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About The daily constitutionalist. (Augusta, Ga.) 185?-1875 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1857)
IIIILV (».\STITITIO.\iLIST PUBLISHED BYj .1 A M E S GARDN ER. JAMES T. NISBET-Editor. i 1 AUGUSTA, GA. — j ( SUNDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 29,1857, l*o-t Office Arraagements lor Sundays. The I’< =t Office iu this city, will be open from j ; o’clock P. M. on Sundays, until further A Negro .Man Killed. An old uegr*. man belonging to Mr. Altaman Howard, was killed in Hamburg yesterday after- j n> on, in consequence of his horses running away and the turning over of his wagon. The man was , severely crushed, and died almost instantly. Specie lor Europe. The steamship Arabia departed from New \ ork tor Liverpool on the 25th inst. with one million jive hundred thousand dollars in specie. - *f~ The letter of our Mtlledgerille correspond ent came to hand too late last night for insertion this morning. - , * a recent attempt was made to rob the Treasury of the State of Alabama, but the effort wit - not successful. The burglars left tbeir augur. So ,ays the Montgomery Mail. The Hon. Fctoruß Firgeso** the delegate elect from Nebraska Territory, is confined to bis i on at the United States Hotel, Washington City, by severe illness. I ,The Democratic members from New York, it is said, have agreed to sustain Orr, of Mouth < arohna, for Speaker, and Allen, of Illinois, for Clerk of the House of Representatives. 2' ' The Washington c.a respondent of the New York J —mat. or < hmmeree thus refers to the report that Governor Wvlker has been engaged in private speculations in lands in Kansas : “ It is not true, as reported by some of the free State men, that the Governor and his Secretary, Mr St \ ntox, had speculated in lands or lots in the Ter ritory. The false report was suggested by the fact that Governor Walker was persuaded to convey certain plats, and deposits them at the land office to oblige some individuals, though declaring at the time that the act would be misrepresented.” - s “Some movements have been made to es tablish m or near Memphis, a branch of the Peni oat ir\ of Tennessee. Some of the Memphis peo ;.le think that it the mechanical employments are to be carried ou in tbe branch to be established, that the mechanics iu Memphis will pull the insti tutiou down. ' “Gov. Walker, of .Kansas, arrived iu Wash ington on Wednesday lust. If-" Elder Alexander Campbell, of Bethany, Va., was announced to preach in lowa city, on the *th November. lf~ Commodore Foxiiael A. Barker, U. S. N., died in Philadelphia on the 23rd inst. ; - ' The legislature of Mississippi, on the 21st 111 -ilant, bv an almost unnaumious vote, adopted T: - dutions ceusuringiiov. WALKER,and condenin n a tin- administratiou iu case his conduct is ap proved. The Hon. Jambs U. Birnky, well known fr no character as a very distinguished nieinbcr of tiic Abolition party,died in New Jersey ou the 24th -raj* in following para tv In escaped from the wreck of the steamer Ope lousas : •• In regard to the loss of Gen. Hamilton, Mr. Wood slates that a rescued lady passenger told bin's that, as she was leaving the cabin, just before the ship sunk, an elderly gentleman came out of a siate-room with a life-preserver iu his hand, and In ggi-d tier to help him put it on, as one of his h mils was crooked and useless. She replied that ■ had her child to look after, and could not stop. He then said, ‘Go, madam, for God’s sake, and ...io yourself and child.’ From tli ■ description Cue lady gave of the old man, Mr. Wood is conli •i- nt it was the General, and that the words ad : sst d b\ him to the lady were his last ou earth.’ Disaster upon Disaster —A Fearful Catalogue. We du not believe that, in the entire history of ne.vspaper printing, the press has ever been called upon to record a week’s chapter of tragedies, dis asiers, and fatal results, that can compare with the < !!.> just past. To waive ail comment upon the in credible number of murders and fata! assaults that have transpired in this city and elsewhere, and which seem to be viewed more in the light of mat cr of course occurrences than otherwise, we will .oily allude to what may be classed as serious dis asters. We have, then, in this one week’s cata . igue the unprecedented freshets in this State, iu Canada, and ou the western rivers, involving the 1 -s of a million dollars’ worth of property and a nge number of lives; gales on the lakes, in which Mime thirty vessels are known to have been foun dered or stranded, with the probable loss of a still larger number. The amount of property thus de -itoved can be estimated only by hundreds of thousands of dollars, to say nothing of manysail o; < and others who perished. Gales on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, in which a large number of ; coal boats were sunk, involving tile loss ot fifty •!. usatid dollars, and upwards of one hundred ‘ires. 1!oiler explosions—in Griffintuwn, Canada, with one mau killed and many wounded; steamer Cataract, five lives lost and titteen wounded ; Rain bow, loss of life and many wounded; N. I’. Sprague eight lives lost, and several wounded. Collision oil the coast of Texas, with loss of steamer Ope lousas ana twenty-live lives, besides many wound <l. Fires—in Rochester, two lives lost and one Mildred thousand dollars worth of property; ltal 11more, loss eighty thousand dollars; Columbus, o.oio, loss heavy; Louisville, thirty thousand dol lars ; Mobile, oiie hundred and fifty thousand dol lars; Glean, X. Y., seventy thousand dollars; Ja maica, Y Y., twenty thousand dollars; Lockport, • hundred thousand dollars; stfamer Henry H. It. !i, at Baltimore, ten thousand dollars; also in L - city, fifty thousand dollars. All these disasters occurred during the week -■ ;.a».-. The record for the previous week was ■ arc ly les- appalling. The old proverb that m:>f»rtuii! * iw-vt r come singly,” seems to be of ten verified,and particularly in tliepresent instance. A. i . Journal of Commerce, fur. 25. Croti-ts. We hear, on authority in which we place confidence, that both the English aud French G.ivermucnts have taken occasion to protest, through their Ministers lure, to this Government, .-gainst Walker, the filiibuster’s, second expedition to Central America. These protests were proba ble sent to the State Department some time since before Walker succeeded in eluding the vigi lance ol the federal authorities at New O. leans aud .Mobile,— U'asJngU-n Star, ‘2sth inst. Memimms. Nor. 24.—The following persons are Lie on to be lest on tbe Rainbow: J. MeLaugh- L u and Hiram Charleston, of Alliance Ohio; Win. Chambers, of Cincinnati; John Gahgher, of S'aiineviile, Ohio; James Branan, of Allegheny r.iv ; 1). McLaughlin and W. Horn, of Pittsburg; C.-orge Craig, .if Birmingham, Pennsylvania; T. N. iviem-e and George Newman, of Carrolton, Ky. ; Mr. Johnson, a blind man, his wife and two daugh ters, who were going to Paducah ; an Irish girl go • ng toiler mother iu Can oltou, lnd.; and Mrs. Boud of Memphis. Governor Walker, of Kansas, whose arrival in 1 W .ishing’on has been for some lin.e expected, i . ached this cut last evening in the live o’clock j train tiom Baltimore.— H o h. L'nlan, Xoc. 25, j Sr. Catharine. C. W . Nov. 23.