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V
between the
imiv to their safety and protection ; or documents and do all in their power to
to rte^slTero««entpSial code, or create in the South a sta te of things
any part thereof when suott repeal ma^ which must ultimately terminate
be neoessery to tho prosj^ty <rf hqr ta
S5.4SM- ?waEas>S&BL« *-»»
government or power on<>rth,Ot*ap«l
her to punish any M as 1 erimywmotv
she does not ohoose to consider as a
crime against her peace and dignity as
atoyerergnStato._,;_; i , drefu .et <) de.
dare ertatar^’.^to^rmit 6 her courts
iria^he ascertained by ,
shall have repealed her laws pteaed for vention bf all the States;
the nurposc“of robbing the people be called, ahdall shah ae
« « “ S _ e*i! _« .^1.. mhinU shr. ^nnAAkl . ah wtiaikae nnnll
it .
torn States will consent to
..Jktate thlrffes to exist
among them, and will bow tne neck in
willing subjection to the yoke, is a ques
tion to bo determined by them in their
sovereign capacity.
Whetlierthesovereign w.ll of the peo-
- ~ es; hereafter to
j act together in
of Georma ofthelr property, Whfch she cbneert,- or whether each 8tate shall de-
hos nledrfed her faith to delW to tMm cldc for herself without conference with
faeraemond, neither tho Federal Gov* the others; are questions upon which a
iment, nor any State government, diversity of opinion may exist, ■
i a rirat to interfere or to dictate to • Teptertain no doubtof the right of
her wbM shall 'be'tfae promohs, bf her each State to decide and aot for herself,
penal cods. «liile'©t»rgb»: is a sdveiv Thb'Union is a compact between the
eign Stale, she #itt .d|ctote her own: sovereign-fitatesof Which it is oompos-
pcnal lairs, tod determine for hereelf ed. BaAfi State in tho Union is in point
nhat she vrfll punish as a crime tttoinst of sovereignty the equal of every other;
her peace and dignity, and what she and neither is dependent upon another
Will omit to punish;' for any of tho attributes of sovereignty .
It may be objected that such an en- So long as all the States abide in good
actment would deny to the citisen of frith by their Constitutional engage-
Massachusetts, or or other States whose ments to each other, and the oompact
citizens may be deprived of the proteo- is not violated, no State can wlthdrav
tionofour laws, the enjoyment of “all from the Union without being guilty of
privileges and Immdtiitlee- of citizens pf bod faith to the others. however,
the several States." Should this be tho compact is violated by the refusal
the case, the fault would not be ours.— of part of the contracting parties to
We were not the aggressors. The laws abide by it, and submit to it# burdens,
of those. States were enacted,**d were while they receive the benefits arising
intend to deprive bar’Citizens not only from it,
of those •‘privileges tod immunities” bound
under the Constitution, bnt of their and refuse — . ...
rights bf property, tod of their liberties part. It is an essential part of the law
as freemen. 1 ‘ of contracts, that both partie* are bound
Massachusetts, as above shown; even or neither is bound, and if one vio-
denies the me of her prisons -for the lates the contract, the other 1b no longer
punishment bf him who is cbnvieted of bound.
