRUP. TOBACCO.
MOLASSES, BEGAR8.
COFFEE, Cotton Yarns,
FISH, DRIED AND FRESH
FRUITd IN THEIR SEASON. Ac.
No pretense is made to a .WHOLESALE
business, but persons may be sure of gutting
at least as Good Bargains here at RETAIL
as at any other House In the city.
tSTTerms—Cash only.
JAB. W. LANGSTON,
jrne2—twtf
BOOTS AND SHOES
MaxuFACTonKD sr
P. A, OIBEttC,
ROME GA.
for Gentlemen's Dress Boots Sc Shoes.
He employs the best of Workmen and keep*
posted on the iatoit fashions.
Genteel Fite and Work warranted.
ThankiUl for past favors he hopes to re
ceive a continuation „pf patronage in this
branch of home industry.
aug25-Iy P. A. OMBERG
Change of Sohedulo.
Orncn Romm RaanoAD,' \
Rome, March $1,1860. J
O N and after Sunday the lit day of April
the Morning-train will leave Rome dsily
at 7| o’clock, A. M.. returning at 44 o'clock,
P. M. Evening Train leaves ~Rnme dally
(Sundays excepted) at 64 o’clock, P. U.,and
return next day at 64 o’clock, A. M.
W. S. COTBRAJT, .QenT S'n^'t.
HENRY A. SMITH,
Bookseller & Stationer
ROME, GA.
JU8T RECEIVED
a large and exten
sive Stock of School, 1
Classical and Miscellaneous Books. Also, a
large variety of Stationary., Wnll Papering.
Engravings, Paintings and Fancy Articles,
suitable for tho Holidays.* Merehnnts and
School Teachers,' supplied withr Books apd
Stationary at Augusta prices. The atfa
of purebasms rcspectftilly solicited.
Terms Oasb
jan3—twly
WHOLESALE
TOBACCO BOISE!
Weatherford, Sloan & Thomas.
BROAD ST., ROME, GA.-
W ILL keep constantly on hand a large
and oarelully soloeted stock of Vir
ginia and North Carolina Tobacco, and will
supply the trade nn as rocsonable terms as
ib be had elsewhere.
I. G. S. WEATHERFORD,
-Rockingham Co. N. C.
W.C. SLOAN. Rome Gal
W. J. M. THOMA8,
junel9trlly. Rockingham, Co. N. 0.
2. The
wifi cease-with the rij
Great Britain rpoeives with open arms
all who reach Gaoada. All other no
tions adopt the same rule. And the
UnitedStates have ever submitted to
this universal law. The South has yiel
ded to it in silence, andafter dissolution
wilt have neither strength nor compact
to enforce or insist upon, it; Fanati
cism, always most zealous when nlost
opposed, will be upon her long border
of fifteen hundred miles with the prom
ise of a free home to every slave who
can put foot on her soil. Within and
along all that border where, now the
South has thousands of friends,. whose
respect for the Constitution and good
faith-drive back the fugitive slave and
give such raidsmen as John Brown nei
ther a resting place nor a hiding place
from the vengeance of the law, the
counsels of the fanatic alone will. be
heard-atld alone beheaded. The South
ern Republic will pot go to war be
cause the Northern Republic shall, -like
Canada, open her arms to receive the
fugitive slave.
8. The agitation of the question of slavery.
Will that be hashed in our Southern
Republic? It is very certain that un
less we change our own conduct, it will
be none the less agitated. . When have
the minority of our political, orators
ceased to make that their eternal and
never ending theino of discussion ? In
and out of Congress we have had our
full share of this sin. It has been for
many years the escape valve of the Nor
thern nnd Southern gas manufactories,
more to make capital at home than to
do good any where.' The^ only result
bos been the inculcation of a disastrous
hatred between the readers of these pi>-
posing speeches—the. bumble and uni
formed voters at home.
Now when a line sKall bo drawn around
tile slaveliolding Republic,, which will
exclude all other people; from lawful
counsel on the subject of sjavety,
there any prospect that agitation wil
cense? ’ Will the ad
treme
the advocates lor
proposition on the sutye<
very be quiet? Has it not always been
Torjqjwex-
kject oi.sla-
I. R. MARTIN,
Successor to 0. A. Smith,
ROSIE, GA.
WHOLESALE AMS RETAIL DIALS* ■*
CHOICE j' .
CONFECTIONARY,
AND
SMALL GROCERIES.
ALL KINDS OF FRUIT.
OYSTERS &. SHAD
-IN THEIR SEASON.
CANDY MANUFACTORY
. AN?
BAKERY.
ASSORTED CANDIES
Put up to Boxes to suit Customer*.
Parties Supplied with Cake-
fffif Order* will b* attended to . with,
nroraptneee and Diipstoh.'Wk '• - •
pm~Tcrm* Cash. *epl5twly. •
characteristic of them
opinions regardless of opposition among
the moderate of their fellow-citizena?—
If you stop short of their views end re
fuse to go with them in their Tull length
you arc denounced immediately as un
sound oil slavery.