—Tbe Welland canal is full of ice, and navigation is closed for the j season. l!i i KALO, Nov. 23. —A break has occurred in the canal at Black Ruck, which will probably suspend navigation for the season. Trot. N. Y., Nov. 25.—A fire this afternoon broke out in Wm. Tavlor’s planeing mill, in the io r brh w Adams street. The flames spread to fas lumber vard adjoining, where they were ar r, -o.xi. The loss is estimate.! at seven thousand ,Lilians, on which there is an insurance of two tbt.usand dollars. I?At.TtMORF, Nov. 25. -The Hannah Moore Female Seminary <.f the Episcopal Church, at Reister tow o Maryland, fifteen miles from this city,) was destroyed by lire last night. All the inmates escaped. Philadelphia, Nov. 25.—The ferry steamer Oscar JL Thompson is now burning at the pier at Glou- j tester point. I Old Mullion upon the Currency and Hanks. Col. Benton, distinguished among his cotempc- 1 rar.es in the Senate, far his able and persistent ad- , vocacy of a gold currency, has written a letter to ! the National Intelligencer upon that subject and the banks, which is one of the most interesting docu- j ments which the financial crisis has produced. It , has the raciness and point which distinguishes i everything be writes, and will be read with pleasure j 1 and profit even by those who differ with him in the j views which he expresses. His principal object in writing the letter, seems to have been to de- j fend Gen. Jackson from the public journals who are now urging tbe establishment of a 1 national bank, and quoting him as at one time, in favor of such an institution. Colonel Benton denies that he ever said any thing in favor of banks, national or State, after be saw a prospect for tbe restoration of tbe hard money currency which the founders of our government supposed they had se cured for us by the provisions of the Federal Con stitution. The restoration aud preservation of this hard money, constitutional currency, he asserts, was one of the great objects which Gen. Jackson in his administration of the Government labored to accomplish. His plan consisted of five parts, and was: 1. To revive the gold currency by correctingthe erroneous standard of 171*1. 2. To create a demand for hard money by mak ing it the exclusive currency of the general gov ernment. 5. To secure this hard money by keeping it in its own treasuries. 4. To suppress all paper money under twenty dollars by a stamp duty. 5. To wind up all defaulting banks, by a bank rupt law against delinquents. These were the five parts of Gen. Jackson’s plan for the restoration and preservation of the curren cy recognised by the Constitution, the three first of which were accomplished during his administra tion and tiiat of his successor. The last two, al though frequently recommended by Presidents Jackson and Van Ui rkn and urged upon Con gress have always beeu defeated, Col. Benton states, bv the defection of “the paper money wing” of the Democracy. To the success of the first three of these he contends we are indebted “For twenty years’exemption—-from 1537 to 1857 —from bank suspensions aud depreciated currency ; also for carrying the coun try through a foreign war —the Mexican—without paper money, and with the public securities above par ; also, for having in the country at this time full fifteen times as much hard money as we had in the times of the late Bank of the United States,” and to the want of the last two he attributes the state of commercial affairs now existing in this country, which lie thus describes : “Nearly two thousand banks in the country, a great part of them frauds from the beginning, and the bad gov erning the good ; a general suspension in a season ot peace and prosperity ; people forced to use de preciated paper when there is more hard money in the country than its business could employ; mi n and women beggiDg for work and unable to ob tain it, when 1 lie country needs ail the woik they can do and has the means to pay for it ; families erving for bread when a bountiful Providence has given the most exuberant crops tiiat ever were seen ; the business of twenty-five millions of peo ple deranged, disordered, and thrown out of joint; and all this the work of the base part of the bunks, falling down of themselves for want of foundations, aud dragging the solid ones after them. For it is in this case of bank suspensions as it is with a ship sinking at sea, where those who cannot swim drag down those who can.” He contends that a stamp duty upon bank notes, which would prevent the issue of any under twenty dollars, and an act which would give a bank rupt process against defaulting banks, would have protected the country from much of the calamity which it now endures. similar to it)if UmA )r i'iL osH * ,ns ©Teething to have access to authentic sources ot lmoriuauuii, will be recommended and urgedmthe President’s Message, but the first—an excise on bank notes— has been always heretofore summarily rejected by the Democratic party, as involving the exercise of power not granted to Congress by the Constitu tion. Col. Benton is savagely severe upon the system of banking in the United States, which he de clares is the most unrestrained and the most un safe in the world, and characterizes it as “byname in some places, and by fact in others, a system of “ free banking” which the hard-money Democracy was accustomed to call “free swindling.” We have space only for the following extract, from this portion of his letter, m which he enumerates the evils which, in his opinion, result from the issue of change bills by the banks : I do not expatiate upon the evils of small paper money; they are palpable to every observer, and only require enumeration: 1. It drives away all hard money of equal denominations; for, in a competition between two currencies, the meanest is always the conqueror, and chases the other out of the field. 2. It is the great source of the crime of counterfeiting; for the mass of the counterfeits consist of small notes. 3. It demoralizes the com munity, for people, not being willing to iose a note for which they have given value, instead of burning it when rejected by a knowing , one as counterfeit, put it back in the pocket and offer it again to an ignorant person, who receives it, and i who goes through the same process when rejected in his bauds. 4. Small notes make the panics aud bring on the runs which break down good hanks; tor these small notes being in the hands of the masses, when they get ularmed they as semble by thousands at the doors of the institu tion whtcli issued the notes, demand the money, break the banks, and propagate the alarm which themselves feel until it becomes general, for noth ing is more contagious than a moneyed panic, nor anything more unmanageable. 5. It milages the poor aud the ignorant; for every base note, every one tiiat is counterfeit, or on a broken bank, or on a bank that never existed, although it will run for awhile, must stop somewhere; and when it does, is sure to stop in the hands of the poor and unin formed, upon that class least able to bear the loss, who have no advantage from banks while in opera tion, and who breathe loss when they stop. 6. It excites to swindling; for knaves, with nothing but brass for their capital, and that in their faces instead of their coffers, are induced to set up manufactories of small paper, to be sent abroad and sunk upon thousands of those among whom it is scattered; ell that is so sunk be ing clear gain to the manufacturer. 