having forcibly taken from A citisen of But I may be oskd who is to judge of
Georgia’htt property, in open violation the violation of the contract? In an-
of the Constitution of the UniledStatcs, swer that each sovereign State from the
tod the laws of Congress. Who, then, very nature or the case, must judge and
will dotf onr right; to remove from our
statute bbok slick laws as protect her
citizen, till shb repeals her statutes on*
acted for the purpose', of denying tl
protection of her laws to m? When
Hie repeals her unbonsfitutidnal and
Unfriendly lews against us; 1 we should
again extend to her citjzCns the
tion o
decide for herself. There is no common
arbiter between them. Hach being sov
ereign, acknowledges no higher power
on earth. The Federal Government is
but the limited agent bf all the States,
and has no right to assume to dictate to
the principals, from which it derives ail
the power it possesses, nor tos't in judg-
ofourlaws. Until she does this, ; ment upon tho conduct of the creator,
Wb shtold retaliate upon the (other, by whose creature it is, and by whose con
refhsing to protect him 1 Awhile he w sent alone it exists for a single day, -Ii
S undering ns, or to punish those who is not to be presumed that a State will
ly him while ho.is Applying the torch secede from the Union without just
to our dwellings. cause. Of the sifffloienoy of the cause
In my opinion, the time for bold, d<>- each sovereign State must judge for
elded action, has arrived; and he li un- herself. When her decision is made,
worthy the confidence ofthe people of- no one has a right to reverse the judg-
Georgia who will refuse to ’Vindicate ment, because no higher power exists to
her ltonor, *t toyebst, and to main- which an appeal can bo taken, llie
light of a State peaceably to secede
from the Union, when, in the judg
ment ‘ of her ’ people, the compacts
of the Constitution have been vio
lated, cto only be denied by those
whb deny the sovereignty of all the
• * - >'>•,■.
I' am aware that some have attempted
talnher Constitutional rights at every
Itia believed the legislation above
recommended Would tend to strengthen,
rather than weiikeh, the ties of union
between the States generally; -as-, it
would do mbcb -to destroy the section
al character of the controversy, now
pending between the free and the to analogue the right of a portion ofthe
slave state; and to narrow the issue, Btatesot the Union to secede from it,
CtolWlfWfrretolifltfhHfol even for just cause, to theright ol tlie
andnot between whole’ toetibns ofthe colonies tbMoede from thebritish Gov-
Union. The acknowledgment of the ernment; and as the colonies possessed
fret that one State has 'power to pro- only theright of revolution, it is argued
tecthereoir, enainst theqnconslitutinn- that the.sovereign States of the Uniun
al and aggresnve-erislation of another, possess no outer right. u nn
without toe aid ofthe sister State, and just analogy between the two cases.—
without disturbing her relations'with The colonies, prior to the revolution,
them, not only, destroys geographical were not sovereign. They were Bub-
linea of division, drawn afcroes the Un- jeotaof the British Government, creat
ion, and localizes - t^e controversy be- ed by it, and belonged to it. They had
tween individual States, but makes
each State pay a move just regard to the
rights of every other State, in view of
the fret that she cannot look for pro
teelion in the wrong, from- her other
sister States bf‘her oWn seetiori ofthe
Union,'whose'MM# of justice oh well
as interest under We proposed legisla
tions, would prompt them, to a con
demnation ot her bad faith, and her
unconstitutional enactment, lam no
dtaunkraistper- t»t and .would delight to
oontepapiato our-future glory os a na
tion, could I : have -the assurance that
the Utrien; Upon the basis of the Con- right of sovereignty by force of
stitution, would be as'durableorfthe hills But the States of the Union are i
embraced -Within - the vast
hftvc^fobftbly Ututnphcd
over ii*, by
&
never even claimed to be the equals of
the British crown; nor hud that govern
ment ever recognised them as such, or
formed any compact with them as sov
ereign powers. When, therefore, they
withdrew from the Government of Great
Britain; it was a case of rebellion on
the pai-tof tho subject, against the pow
er of the sovereign— in other words, it
was revolution—-and upon their success
defended their exemption from the
penalties of treason, to the Govern
ment Whose subjects (not equals) they
were, till they had established their
T arms,
not the
subjects of the Federal Government;
add valleys _ „
territorial limits of its jurisdiction. — were not oreated by it; ar.d do not be
This cannot-bo the ease', however, un- long to it. They created it; from them
leeaeaoh section of thoUhlon accords it derives'its powers; to them it is re-
to every other section the. full mens- sponsible, and wiien it abuses the trust
ures of its constitutional rights. they reposed in it, they, ns equal sover-
1 earnestly invoke the attention of oigns, have a right to l-nsutno the
the people of Georgia to this subject powers' respectively delegated to it by
and trust the General Assembly may- them.