And now, sir, after the Southern Re
public shall be established will the ad
vocate for opening the slave trade be
quiet under the idea that the area of
slavery will be then fixed, while so ma
ny millions of acres of ootton land still
remain forest ? Will he cease to agi-
that _
supply ..
beany men without slaves t Will the
slaveless laborer in the Sojitli, taught
that white men cannot labor in a South
ern sun, be certain that our ports shall
-remain closed against the idiportation
of Africans, and sojireserve the high pri
ces of slaves, while one freeman- among
us owns 100, and 100 freeman amon
own not one apiece? Think- yott ‘
on the question of opening this minesOt
promised wealth the two mosses wifi pot
bo arrayed in opposition ? The one to
preserve the value of its pro]
the country from being ,Af
othi
and
and the other to become wealthy as its
neighbor, though the country' shall bo
Afncanized? And doyoudoubt which
of the parties will carry the day? For
remember that no small munber of tlm
influential people of .the South liavo
been for several years arguing that t here
is mom-sin .(ittin there be at all in
slavery) in< holding to bond
and civilised: Africans than
Steamboat Notice..
On and after tbs 1st day o
Septsmber nszt, tho Coosa Rlv
i or Steamboat Company will
chores on Pack ages cf. Money contain.*
One Thousand Dollar* or leas 25o, over Or
and. under Two Thousand Dollars 50o. .
ELLIOTT ft RU8B1LL,
auglt Agents.
tutored
. ip _P. -rdduo-
ing to btmdage^in a land of chvistiani-
ty ahd oivilumtion, tho untaught healli-
e& andrad*. hokbariim. Avarice, tUo
love of indolence; and the agrarious
plea will prevail against the wiso coun-
soles of the few:; and the pulpit oven
will become fervid under popular favor,
and reproduce the buried sermons of
by-gono centuries to support tho popu
lar sentiment, fjif
programme will be:—First, the condi
tional secession of. South Carolina, by.,
act of her new Legislature, which is to.,
meet In Columbia on the day of the
Presidential election to oloct her Presi
dential eleotors, and do such other,
things as tho orisis and “the safety of the
State may- require." Secondly, that,,"
under existing legislative instructions;
the-Gtovernor of Alabama, on satisfacto-.-
xy information of Lincoln’s election,
will issue his proclamation calling for
the election of a State Convention to de
termine the .question for that Stato 6f
submission or Secession; and that tho
Governor of Missississippi will, inasim, .
ilnr manner, bring her people directly,
tb the same issue. , - .. ■ w -
In the next place, it is - believed that"
Georgia; Florida,Louisand.Aakansas and
Texas will readily co-operate with South
Carolina and her seceding, associates:}'
and that thus acting in concert they
will establish the nucleus of a Southern
confederacy on or before the day of
Lincoln’s inauguration. The President
cannot interfere until some ovSirt act of •
nullification of tho federal laws or com-!-
paot shall have been committed, and,
when committed, the interventiop iof
the federal government must take the
form of.pailitary movement to suppress
an Open rebellion. Any movement of
this sort.wo know would, from the first
collision of arms, bring all the remain
ing Southern States, except, perhaps,
Delaware, Maryland and Missouri, to'
the rescue of the seceding coalition.-*
With this disunion rhovement thus.
strengthened, the only sensible thing
wliioh the federal government could
do would be to give it up and. recog-.
tionality ^fj-this
nize the separate nationality <
Southern confederation.
We learn, too, that it it extensl
ly understood. in the South that in
half of a Southern confederacy the;
ties concerned would be sure to
mand the co-operation of Englanc
France. The argument is, that _
war for the subjugation of. the South
would inevitably so far unsettle.: the
whole Southern social fabric as to re
sult in suspension of tho cotton culturo
during the continuanoe of such war,
England and Franco, looking to their
.J LL
T . Jfrgjto
pence. Nor have we any doubt should
the occasion demand it, that such
would be tho line of action on., the part ~.
of England nnd France; for in every
point of view it is their policy; ns com- '
mercial, maritime and manufacturing
States, to encourage the dissolution of -
this overshadowing Union. England
could afford to pay some millions of
money to establish an independent con
federacy of our Sotuliern States, for she
could make many millions of money by
tho operation. • ‘•
Wo dare say that under a Southern
confederated government, with! tariff
ilntions, putting our Northern coh-
racy on the same footing with other
foreign Powers, the South would draw
from England and France, in manu'
tured articles, fifty millions or i
annum than are now f.xpond
lceo potions’ under our
laws. Thus we see that't
of tho institution of slavery a w
overwhelmnipg and still increasii
lition power of tho North is not
ly Southern incentive to d
Cheap goods, including all
hold articles and agricultural
of tho SouLhern ;
lisliment of a d
with Europe and Sout!
and the establishment
fuctures, onter into th
idea of an independent, homogeneous
Southern Republic. v.-.s '
It is not.diffieult to believe then,that
tho Union is in dungar. But what'aro
wetodo? All t’ ' 1
#®“What a glorious world this would
bo if all its inhabitants could say with
Shakespearo’s Shepherd: ‘‘Sir I am a
true laborer. I earn that I wear; owe no
man hate; envoy no man’s happiness; - I mU| MMM
of our Northern conservatives, opposed
)o -the division of the Union, is to do all
in their power to defeat Lincoln. With
this duty discharged, whatever may be
the issue, we can await the eonsoqueiv:
cos with comparative composure, jw,
Tit* Vote im . Gsorcia.—Garnett A.
Andrews ha* been elected representa
tive in Wilkes county hy 50 majority.
fTbis election wo* to fill the vaoao
occasioned by the death of Hon. I.
Irwln.-l w-f
— Vt -