7. It induces and even compels people to be wasteful of their money; for such is the natural, honest and just | contempt aud distrust of small notes that lie or she | that receives one hurries off to lay it out forsome ! thing not needed; while a piece of gold of the same amount would be valued and cherished, and laid by, aud kept, and added to, until enough accumu lated to make a purchase ot something needed aud useful. 8. It subjects the payer to be cheated or worsted in change; for, giving paper in payment, he must receive the change iu other paper; and for that purpose the meanest, most ragged, dirty, and worthless will always be pickea out, and shoved upon him. Iu short, such are the evils, the crimes, the demoralization and cheating of small paper money that all nations, except the United States, place it in the category of a crimi nal agent, and suppress it accordingly. Hartford, Conn., Nov. 23.—Our annual town election came off to-day. The Union party elects four selectmen to the Democrats’ one; the balance of tbe ticket is equally divided. A ticket nomi j uated bv National Americans, containing the j names of each of the other tickets, controlled the election. None were elected except those on ih« American ticket The election was warmly con tested. The w hole vote was about three thousand two hundred. "" "T."l ‘•GREAT ATTRACTION.” I MI’ST have : ... and In order I" get it I have marked . down my entire stock t n COST. This is no humbug. I 1 must meet niv engagements, and, therefore will sacrifice the pr> -Sis on ailhiy stock, including the most dosiiable goods ever brought to this market in mv line. iV ~y Grey BLANKETS*. *1 37 S 1 do Scarlet do 200 i do Blue do 200 G its* SH AWLS, at $4 2s to *lB 00 <’ant..n Flannel DRAWERS at 55c. per pair. Merino I NDEKSiI IRTS. at 75c; -22 Meric Knit DRAWERS. 75cto *2 ThcSncst White SHIRTS, at *1 S7'-, White at *l. BOSOMS. BOSOMS, BOSOMS. INS' SHIRT FK* >N IS, new styles, just come in, at 12 V, 25, 575. 5.1 cents and #l. The greatest bargains ever offered. Come one and all. Now * la the time to buy goods. Cash I must have. socks: socks :: so< ks i:; I have the beat! :of Socks over -wc In tk> dty, at *2 per *k*z«i : **>aie at *! 50 per dozen. I'ail and Ic.k at the Socks. 1 have marked all my goods DOWN. Call and seeforyour- CASH i CASH!! CASH!!! 1 must have the cash. -Sink or swim, live or die, survive or I«-rish." I must Sell £ -is and get the money. —stiike while the iron is hot. CHARLES W. MERSEY. i ecjh Opposite the U. S. Hotel, Additional by the Vanderbilt. St. Johns, X. F., Nov. 24.—The steamship Van derbilt touched at Southampton on Saturday, the j 14th instant, and arrived off Cape Race at’three I o’clock on Sunday afternoon, the 22d instant, where she was boarded by the news yacht of the New York Associated Press, and her news was de livered to the agent here on Monday morning, but unfortunately the recent heavy storm in Cape lire- j ton, X. S., had broken down the wires at several j points between Cape Hood and Pictou, (a distance of some two hundred miles, through a sparsely inhabited portion of the country,) and it was found impossible to repair the line until this afternoon. On reaching the St. John, X. 8., office, it was found that the line between that place and Port land, Me., was also broken, and we finally succeed ed in reaching New York via St. John and Fred enckton, N. 8., aud Quebec and Montreal, Canada, and thence via Portland and Boston, over the lines of the American Telegraph company. The steamer North Star, from New York, ar rived out on the 13th inst. The following is the summary of news prepared at Liverpool and Southampton, by the correspon dents of the Associated Press—the Liverpool ad vices coming down to Friday evening, 13th inst., and from London to Saturday morning, 14th inst: The despondent condition of monetary matters on the departure of the steamship Atlantic, oil the afternoon of the 11th instant, resulted on the fol lowing day in a fearful pauic throughout the whole country. All the banks utterly refused to discount to their patrons, which naturally added to the wild excitement, until the afternoon of Thursday, when a treasury letter appeared in London, and was in stantly transmitted by telegraph to all the chief cities aud towns, suspending the bank charter act, and authorizing the issue of notes to any amount, on approved securities. The effect at every point was instantaneous, and the panic ceased as if by magic. At Liverpool, Manchester, Glasgow, and other important cities, tha news was received with the most extravagant ac*huuations of joy. The suspension of the City Bank of Glasgow, on Wednesday, the day the Atlantic sailed, is con firmed. We select the following additional list of suspen sions from a large number reported in the English newspapers : Sanderson, Sandmann & Co., Lon don; Wilson, Morgan <fc Co., stationers, London ; Fitch A Skeet, London; Coddingtou & Co., iron merchants, Liverpool ; Mackenzie, Ramsay A Co., Dundee; Picton & Co., London ; Fulman, Crenel & Co., Liverpool; Ban, Roddice A I Co., London; Munroe, Grant A Co., Swansea ; Stergman A Co., Nottingham. The London money market was steadier on F’ri dav, the 13th inst., and hank stock sold at two hundred and nine and a half to two hundred and twelve. Exchequer bills were firm, and the feel ing in business circles in all the principal cities and manufacturing towns became decidedly more cheerful, as soon as it became known that govern ment had authorized the bank to extend its issues without increasing the penalty of the bank char ter act. The Bank of France had raised its rate of dis count on ninety days bills to ten per cent. Consols had fluctuated considerably, but closed with increased steadiness on Friday at eighty-nine and a half to eighty-nine and a quarter for money. The details of tbe news from India by the last mail, add few facts of special importance. The latest report from Delhi states tiiat tile loss of the British at that place, in killed and wounded, was inside of twelve hundred, including sixty-four of ficers. Scindia had brought the mutineers of the Gwa lior continent under his control, by arraying against them his own troops and ten thousand Goorkas, aud by cutting off their supplies. It was reported that Lucknow, which was re lieved 25th September, was again besieged by \ena Sahib, with fifty thousand rebels. All the city people found in Delhi were bayonetted by the British troops. Many Europeans were found in the city, fighting in the ranks of the rebels. The English ship Dunbar, bound to Australia, had been wrecked oft’ Sydney, and one hundred and forty passengers, and all the crew, lost. Parliament was to assemble immediately. The greatest anxiety was felt in England to have the news by the Vanderbilt reach New York in advance of the publicity of the advices by the Atlantic. Forty-seven States.