take prompt action for the protection Upon my mind tbero is no doubt ttiat
of their rights, - and-the vindication of Georgia or any other State in the Un-
their honor..' Ia my -opinion the times ion, has a perfect right to secede from
demand the legimmont which’ I flow it whenever the people in their sover-
reoomtnend j'OUd the people, shoutd it eign capacity decide for themselves
be denied'them,’ WiN* and ought to that the compact has been violated by
rise to their mightj-and it the ballot- the other States. And neither the Fed-
box demand its enpefanent. Should
these retaliatory laws -be enacted while
I have the honor to 'he the -Executive
of Georgia, I shall be- prompt arid de
cided in their -enferoemeht.- The pres
ent ts-a most appropriate time for this
legislation. The Black Republican
party, organized upon a sectional issue
and-standing upon a platform of avow
ed hostility to our Constitutional rights,
oral nor a State Government has any
more right to make war on her, for the
exercise of tills aot of sovereignty, than
they have to make war upon her for the
exercise of any other one of her sover
eign powers. Should Georgia deter
mine; while I exercise the Executive
power; to seoede from the Union on ao-
count of theviolation of the compact
by other States, 1 should deny the right
pf any other State or Government to
f and Vice-Presidency. — the allegionco of her oitizens would be
' > the case, this dominant due totter alone, and each would be
eedtibtt of the entitled to the protection of her flag.—
. rule* Thi* they shoMld hove. And if anyotber
the hour. and mob law-too often main- government should interfere, and as-
tatas its ascendancy, will wyMtt sdme jurisdiution over them, and stake
themselves as victors; snd the people the lives ot any of them upon a charge
of the South as tanqnhdndA I*> «»t pf treason to its authority for following
ewfet/thoadoptfcKi ofother safeguards the flsg of Georgia, I would retaliate
may beoome necessary to tija muhtmi- promptly, by seising Snd hanging upon
and honor of the the nearest tree, two of tho subjects of
» such Government for each citizen of
Georgia whose life should be thus ille
gally taken. 1 heed only add^that I re
gard the question of separate State ao-
{ioih oA of united action upon the part
Of-all the Southern States, as a mere
question of policy, and notasa question
of right. As the cause of the Southern
States is a common cause, and as the
trgfessions upon their righu are com-
toon, I should think it wwe that their
action he common.
If tho fifteen Southern States of tho
Union should meet in convention, and
determine to seoede fromit, there would
be no war, no bloodshed. So many of
the Northern people are dependent up
on our cotton, and our trade for em
ployment, and for the necessaries as
well os the luxuries of life, that they
tcould neither afford to fight.us, nor to
Stand by and see others 'do it. Nor
could the government of.Great Britain
afford to witness an Invasion of the
Southern States. We ajfe planters, a :
largo portion of the people of England
are manufacturers we come In com
petition with none of their interests.—
Our interests and theirs arc mutual and
reciprocal. The people of the Nor*h-
ern States are the rivals of the people
England: in manufacturing and ship,
ping. Both are dependent upon us lor
cotton. Four millions of the people of
Great Britain look for themeansof their
support to the cotton crop of the South
ern States of this Union. An invasion
of our soil, which would cut off usingle
crop of cotton, would shake the pillars
of the English throne, and the cry of
‘‘bread or blood” would at once control
the action of the government, the army
and the navy of Great Britain in our
fayor.
1 am aware that the.opinion, is enter
tained by many, that the southern
States, in the event of a dissolution of
the Union, would be in a worse condi
tion than they now are, in reference to
the recapture of their fugitive slaves;
as it is said large numbers would escape,
and we would liave no process by which
we could recover them from any por
tion of the Northern Confederacy.—
This is a great error. In case of a sep
aration of the two sections, and the foi>
ination of new governments, the people
of the Northern Confederacy would no
longer feel tbut they were connected
with slavery in the South, any more
than they now are in Cuba and Brazil.
Most of the northern States have al
ready enacted stringent laws against
the importation of free negroes
among them. They would not desire
such o population in their midst, and
would be willing to spend money to rid
themselves -of it. They would need
out- cotton, os they now do, and would
find our trade still indispensable to
theit prosperity. We should then have
the power to regulate our own revenue
laws, tariffs, Ac., and to discriminate
against them, and in favor of European
States, if we choose to do so, by impos
ing export ditties on cotton purchased
by them, and import duties on manu
factured articles sold by them to our
people. This they could not endure
and prosper. The result would be that
they would, if required, enter into a
treaty with us to bring back our fugitive
slaves, and deliver them to us at the
line, if we would agree to a favorable
commercial treaty with them, by which
they cquld buy our cotton and sell us
their goods upon equal terms with
other nations. A similar treaty for the
like reason, could be made with the
English Government, by which Canada
would no longer be the harbor of "
tivo slaves.
The sentiment, no doubt, prevails in
the northern States, that the people of
the South would be in great danger
from their slaves, in case we should
attempt to separate from the northern
States, and to form an independent
Government. Insurrection anu. revolt
are already attempted to be held in ter
ror over us. I do' nd( pretend to deny
that northern spies among us might be
able, occasionally, to incite small num
bers of staves in different localities to
revolt, and murder families of innocent
women ana' Children,’ iWitoti would
oblige us promptly to execute the
slaves who should have departed from
the path of duty, under the deceptive
influcnco of Abolition incendiaries.—
These instances would, however, be
rare. Our slaves are usually under the
eye of their musters or overseers. Few
of them can read or write. They are
not permitted to travel on our railroads,
or other public conveyance, without tho
consent of those ha/iug tho control of
them. They have no mail facilities,
except 8ucli as their owners allow them
to have, and no means of communica
tion with each other at a distance.—
They are entirely unarmed, and un
skilled in the use of unns. A general
revolt would therefore be impossible.—
But the more important fact, which is
well known in southern society, is that
nine tenths of them are tru.y and de
votedly attached to their masters and
mistresses, and would shed, in their de
fence, the last drop of their blood.—
They feel and recognize their inferiority
as a race, and their dependence upon
their owners for their protection and
support, whose smile of approbation
constitutes their highest enjoyment.
They have not been uccustomed to
claim or exercise political rights, and
tew.of them have any ambition beyond
their present comfort and enjoyment.
In case of a plot or conspiracy, the se
cret could bo communicated to but few,
till some would learn it, who would im
mediately cCmniunicate it to their mas
ters, aild.put them upon their guard.—
Tim would lead to an.immediate seizure
and execution of a few of their lead
ers, We have therefore but little cause
of apprehension from a rebellion of
our slaves.
Let us lor a moment contrast our dif
ficulties with our laborers, in casa of
division, with the difficulties which the
northern people would have with their
laborers.
Many ot the northern masters, or
employers, if they prefer tho term, are
now in possession of large fortunes
which they have accumulated by the
use of the strong arms of white laborers
among them, who have labored and
toiled and dropped the briny sweat, for
weeks, and months, and years, in their
service, and have reoeived from them
in return a meagre compensation,
which, in health, has barely enabled
them to support themselves,in a simple
style, denying to their families most of
the oomforts of life ; and in sickness
has often left them in destitution, and
aotual want of the necessaries of lifo.
White those who receive the benefits
of the labor of others, are living in
stately mansions, amid ease and Mhrary,
and faring sumptuously every day,
many of the laborers whose toil brought
these oomforts, must spend their days
in unpleasant dwellings, doomed to
m tua! obscurity, and denied, even
cness, the oomforts of life, pro
duced by their own hard labor.