—\Yo take the following from the Boston Journal: “ Would any one believe, without looking into it, that we are in a fairway of carrying the num ber of sovereign States, originally thirteen and now thirty-one, up to forty-seven? But so it is. Iu the first place, there are Oregon, Kansas, and Minnesota, whose Constitutions are already formed or forming. It is hoped that they will be adiuit ; ed the coming winter, making the members of the j confederacy thirtv-four. Then, New Mexico, Ne - riesTwilt thriving Territo > Four new States to be carved out of Texas, accorit - ing to provisions in the treaty of annexation, will r give us forty-one. Two additional States demand- ed from the area now included in California would make forty-three. Arizona, Neosho, Dacotali, and ■ Columbus Territories carry us up to forty-six ; and Utah will be the forty-seventh. OFFICIAL DRAWING OF The Fort Gaines Academy Lottery of Georgia, CLASS m, . At Augusta, Georgia, tSA TUIIDA Y, November 28th, 1557 SAMUEL SWAN & CO., MANAGERS. xo». rzs.NO?. rzs. nos r;:s. nos. rz». .\-ns. , 190 100i12054.... 10020024 40* * 31125... .lOO'Juit ~U)0 62.7... .900 121.13.... 150.20229.... 100 UHS 100 40499!.! ilisj 748 100,12285 100 20292 150 31157. .25000 406’9 ’' 150 1005.. . .100 12 150 20 *97 .90" 11185... .100 40500 ”s.»i 1299.. 100" 12:52....300 20321 ...100.11211 ...ISO 40K«""l(io 1388 500 12521 100 20410 100 11375 100 40047 OnO 1420.. . . 150:12657 IWo 2045!.. ..Km 11517. .. .400 407 21... AOO 1489 400 12936 ...100 20586 500 31573 500 40796 150 1507 ISW.I29N* 500 20670 10" 316 .6 100 -10916 'loo 1579 150 13012 100 20744 10081660 400 41067 '' \v») 162" 40*1113396 500 20882 100W1666 150 41083 ”l,«) 2037.. 100 13436 ...150.20948....500 31742 ...150 41254 ”’7uo J082.,..1«01184*s 10021016.... 150*31814 400*41296 ’ 400 5165.. 1.60 13538... ,15u 21091.... 10031925.,, .150 41392 ’”ll)0 2179.. .1000.13543 100 21095... .150.12161 150 41458 100 271 s 100 1367.1 40021116 100-72265 500 41509. li*o 2 !9o 100 13633 100-22073 10" 32271 100 41690 100 24trt.... too 13712... .500 22172... .10" 32275. .. .900 41703.. too 2474.. .. 150 13745.. ..150 22299... .150 32382 500 42125.. .400 2812 100 11765 15" 22:132... .50(132512 100 42216 100 2825 150-1590 1 *. • .too" 2275! 100 32517 100 42359 150 2875.. ..180114032.... 100:229.18... .100132799... .400 42455. 100 3246.. 10" 14".-,7 50" 23102... .500:32938 500 42527. .500 3329.. . .150*141(10 40" 23203 150:73017. ...100 42572 400 3108.. . 100 1410'5.. . .10" 23211.... 150|88022... .400 4260.7. ...HJO 5 454 160:1 42-13 100 2-1417 500 33155 100 42747 100 4879.. . .100 143-*e... .10" 23501... .15"i.13456. ...111(1 42776 160 4774.. . .100 WStS. .. .100 23556... .10" 33540 100 42946 6"0 4934.. . .500,14409... .100 23714 100.33542... .150 43074 150 6190.. . .4001t45«2... .100,24188... .4"" 33660... .10" 43610 150 5251.. .7000114570.... 150 24239... .500:33880 400 43611... 1M 6280.. 10" 14604... .1(40 243"::... .500 31095.... 150 43653. ...100 5288 500 HSU 100 21311 400 34100 100 44066 10" 5303.. ..100.14909....100:24417....15M34160....150 44176. 100 *6340. .. .11X114937... .100 24491.... 100(34164. ...150 44.604 ’if" "342 100:15080... .1"" 24641... .150:34244 10" 445(16 ’ 400 *384. ...100 150y6 UK- 24709... .100*34300... .100 44541 ”100 54"6.... 100 151:,9. ...100 24727... .40" 34140... 1.600 446.67 to" 8473.. . .500 15204... .900 24932.... 400:34386.. .. 100 44669 100 0522 SCO 15350 500 2.6159.. .3500-34579 160 4189 I l;,n 5710.. . .400 15492.... 100125269... .400431591... .100 41997 800 5717 500 1-6562 Km 25349 400 34664 100 48071 100 6308 100 1556 4 4**o 28351 154* 34865 400 48326 .6*Kl 5984.. .. 150 16**58. .. .400!25436.. ..150,34891 100 45882 100 6039 ISO 16187 806,26529 100 : 35040 100:45476 100 6081 100 16-251 500 25687 180*35054 100 45768 ”100 61U4 100 162.12 100 2-6709 1(H- 35114 500 46134 1,60 6192. . ..100 4 6256. .. .150 25735.... 150 I'-1i0... .500 46151. jno 6592 10"162:6 500 253-5 It!" 3516:: 100 46417 150 6388 4U" 163y2 10" 2.533'.! 100 35.124.. . 100" 464'4. .. 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I**o 46572... .150 7290 11 1 7 141 50" 26,516 400 36110 100 47057 100 7579. ...lUH 171 53.. .. 150:26650 100 36475... .100 47163. 1(H) 76.18.. . .100 17196 100126706... .700:36682... .500:4721 1 .. .100 7735.. .. 100 17201... .150126717... .100 3672-2... .1(10 17239... .150 8127.. . .130:17203... .15" 26914. .. .100:16818... .500 47555.. .150 "144. ...100 17-261.... 100 26924. .. .500:36949. .10000147611... 4"" 8218.. . .100:1736').. ..100126930 .. .100 36967... .100 47530... .500 8578.. . .400:17427... .150 27275 150:37047.. ..100 47644... .150 8784 100:17-41( l"u 27313 500 37247 6*«i 47896 1"" 8993 15" 17643 100.27374 100 37370 6(H) 48100. 500 9037.. . .400:17650 100 27517... .60"-37409.. . .100 48518 10" 9210.. ..180 177-J.1.. . .100 27565. ...1(10 37444.. ..150 48335. . .100 5*93.. • .490 17-95. .. .150 27635,... 100 57580. ... 100 4- 87... 100 1015 s 400.1 7-54 100 277*5 300 37580. . 500*48395 100 10272 150'1789*2 150 2775.8... .100 37697... .700 48(98 100 10273.. . .100:17982.. ..150:27886... .400 57-51... .400 18712 100 1**262. ...400 17990.... 150 27922.... 150 38128... .500 4676 ' ItH) 1*4335... .900 1 7998.... Kin 27980... .150 3-214... .100 48823. . 150 10428.. . .400,18002... .100(28017... .500 5.-747... .100 48873 150 10436 100 18**56 500 28060 500*38766 150 49021 500 10524 500 1s 87 600 28683 100 3-889' 100 491.13 400 10720 10018108 400 28791 150 88954 500,49810 100 10742.. . .100T8200... 100 28811... .150 39025.. ..40" 11*3.4*1. ki 107 48 150 18219 100 28895 100*39172 150 19370 15" 10763 100*18263 100 28983 10C* 89185 100 49449 10" I**Bl6 10" 18372. .60000 29046 150 19252 40" 49516 100 10825.. . .100 18451 -500 29*154. .. ,4"0 19261... .500 19558 ' ”lufl 10788.. 150 D>574.... 100 29066... .150 39319.... 10*4 49684 ’’ ’ 100 10911.. .100 188-42.... 100 29343... .400 39347... .150 49699 15*1 11215.. . .100 19316....10C 296.12... .10**39479... .10"49767.. 4410 11281 100 19536 100-30030... .150-19772.. ..1(4049816 .. 100 11372. .. . 40".196.53.... 10" 30150... .400 39852... .100 49867.. 400 11377.. ..100 19712 150 30588.. ..100:39909.. ..100 49873.. ..100 11393.. . .11*0 19778. ...100 30622 ...4U0399-19.... 10U 49950....1ih* 11506.. . 100019794.... 100 30683... .156 19992... .150 49981.... 100 11537 Isi* 19919 10030740.. ..150.60283 100 11751.. ..10" 2*1012. ...100 30818... .150 40299.... 400 APPROXIMATION PRIZES. NOS PHIZ ES; NOS PRIZES'\*Og PBIZ&fxOS PEIZEF j NOS PRIZES 5249.. 1-2' 13907... .100 25157.... 7'j 1158....30tj 16947... .200 5250 12511 <*9oß 10012515 S 75 81159 3001 '6943... .200 5252.. . .125! 18370... .400:25100 75;3433$ 50136^30... .200 , 5253.. . .12-Vl<-,:i 400 75 34, r :5y.... s<* 3*J51... .200 13904. ...100 18.373... .400 31155... .300)51541.... 50: 13905.... 10u 15374... .400 31150....300-34342.... 50 (V.HMisstoxKß’a CESnncATO. The iindorsitnipti, sworn to supciiDtend the Drawing of the FORT GAIN KS AOADEM \ LOTTERY, <io hereby certify thatthe abort- U an accurate list of the Numbers aud Prizes’ aa they wer* drawn by us this day at Augusta, Georgia. 1 P Dv*k< * \ Swom Commissioners. Sworn to and subscribed before me this day, November 98,1857. Lewis Lfvy, J. P. Explanation.