But who are these honest sturdy la-
borera, who are kept in a position of
inferiority,by those who assume control
over them? They are white men.—
They belong to ftp inferior race. They
are tho sons of freeman, and they liave
aright to bo -free; many of them ace
descended . from revolutionary s jure*,
♦fib shed their blood to secure Mb&rty
Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday
EVENINGS at 5 c r 6lock. ; <. --
I2:ltwtf J. R. MARTIN.
BAKERS
IfREAD!
FRESH ON •
A LARGE lotof Gunny Cloth for sale-low
A for CASH.
Also a considerable quantity. of
Family Flour, Choice Brands,
oct25tr(Sm j ,y -GKO.^. WAnT)’-A-00..
In Order to .change the
Stock heretof jr^ ^diit,
RKA-DY-MAPj.
v jsirfilSk
HP
CLOTHING.
AT
FIRST
c ost
atom $mm
My assortment i t very largo, comprising
Goods from tho lowest grades to the very
finest, all recently bought.-
S. JONAS.
Next door below Mr. Rucker's Fur-
tufe Store. liovi— lm
their posterity. These ip on liave
‘ideal lights inherited from tlieir an-
ostors, Aviiich at'e inalienable. They
have tho right to bear arms, and thous
ands of them know liow to use them.—
Thev can read an<l write and corrres- m
Should a separation take place,, and
the’ northern States take up nrriiB against
the people of tbo South, and attempt to
incite our slaves to insum-ction, thous
ands of these nortliei-n white laborers,
who liave suffered so much injustice at
the hands of those who have wrung
from them tho hard earnings of the
sweat of their brows, might feel at liber
ty to require satisfaction for post.injus
tice; anti to assert the principle recogni
zed in the South, that-the true aristoc
racy is not an aristocraoy of wealth, but
of color and of conduct. While their
sense of justice niigljt prompt them to
assist the South against the aggressions
of these in the North who have denied
equality to thom. us well'as to tho peo
ple of the South.
Among us the poor white laborer is
respected as nn equal. His family is
treated with kindness,consideration und
respect. ITe does not belong to the me
chanical class. The negro is in no sense
of the term his equal. He feels:and
knows tliis. He belongs to the only
true aristocracy, the race of white men.
lie blacks no master’s boots, and bows
the knee to noone save God alone. He
receives higher wages for his labor,than
does the laborer of any portion of the
world, and lie raises his children, with
the knowledge that they belong to no
inferior custom but that the highest tnem -
hers of the society in which he lives,
will, if their conduct is good, respeot
mid treat them us equuls.
These men know, that in the event oi
tho abolition of slavery, they would be
greutor sufferers than the :ich, who
would be able to protcot themselves.—
They will, therefore, never permit - the
slaves of the South to bo set free among,
them, come in competition with their
labor, associate with them and 'tlieir
children as equals—be allowed to testify
in our courts against them—sit on juries
with them—march to tbo ballot-box by
their: sides; and participate in the choice
of their rulers—claim social equality
with them—and usk the hands ot thoir
children in maniage. .
That the ultimate design of the Black
Republican .party is to bring about this
state of tilings in the Southern States,
and that its triumphs, if submitted to
by us, will, at no.distant period, leud to
the consummation of these results, is, I
think, quite evident to every cool, dis
passionate thinker, who has examined
this question in the light of all the sur
rounding ciroumstances.
If the madness and folly of the pco-
ploof the Northern States shall drive
us of the South to a separation from
them, we liave, within ourselves, all the
elements of wealth, power, and nation
al greatness, to an extent possessed
probably by no Other people on the face
of tlie earth. With a vast and fertile
territory, possessed of every natural ad
vantage, bestowed by a kind Providence
upon tho most favnied land, arid with
almost a'Complete monopoly of the cot
ton culture of the world, if we werotruo
to ourselves, our power would be invin
cible, nnd our prosperity unbounded.
If it is ascertained that the Black Re
publicans liave triumphed over us, 1 re
commend the call of a Convention of
the people of the State at an early day,
and I Will cordially unite with the Gen
eral Assembly in any action, which, in
their judgment, may bebrcCssary to the
protection of the rights, and lh'^ prefer*
vation of the liberties of'the people of
Georgia, against the further aggressions
of an enemy which, when iluHliud with
victory, will be insolent in the hour of
triumph.
For the purpose of putting the Stutu
in adofensive position us fust us possible,
and preparing for an emergency winch
must bo met sooner or later, I recom
mend that tlie sum of one million of
dollars be immediately appropriated, os
a military fund for tlie ensiling year;
and that prompt provision be made for
raising such portion of tlio money as
may not be in tlie Treasury, as fast as
tho public necessities may require its
expenditure. “ Millions for defence,
but not a cent for tribute,” should be
the future motto of tlio Soutbprn
States.
To every demand for further concess
ion, or compromise of our rights, we
should reply, “Tho argument is exhaus
ted,” and we now “stand by our arms.”
JOSEPH E. BROWN.
z. B. HARGBOVE,
'/tvccsaJoh to
NEWMAN & NOWLIN,
If
Having bought the entire stock
of the firm of Newman A Nowlin,
onfl largely' increased it by reeent
additions in every department,
witli Fresh nnd Genuine
Drugs, . fr; ..
Perfumery,
Pure Liquors,
Far Medicinal P urpo,e., lam prepared
to ftlrdtth the people' of Home and vicinity,
with all and ewartWo In the Dragline,
us cheap and <ht si reatnneblo ternU-as any
other hones this ekio of Auguata.
Mr. JOSEPH M. MACK,
Who Is an experienced Pharmaceutist and
Draifefrt, trill fetnAin in the house, and^ve 1
Ills entire nttoution to the business. Physi
cians desiring their Prescriptions accurately
und cartfnihj prepared, will find it to thoir
interest to entrust them to his care.
octO Z. B. HARGROVE.
Just Received,
40-galls. Ca.torOlI, ext.
2 b'.xcs Cod Liver Oil,
lOO.lbs. Cream Tartar,
2 grot-s Cmicontrntcd Lye,
1UU lbs pure Pearl Slarcli,
100 « Saltpetre,
5 gross German water-proof matches,
20o il» Englltli Red Lead,
And other articles in the Drug line.
ALSO—A lot of fine French -Brandies, Ma
deira, Bhorry, Port and other Wines of tho
Ifiuest quality for Medicinal purposes.
ALSO—A largo lot of Brown Windsor, and
ollws. Tests# „Bo»pa,.,tpgaU>4r.*<wilhia fix
Bortment of Perfumery, Pomades, Ao.
ALSO-A fresh invoiee#f oU llie moat pop
ular Pntcnt’Mcdicihc*.
ALSO—3000 Extra fine Itnrnna Cigar..
oclO-twswlm-to jant Z. B. HARGROVE.
EVERY PLANTER
SHOULD HAVE A
Reliable Fire & Burglar Pro’f
SAFE.
I N A community like this, where many
Wealthy persons reside on plantntiopaVe-
unite from neighbors, anil who sbuietimea
have occasion to kcop large sum. of money
or costly jewelry in their houses, or hove
valuable documcuts to- [(reserve, every pro
dontial consideration requires that the’
should havo sumo rare, depository for sue’
property, that it may lie entirely secure from
tlie accident of fire or temptation to robbery.
The loss of a single account hook or other
document, - whether by tire, or abstraction
may involve its owner in irretrievable ruin
and it therefore admonishes nil prudent men
to eficct a kind ot perpetual insurance
against such calamities, an-1 tlie cheapest and
most effectual oao is the poisessi-oi of a fire
and burglar prtof Safe. Many persons
warning sitfch depository carry tlieir money,
sometimo largo sums, on their persons, oth
ers hido it m secret places; others,'whose
entire fortune is invested in stocks arid
bonds, are known to keen tho evidences c
such in vestment, in “wooden t'riinks' or -fli
^eto ftdbeHijsetyeiite.