-—’The left hand row in each of the above columns contain the Numbers which were drawn from the ! whiel. The amount opposite each Number is the Prize which j the Number is entitled to. ; All Tickets where the Number ends in 2 are entitled to S2O, In addition to any <*ler Prize which the above drawing may entitle it to. Half, Quarter and Eigiith Tickets draw their proportional part. , „ , Certificates of Packages are entitled to all they draw over the S2O Prizes. Halves, Quarters and Eighths in proportion. The principal Prizes in this Scheme were sold in the follow ing places : No. 18372, $<30,000, Memphis, Tenn., and Coluin- j bixS.U. No. 31157, $25,000, New York city. No. 36949, : SIO,OOO, Madison. Fla. No. 5251. s7,siJo, Augusta, Ga. No. i 13906, $5.000. Natchez, Miss. No. 25129. $3,300, Fayetteville, J N, O. No. 34340, $1,300, Macon, Ga. j WFids, without Comment—The Public should know them. New York. October 10,1852. i Mrs. Hardy, No. 119 Suffolk Street, writes us that she has j been troubled with worms for some three years, and that she j used one viol of Dr. MTauie’s Celebrated Vermifuge, prepared , by Fleming Bros., Pittsburgh. I‘a., which brought away over fifty large worms. Her usual good health immediately re turned. Mrs. Quigby, No. I8i! Essex Street, New York, under date of November it, 1362, writes us that she had a child which had been unwell for better than two months. She procured a bottle of M’Laiie’s Vermifuge, and administered it. The child passed a large quantity of worms, and in a few days was as hearty as ever It had been. Parents with such testimony be. fore them, should not hesitate when there is any reason to sus pect worms, and lose no time in procuring and administering Dr. M'Lane's Vermifuge. It never fails, and is perfectly safe. Purchasers will be careful to ask for DR. M'LANE’S CELEBRATED VERMIFUGE, manufactured by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburg, Pa. All other Vermifuges in comparison are worthless. Dr. M'Lane sgenuiae Vermifuge, alsohiscele brated Liver Pills, can now be had at all respectable drug stores. Hone genuine i eithout the signature of FLEMING BROS Sold.wholesalcand retail, oy SCOVIL A MEAD, 111 Chartres street. New Orleans, General Agents tor the Southern States, to whom all orders must be addressed. For sale in Augusta hy HAVILANP, RISLEY A CO., PLUMB A LEIINER, BARRETT, CARTER A CO., CLARKE, WELLS A SPEARS. W. li. TUTT, HAVI LAND, IIAKEAL A CO., Charleston, S.C. A. A. SOLOMONS A CO., Savannah.and byoae Agent in every town in the South. dtaclw uovfi9 SPECIAL NOTICES. ;Sunday Delivery. The PM Office »ill in* opened TO-DAY, and on successive Sabbaths, for the delivery of mail matter, from two to three o’clock, I*. M., until further notice. nov29 2 JAMES M. SMYTIIE, P. M. For Savannah.—The Fashion Line Steamer TALOMIOO, will be loading for Savannah on MONDAY, and will have dispatch. For Freight Engagements,apply to nov29 1 JOIIN A. MOOKE. ZBT For Savannah.— I The Iron Company'.* Steamer AUGUSTA, will leave with despatch. For Freight, apply to nov23 J. B. GUIEU, Agent. Mr. Thomas Forster, Portrait Painter, from London, beg» leave, most respectfully, to inform the citizens of Augusta, and its vicinity, that he has availed himself of the Inducements held out to him to become a resident in this city, and hopes, by his faithful likenesses, and careful finish of his Pictures, to have the patronage of t he public. PRICES OF PORTRAITS IN OIL COLORS. Size of Pictures. Price. 21 hy 20 inches $25 00 hy 25 inches 50 00 30 by 29 inches 75 00 40 by 30 inches 100 00 T. F. warrants all the FORTH AITS he paints, and will not receive the price charged unless he gives satisfaction, which (as lie has had more than twenty-five year's experience) he feels capable of doing. Only three sittings required. Studio at Messrs. Tucker *& Perkins' Photographic Rooms, Broad Street, Augusta. ts nov2S ! I3f“ Final Notice. Ml those who are indebted to j the old firm of J. M. Newby & Co., either by note or account , will please make paymeut to the undersigned, as longer indul gence cannot be given. J. K. lIORA & CO., nov2t> dtf Successors to J. M. Newby & Co. IC \mhroty|K‘s for the Million.—ls you want a first rate AM BROTYPK, beautifully colored and put in a neat case for Fifty Cents, go to the original Fifty Cent Gallery, Post Office corner, opposite the Georgia Railroad Bank. En trance t<» the Gallery next door to Post the Office. novlO W M. 11. CHALMERS, Proprietor. Bitter*.—The celebrity that this ex cellent preparation has gained in the last few years, is beyond belief. The best physicians in the United States endorse it, and recommend it to their patients in all cases of dyspepsia, indigestion, and loss of appetite, it >s used ms a stomach tonic by nearly every family in tin 4 United States, and no family should be without it. it requires no addition of spirits. Sold in full quart bottles by all Druggists, Groceries and Ho tels throughout the United States and Canada. nov24 tUe2w C - \ Fixed Fact. Dr. Cavanaugh's PileSahe has now been long enough before the public to have its merits fair, ly tes ed ; and from every one who has given it a trial, we hear of but one expression, that it is indeed a Cure. Every one who has used it, experienced almost immediate relief and a speedy cure, a result, in many cases, long and diligently sought, but in vain. In a conversation with the Doctor a few days since, in re gard t<* his Pile Salve, he made this remark: “M v Pile Salve Sir, is a cure—not a palliative. For twelve years it never failed in my hands, in curing every case; and 1 ask no reputa tion for it beyond its intrinsic merits. What I say It will do, it will do.” We advise all who have need of such a curative to try it. Forsale in this city by FLUMH& LEITNEIt; CLARKE, WELLS & SPEARS, and Druggists generally. Itn nov22 iLR r “ To Nervous Sufferer*. \ Retired C lergyman, j .V .'"!'«•*’ <n a few days. .ifUr many years of great ner vous sutienng is anxious to make known im .... „ Will send (free) the prescription used. Direetthe Rev. JOHN M. DAGN ALL, No. 139 Fulton street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ocO _ tßm Alcohol ft*a Nledieine.—Fhv sieians of the I 11l- States. Wolfe's Celebrated SCHIEDAM AROMATIC SCHNAPPS, a Medicinal Diet Drink, of eminently salutary qualities, manufactured by himself exclusively, at his factory at Schiedam, in Holland. It is made from the best Barley that, can be selected in Eu rope, with the essence of an aromatic Italian berry of acknowl edged and extraordinary medicinal properties. It has long since acquired a higher reputation, both in Europe and Ameri ca, than any other diuretic beverage. In Gravel, Gout and Rheumatism, in Obstructions of the Bladder and Kidneys, and in general Debility, its effects are , prompt, decided, and invariably reliable. And it is not only i a remedy for these maladies, but, In all cases in which they are 1 produced by drinking bad water, which is almost universally , the cause of t hem, it operates as a sure preventive. The distressing effect upon the stomach, bowels and bladder, 1 of travelers, or new residents, and all persons unaccustomed to them, produced by the waters of nearly all our great inland rivers, like the Ohio, Mississippi, and Alabama, from the large quantity of decayed vegetable matter contained in them, in a state of solution, is well known, as also that of the waters of limestone regions, in producing Gravel, Calculi, and Stone in the Bladder. The Aromatic Schiedam Schnapps is an abso lute corrective of these injurious properties of bad water, and consequently prevents the diseases which they occasion. It is also found to be a cure and preventive of Fever and Ague, a complaint caused by the conjoint effect of vegetable malaria in the atmosphere, and vegetable prutescences in the waters of those districts in which.it principally prevails. The Aromatic Schiedam Schnapps is