A Howard Street Residence
FOR SALE!
THE Undersigned offers for
sale his House and Lot on
Howard street Tho Lot con-
tains Ij acres, and the .house
is large uud comfortable.
. ALSO, -
A low priced House and Lot on Franklin
streot. GEO. 8. BLACK,
novfltwiwtf
m
For tho r Inst*nt Re
lief nnd Permunont
Cure of this distressing
complaint use
FENDT’S
Bronchial Cigarettes,
Made by C. B, Seymour A Ce., 44# Brt
way, N. Y. Price $1 per box; lent free by
post For salo at all Druggists. -
oetSOtwaw—Urn
“THE GEORGIA CIGAR,”
MANUFACTURED FROM
Tbo best Havana Tobacco,
I»v e. VQUgBll fr.CGr,
AUGUSTA, GA.
liY flrtn °f the»« prime Cigars have
lV,UuU been received by FARKLL
A 1EISER, who are Sole Agents for the sale
of them in Rome. Gentlemen desiring a
good cigar can get these at a reasonable price
oct23—tw3m
B URNETT'S Flavoring Extracts. Coco-
nine, Kallcston and Tcotli Wash—a
fresh supply at FA RELL A YEISER.
Tomlin & McCarver’s
STEAM SAW MILL,
T HE proprietors will furnish first quality
long leaf Pine Lumber, sawed at tlieir
Milloil the Coosa Rivor, 14 miles from Rome,
qs follows:
Delivered ot tho Mill nt$l,nO per hundred
or at steamboat landing in Rome, or at inter
mediate landings on tlie Rivor nt $1,23 per
hundred. For. driest-dumber' 33 cents per
liiilidrcdadditionul will lio charged,
ItOBT. G. TOMLIN,
J. l. Mi-carver.
scp22twAw6m
NOTICE.
O N and after September 1st, all work i
ot our Establishment must be ,
Paid for on Delivery, ,
and on ail contracts exceeding Thirty Dollars
One-third of the amount p>"st be paid whin
ordered, »ud the balance when the work is
taken aivny. All parties indebted to us are
requested to make Immediate Payment. v
Noble Bros. & Co.
nug30tf
Rome Railroad,
F ROM this date, the rnto of char-,
gOs> oil STOVES on Romo Rail
road will be 30 cents per 100 lbs., in
cluding stove pipe nnd fixture*. . _
nug23 W. 8. COTHRAN, Snp’t.
Diarrhoea! Cramps!
boxes, liable aCaay time to hti destroyOd by J. C. BAKER R. W. ECHOLS
fire of taken by theft. All these practices
aro most Imprudent. Moreover, if tho por
tents of tho times indicate political sod df.,
mettle commotion, -this ts « strong reason few
procuring a safe deposit for money and- val
uables-withiu the cOntrpl of tho ownen—
ThiB security is afforded by VALENTINE A
BUTLERS ALUM PATENT FIRE AND
BURGLAR PROOF SAFE. This safo fs
made upon tho vnpnrisipg principle, which
is tho only reliable Vno. bcing filled with
natural Balts which' remain perfectly'diy
until heated, when they discharge such t
volume of steam that the burning of docu
incuts is rendered Jmnoisible. During tlie
twelve years that they havo been in use, al
though hundreds of tbom have been subjt
ed to the severest', ordeals, not one of them
has had its contunta destroyed bv fire t nor-
lias the burglar succeeded iu a .ingle in
stance in entering them. Tlie locks i
p, wder proof, and tlie key can be carried
tlio vest pocket.
Prices of sizes suitable for Planters. $113
$70, $S0, $03, $103, $U5, $125. Transport,
tion expenses added.
Also, SoLs for-Merchants, Banks, County
Oftl es, Ac. ‘For solo by
J. A. QUIMBY,
No. 3 Warren Block,
li-iviotwawlm Augusta, U*.
Rome. Go. Feb. 18th.
[triwiwtf.]