consequently in great demand by per sons traveling, or about to settle in those parts of t he country, especially, as well as by many in every community where it has become known, on account of its various other remedial properties. In all cases of a Dropsical tendency, it is generally the only remedy required, when adopted in the early stages of the dis ease. In Dyspepsia maladies, when taken in proper quantities, as a diet drink, and especially at dinner, it is found, by uniform experience, tube eminently efficacious in the most obstinate cases, when even the best of the usual remedies have failed to afford more than temporary relief. In cases of Flatulency, it is an immediate and invariable specific ; and it may be admin istered in diluted and proportionate quantities, even to young infants, in all those paroxysms of griping pain in the stomach and bowels to which they are especially subject, as well as in the colic of grown persons. Injudicious adoption in connection with the principal meals, or when a sense of exhaustion dictates its use, never fails to re lieve the debility attendant upon protracted chronic maladies, low temperament, and exhausted vital energy, by whatever cause induced. These are facts to which many of the most eminent medical men, both in Europe and the United States, have borne testimony, and which are corroborated by their highest written authorities. Put up in pint and quart bottles, in cases of one dozen each, with my name on the bottle, cork, and sac simile of my signa ture on the label. For sale by all the respectable Druggists and Grocers in the United States. UDOLPHO WOLFE, Sole Importer, 22 Beaver Street, New York. Caution to tiib Public.—The words Schiedam Schnapps, belongs exclusively to my medicinal beverage, all other is counterfeit and imposition on the public. nov92 3m UDOLPHO WOLFE. JANUARY 1:1, EOT ION. } 83?“ Mr. Editor. - Plea*** announce John Barseron as a candidate for Tax Collector of Burke county, at the next January election, and oblige nov23 * Many Voters. Mr. Editor.—Please announce B. W. Whitfield a suitable candidate for the office of Receiver o! Tax Returns of Burke county, at the ensuing election in January next, and oblige nov22 Many Voters. I t We are authorized to announce Richard Wim \ B LILLY, Esq., as a candidate for re-election to the office of Coroner at the ensuing election. * novs S 3 r ’ We are authorized to announce Green Bell, i Sr., as a candidate for Tax Collector of Burke county, at the ] January election. * novs To the \ otenTof Richmond County.—Fellow | Citizens—l respectfully announce myself a candidate for the office of Sheriff of Richmond county, at the ensuing election j in January next, and solicit your support. Your obedient ser | vnnt, novS G. A. PARKER. ; We arc authorized to announce William F. J Doyle as a candidate for Sheriff of Richmond county, at the ; election in January next. If elected, William Doyle, the j present Sheriff, will be hi* Deputy. 0c29 81?“ Robert Wigging w ill Im* .supported for the office j of Sheriff of Richmond count), at Hie ensuing January elec- j | fry 0c29 Many Voters, i Mr. Editor—Please announce Newton M. | Perkins, Esq., as a suitable Candidate for Tax Collector of j i Burke county, at the ensuing January election, and oblige ! ! many Tax payers of LESTER’S DISTRICT. | Buike county, Ga., Oet. 20, 1357, 0«25* RAISINS AND MOLASSES. THRESH RAISINS, in whole, half and quarter boxes. 25 I 1 hhds, Cuba MOLASSES, on the wharf, for sale low. by i Jiov3S HAND, WILLIAMS & GRAVES. BUCKWHEAT. 11 1 BBLS. BUCKWHEAT ; . I r 20 % bids. do; 20 '* do do ; a very flue article, just received 1 and fur sale by novS D’ANTfU NAC A 11UBB A HD. | SPECIAL NOTICES. T®’”’ Magistrate's Office, on JaekHon street, near Warren Block. 0e24 3m A. D. PICQUET, J. P. ZST' < 'ash paid lor Linen, Cotton, Woollen and irilk RAGS, by E. CAMI'FIELD, janfiQ ts Comerßiverar.il Jackson streets. Hosiery, Hosiery—Under Shirts, Under Shirts. DRAWERS, DRAWERS, cheap at rcS WM. O. PRICE A CO.'S. Shirts i Shirts! Shirts! Shirts! Shirts! SHIRTS! SHIRTS! SHIRTS! SHIRTS! SHIRTS! mhl WM. O. PRICE & CO. 13f The Bills of till the Banks of tills City, w hether suspended or not, will be received at PAR, in payment of any debts due the City Council of Augusta. ocls d.ctf JOHN HILL, C. AT. C. A. ,'r* Augusta anil Savnnnnh Knilrond, Oet. t 1. ISO?.—The bills of tlie Georgia Railroad and of the Union Bank will be received in payment of all dues to this Company, oclo FRANCIS T. WILLIS, President. The Augusta Cotillon Band, Andrew licit, Leader, is prepared to furnish MUSIC for Balls, Serenades, and Evening Parties, at short notice. Orders to be left with G. DAMM, corner Broad and Centre streets. 3m noB ZW~ Notice.—\\ e have received a complete assort ment of GOODS for manufacture, and a full assortment of new and fashionable Ready-made, and every article for Gen tlemen’s dress. WM. O. PRICE & CO., oc4 Drapers and Tailors. Z2T Union Bank, Augusta, (iu., Nov. 20. I rv.T?.— Dividend. No. 28 The Board of Directors have this day de clared a Dividend of Four Dollars per Share, payable to the Stockholders on demand. JOHN CRAIG, Cashier, novfil s 10 83f"Superintendent's Office, Georgia Knilrond, AU GUSTA, March 30,1357.—0 n and after Ist APRIL, prox., up freight cannot be pre-paid at Augusta, but will be required to be paid by consignee at point of delivery. rnhSl GEO. YONGE, Sup’t. t&~ I‘lunib tfc Leituer will sell anything in their line, at lowest casli prices, for Georgia Railroad Bills, an be eery happy to receive them for any debts due them. _ocls __ ts Inducements.—We oiler to the I'nblie, this Fall, the very best CLOTHING and FURNISHING GOODS, at the lowest prices, in the market, nol WM. O. PRICE & CO. S* I ''Hinnll and Large Men Boys and Youths can be suited with COATS, PANTS and VESTS, SHIRTS, DRAWERS, UNDERSHIRTS and SOCKS, at oc-lttf J. K. lIORA A CO.’S Under United States Hotel, Augusta, Ga. |y Dividend No. !I2.—Georgia Railroad and Hauk ixoCovu-anv, Augusta, Nov. 10th, 1357.—1 lie Board of Di rectors have declared a Semi-annual Dividend of Three Dollars per Share, payable on and after the stli of December next. novl7 ttdeclO J. MILLIGAN, Cashier. %9f~' The Augusta Brass ami String Baud. John Bohler, Leader, is, as usual, prepared to furnish MUSIC for Parties, Processions, Serenades, Ac. Application to the Lead er, or Ch arles Spaeth, will meet with prompt attention. novl.’J 6m Iff*(leiitlcineii's Dress llats, for Fail and Winter, 1857.—The undersigned has commenced opening his Fail Styles |for Gentlemen] HATS, among which are Beebe He Co.’s I’atent Ventilated, and invites the attention of the citizens generally, opposite the Bank of Augusta. N. 11. WII.DMAN, Successor to William N. Nichols. Augusta, August 8, 1857. ts auS »¥?“<'ity Court of Augusta. In consequence of the bolding over of Burke Superior Court, and at the request of the Bar, the City Court for November term will he ad journed over to MONDAY, tlie 14th day of DECEMBER, when all persons interested will attend. By order of the Judge. nov22 4 DAVID L. KOATII, Clerk City Court. Augusta lndei«‘iidenl l ire Company. 2nd Hi rtsiox. lam requested by the Company to notify ail persons having in their possession any property of the Company, such as uniforms, Ac., to deliver the same to me at the store former ly occupied hy T. T. WraortELD, Esq., hv the Ist of Decem ber next. JAS. H. DOUGLASS, aov!4 Secretary Mechanic Fire Coin'y. Final Notice.—This day 1 have received a Pro clamation from the Governor , and Circular from the State Treasurer, instructing aud urging me to proceed forthwith to collect the TA XES and settle at an early day. I will he found at the livery stable every morning till 10 o'clock, and every evening after 3 o'clock, except Saturdays. 1 shall try and call at sll the prominent places on Broad street, novfit lm ALEXANDER DBAS, T. O. R. <’. • .Superintendent's Office, Augusta and S.ivnu xau Railroad, Oct. 29th, 1357.—0 n and after fid NOVEM BER, prox., freight on Cotton from Augusta to Savannah, will he 80c. per bale, until further notice. OC3O C. A. BROWN, Snpt, Zif" Fall and W inter 4 lolliing.—The undersigned are now opening their large and complete stock of Men's and Boy’s CLOTHING, at their old stand under the Augusta IIo rf.«-pnrenaSt«?,.,!,'!!:.2'7 and examine our Go.kls he i luthing, of every style and finish, upon the most accomiiHula ting terms. sept”. Bu, CLAYTON A KENNADY. TF" Hats and Caps—Fall Styles, 1557.-Gco. W. FERKV has now in store a beautiful assortmmt of Fall Style MATS and < 'Ai’S, among which are Beebe Sc Co.’s Ventilated Mole and Cassimere HATS, c.-mfortalde and elegant: Leary .v Co.'s Trade Style Mole and Cassimere HATS; French I- elt H A'i S, various new styles and colors : Gent's and Boy's Dress 1 'AI’S. Ac., to which he solicits the attention of his friends and the public. -'' sihirta, Collars, Cravats, Are.—We have now in Store about eighty dozen Linen bosom SIHRTS, of every quali ty and size, from thirteen to seventeen indies in neck, with and without Collars, all made to our order by Morsisox A t'o., John- M. Davies A- Co., anil Jenson, Fowler Sc Co., the very best makers known to the trade. Also, fifty dozen COL LARS, of various kinds, with a complete assortment of CRA VATS, GLOVES, Ac. RAMSAY A LA RAW, Opposite Union Bank. . f Attention. -All those who are in favor of, Will meet at the Clothing Store of J. K. HOltA A CO., success, ns to ■l. M. Newby Sc Co., for we are now getting in our WINTER STOCK, which will he unusually large and of the best style ami manufacture. Our Stock consists of everything pertain myto Gentlemen's wear, and hy weekly arrivals from New York, will be kept complete during the season. Give usueall, and judge for yourselves. jvpio Under the United States Hotel, Augusta, Ga. ■ ! Oh! Y!• Bald Headed.—We invite the atten tion those who are bald headed, and those who are afraid of becoming so, to the advertisement of Fruf. Wood's HAIR RESTORATIVE in to-day's paper. We are.not in the habit ~f putting even-quack nostrum that is advertised incur paper, hut we feel it our duty, when we come across an article that is good, to let the people know it. We have no fears of having soon to “semi under bare poles,’’ ami therefore have not used the Restorative, but think if the certificates of honest men can be relied upon, that it must be a first rate article. Try it, ye whose uatural wigs need rejuvenation.— Rockland Republican. For sale hy I’LUMB A- LEITNER, and all respectable Druggists. dlfisefi uovfiO 6 ; gc-South Carolina Institute F'oir, Charleston South Carolina Railroad, Or so eje f.n f.ha i. Si-i*khinte.v den't, ( harleston. Nov. lfi, 3357.—Persons desirous of at tending the above Exhibition, will be passed to Charleston, on the 37th and ISth inst,, upon paying the full fare, ami given free return tickets, good for one week from date. stock and articles strictly intended for exhibition, will be Charged full fare, and returned free at owners’ risk. Application for extra ear accommodation, must be made to the Shipping Agents, two days before wanted. _mo lt iI. T. PEAK, O - p‘t ZIC \ Retired Fhysieian, seventy-live years of age, whose sands of life have nearly run} out, discovered, j while in the East Indies, a certain cure for Consumption, Asth ma. Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, and General Debility. The remedy was discovered by him when his only child, a daughter, was given up to die. IB had heard much of the wonderful restorative and healing qualities of preparations made from the. Iv.st India Hemp, and the thought occurred to him that he might make a remedy for Ids child. He studied hard and suc ceeded in realizing his wishes. His child was cured, and is now alive and well. He has since administered the wonderful remedy to thousands of sufferers in all parts of the world, and he has never failed in making them completely healthy and happy. V oiling to do as much good as possible, he will send to such of his afflicted fellow beings as request it, tills recipe, with full and explicit directions for making it up, and success fully using it. He requires each applicant to inclose him one shilling—three cents to be returned as postage on the recipe, aad the remainder to be applied to the payment of this adver tisement. Address i)r. 11. JAM ES, novS lm No. 19Grand-st., Jersey city, X. J, ts? It. A G. \. Wright’s Original F’rangipnmii, or E\ EBLASTING PERFU ME.—Fratigipanni EXTRACTS ; Frangipanni HAIR OIL; Frangipanni TOOTH POWDER ; Frangipauni POMADE; Frangipanni SOAP; Frangip-inni SACHET. These new, and recherche perfumeries arc from the laboratory of Messrs. K. A O. A. Wright, sole originators and manufacturers in this country. The Perfume Frangipanni is an oriental production, brought in its original state into this country and prepared in its various forms by them. Ttie admiration and demand for these articles, is beyond pre. cedent, and in consequence a varioty of imitations are springing i up; hut these, whether of home manceactcb* or sold as “isT ! dost at toss,” have only an evanescent fragrance, and ahouM i be avoided by purchasers. For sale by all the Druggists in the United States. Canada and South America. R. Sc. G. A. \\ HIGH I', Sole Originators and Manufacturers iu the United States. No. 35. late 28 South Fourth Street. Philadelphia. 6m jefis J:- I.rn,v Perritu’WaraMmUraStaie,. Tiivat tent ton of Hotel Keepers, Proprietors of Eating Houses, Cu ! terers nr Clubs, Mess rooms, and lMvate Kandlles ’ s i ''Hiulcdtoa trial of Lea A- Perrin** famous WorcJstvrshiic I ; Sauce. This condiment, hy its own merits, has attained the i j Ibgliest rank as a pleasant, palatable, and wholesome s n ,r | applicable to soup, fish, hot and cold meals, game, Ae. Ae is ' extensively used in ail quarters of tlie globe The numerous “ Imitations." on both rid™ of the Atlantic I speak loudly of its merits; and the fact that it received the i only Medal awarded to foreign Sauce, at the Ne w York Exhi bit ion, attests the estimation In which it is held by those select j ed with special reference to their ability to judge of the quality I »t similar articles of table use. And being the most popular ! r.iure in the market, unprincipled parties are offering for sale 1 ttgSK'fvq'i**’ * 11 K h, . , .v varying the spelling of* LEA * °« l y Proprietors of the Genuine Sauce I m^; k „xs,:r ,re * iUp ; jj 7 B ° ie M<U>U iD “ g l l k ; niteJ * N pirin. , Kciu i _ _ __ CITY BONDS. VKM VLL amount of city of Augusta Seven Per Cent. BONDS for sale. Apply at this ofllcf. ts nov"9 A COOK FOR SALE V\o 1 COOK, thirty-five years oUI. sound and able bodied, for sale. She is also an excellent Washer ami Ironer. and a very intelligent woman. Price, ♦l.lOO, carib, or approved paper. Apply at this office. ts novsw THE SURE TRICK, HOPEH'S Sure Trick, the celebrated remedy for certain fust received by pLI - MB & LEITKER . FRESH GARDEN SEED, WARRANTED CROP OF 1857- ttte have just opened a large stock of SEEDS, which will \V be complete in a few days. Purchasers may rely on ' getting what they call hr. Merclumtss,,pplied as usual at low figures. nov29 I la u M& l- h* * l -a il k . ONION SETTS. riru exoect to receive, by next steamer, twenty barrels » choice selected ONION SETTS Dealers In Seeds sup plied ar usual. nov*9 I I.CMR & LEITNER. FOR CHAPS. IT3U->II Rose f.ip Salve, Pomade Divine, anti Frangipanni ' Cream are delightful articles for Chapped Hands and Faces. For rale by nov29 I’EUMB .V LEI 1 NEK. SUNDRIES. 