A:
incut on this
>
r LIFE DROPS. J heefljfrtaffwtraaml
tub XKVKa kaii.ixu > prevod by ten yean
[ . REMEDY. J experience to be the
—: only certain,yafo.and .
reliable remedy for nil Bowel Derangsmsnjs,
Diarrlnua. Dysentery, Cramps, Pains, Chol
era, Cholic, Ac., now before tiro public. One
or two doses of 20 drops, .trill .cure, the most
severe cramps la the stbmn'ch in 20 minutes.
A single dose often cures the Diarrhoa and
it never constipates ihe bowels, Ono dose
will /satisfy any one of .its merits. Prico
pnly 25 Cents. '
Prepared by S. D. Trull. 43 Bowery, New
York, and Buhl by Druggists generally.
In Romo by Baker A.Echols, aqd Newman
A Nowlin. ' [aiig2tw*w
NEW <■&
FIRM ! H
BAKEH&.JKCHOLS, '
; DEALERS IN iv..a
DRUGS AIVD HHD1CINE8,
Colognes und Flavoring Extracts,
OILS, PAINTS, &C.
GLASS, PUTTY,
DYmSTUFFS»
FINE CIGARS,
LIQUORS for Medical Pur*
poses, &c., &c. &c.
MAPES’
SOIL-LIFTING PLOW!
TYTHEN a surface Plow is run nt a depth
VV of twelve inches, an.l a two-horse Soil-
Lifting Ptnw follows, which is capable of
disintegrating to a depth of fifteen inches
wore, there is a total disintegrated depth of
twenty-seven inches, nnd those who so
practice will find that they havo another
farm beneath that represented on thoir map.
A smaller size of this Plow, (one horse)
thinper in the sole any more dart-like in its
figure, is aii admirable implement for cuiti
voting orope, and will do tho work of more
than forty men with hoes. With the corn
crop, this tool may run close alongside tlio
corn, nnd to the foil depth of - twelve inches
when the porn is but throo inohes high, and
before the rpofe occupy the'spsce between
the rows jthie will lift the soil, move every
corn plant with the soil, and for so slight a
distance ns not to separate the particles from
tho roots, yet so completely loosening tho
mass that the plant may be picked up with
tho fingers. This is more thorough cultiva
tion than can be obtained by ono hundred
barings, leaving the soil in bettor tilth and
cutting of no roots. More than twonty
thousand of these Plows wore fold last year.
PRICES: 7
One Horse $g jg -
Two Horso gg
“ “ with Cutter 14 00
Three Horso 44 gg
“ •' with Cutter 15 sg
For Sale by J. A. QUIMBY,
No. 3 Warren Block,
oct23tw*w«ni] Augusta, Go.
A Desirable Home for Sale,
wij -
1 miles -from Cedar Town, cn'fi4«-
1 tainfng 204 acres, 20^fcfiM*»®
| tlio balance in timber. Corn-
1 place is unnecessary, as it is
Known wy the community to bo No. 1 Cedar -
\ alloy land, and is one of the best improved I
t.!«oe« In the Vallpy. Having on It a noj •
frame dwelUng with five rooms, eqd front ;
ami back porehes, frame negro cabins, 000k
room, smoke-house, stables and cribs, also,
finely watered by a fine well ton steps from
tho house, and Big Cedar Creek running on . ‘
the North and West boundaries. No improve*
ment is needed as Uie place Is well fenced,
mostiy with new rails, outside, and cross fen-
ees. The neighborhood is excellent, and‘con-
venlcnt to Churches, Schools, and Mills!
JE Newman, Romp, Gp., orto me.oii the preiif-
!*X r- 7a?*
U00SA RIVER '10
ST]
After tliL,i date the Coma River Blcarahoa -
Loaves Bom,, Tuesday Hon,
ing at 6 o'clock;
Leaves Greensport'Wednes
day at 9 o'clook.
. ELLIOTT k RUSSELL.
jau24tnwtf.