1 ÜBi>. Red ONIONS; 10 bbls. POTATOES; 1>) 170 quarter boxes RAISINS, new crop, 20 boxes Malaga LEMONS; 10 bids. Grape FRUIT: 50 boxes Goshen ('IIEESE; 10 kegs ** BUTTER: 25 boxes Chemical )A I*; 5 hhds. BACON, Shoulders: 40 boxes Fine and Common TOBACCO ; CABBAGE; CARROTS; PARSNIPS; BEETS, &c M on consignment and for sale by W.M. 11. IIOW AHI >, nov29 Coimms.-iim Merchar.t. ESTABLISHED IN 1848. , T\ AIIiEV'.S NURSERY, near McDonough, Henry county, I / < let). Nine thousand Grafted Apple TREES for sale, the grafting of a native Georgian. The trees are of one and two Summers’ growth, and embrace fourteen choice kinds that ripen from the 15th of June to the Isfh of October. Some of * ttie varieties will keep through the winter to June following. I will mark each kind, do them up in order, put straw and cloth around the roots, and deliver them at the Jonesbo rough Station, on the Macon and Western railroad, eighty miles above Macon. Price for an average size, ten dollars per hundred, in gold, or * eleven dollars per hundred in bills on the South Carolina, Au . gusta and Savannah banks. Fasten your gold securely between two thin pieces of leather by sewing. Write distinctly your name, post office, county and State. Register your money and send at my risk, and I will send the Trees. Mv address is McDonough, Henry county, Georgia. » _ nov29 eoeO* ' JOHN DAILEY. POSTPON: EXECUTOR'S SALE. WILL bo sold, on the first Tuesday in JANUARY, 1 v . TT at the Court House in the.county of Carroll, Lot num ber two hundred and forty-nine, in the eleventh district, and fifth section of saidcounty, containing two hundred and two i. and a ha’f‘acres—said Lot drawn and granted to Mary McTyre. Terms cash. JOHN A. RHODES,* s nov2d Executor of Mary McTyre. ELBERT SHERIFF’S SALE. \VriLLbesold, before the Court House door in Elbert n, Elbert county, on the first Tuesday in JANUARY. r 13-bS, during the legal sale hours, the following property, to , wit: One hundred acres of Land, more or less, lying on the waters of Beaverdam creek, in said countv, whereon James 11. Reynolds now lives, joining lands of Wiiliam Patterson, John M. Adams and others. Also, twelve and a half acres of Laud, _ more or less, 1 ving on the waters of Van’s creek, in said coun . tv, whereon Washington Craft now lives, joining lands of ’ William Patterson and the Elbert Camp Ground. Also, one Jack, about ten years old ; one lot ot miscellaneous books: k one large map ot the United States, with an index, Ac.; one ia new Bureau: one old Bureau: one Sideboard; two pine (’bests; four large and one trundle Bedsteads; five pine Ta bles: one Clock; one wash Pot ; one oven and two lids; one Grindstone; one pair large Steel yards : one lot of Pb.ws and old Irons; one two-horse wagon body Frame ; one old Jersey wagon Body; one kitchen Cupboard; all levied on as the property of James 11. Reynolds, to satisfy two ti. fas., one from Elbert Inferior Court, in favor of Scranton, Stark A Da vis vs. James 11. Reynolds; the other from Elbert Superior -t Court, in favor of Ira Christian vs. Jag. IT. Reynolds of Elbert j. county, William C. Davis of Hart county, Madison Hudson of , Elbert county, William M. Dobbs of Cobb county, Adminis k ’ trators, Ac., and other fi. fas. vs. said Reynolds. Property pointed out by said James 11. Reynolds. Jiov29 ' T. 'M. TURN ER, IVp. Sh’ff. wiIXTY DAYS after date application will be made to the O Honorable the Court of Ordinary of Elbert county, for i leave to sell four Negroes, namely : Epy, a girl eleven years ;s old; Nathan, a bov sixteen years old; Charity, a woman fwen . ty years old; and her child. Seaborn, one and a half years old, belonging to Rebecca C. Allen, a minor heir of Singleton W r Allen, deceased. JANE L. ALLEN, l- MOV29 (Guardian for Rebecca C. Allen. YTO I ICK. All persons indebted to tlie estate of Archibald LI Mewbourn, late of Elbert comity, deci-ased, are requestvid to make ’inmediate payment; ami those having demands y- against said estate, wiii'render them in, dulv authenticated, according to law. THOMAS J. TEASLEY, ) . . , nov2 ( J MARTIN M. MEWBoURN,J AUln d FARM TO RENT. v f|MI VT >!, .-able FARM, C'-rtainin-tlffy-m <a-rt >, he!. ■ 11 L ing to the --"ate ot Mis. Mary An-.. Harper. situated near Carmichael** Mills and W-.odh.wn, will In- rented for one '"ear. Possession given on the first of January, ISSS. For terms. An-., apply to JOHN CASIIIN, - noviS a _ One of the Executors, N'n. -I Warren lilock. TO RENT, i, fl'll VT large and commodious three.-story Lin k HOl'tsE. .L situated on the corner of Mr.Kinnc at-.d'Ellis streets, with every convenience for a large family—the late residence of the family of Mrs. Mary Ann Harper—will l.c rented low. and , possession (riven first of January, BPS. Fr.r terms, a- . apple “ to John cashing ' ' d no\ 28 ■" One of the Executors, No. -I Warren Block. PAPER DOLLS, PAPER DOLLS. m \V K have lust received another supply of the above popu “ vari% live differed _ Pa|«?r Furniture for Paper Dolls, print Mon Virus' arm soinely colored, all ready to cut out. Price, fifteen cents tor ;* each number. GEO. A. GATES A HKo„ ... 11 ‘ *’• I.viokseljers and Stationers, Broad Street. y MOLASSES, SUGAR. SALT. &C. It i choice West India MOLASSES • mm * “ Id hhds. prinn- Musc<-vud<> SUGARS : saeks SALT, new and fresh ; d ... 40 1 tags Rio (M tFF E E : M ili be landed from steamer Talomico, on consignment and for sale, tu arrive. Apply to JOHN CASIIJN. ii {l ru ‘ n * l Commission Merchant, No. t V urren Bh*ck novas h , GASFITTING AND PLUMBING. ,V rl En'Th ,S kTfUM l v\invb ;iTi ex P e iicn«-il GAS ie * o * l * * A - Ntl I LI MIS LB, we are note prepared to txecuteall orders entrusted to us. with neatness and despatch •'L'V' l l l - Cdfittdent in ouruhility to do so, in asuuerior mat nor’ L. all of which shall be under a full guarantee . „ .. W. 11. MAHAKREV * CO. nov - ‘ No S Dekalb Batqje, Broad st„ Augusta, Ga. ii WM. 0. PRICE & CO.. Havi; received new supplies of choice GOO 1 1 s ,■ i oyirs CAB.-IMEKE S and VKSTINGS, and ' all’the latest • siyies Ot Goods for manufacture, which will he made unto e measure in the most fashionable manner. All orders prompt ly attended to, [ GUNS, PISTOLS. POWDER, SHOT, &C. IHAVK removed to the Building on the South side oi Broad street, nearly opposite in\ former stand, where I nave just received a large addition to mv extensile-lock of t,l Nb. I’lMol.s and G( NNIXG Ai'CAKATFS. wl-iG - makes tin assortment complete, anti superior to anvthin- i >f Hits market, ami respeettully invite the attention of all wh t ur oVA t’ 1 ? ll * a,l >’ article in the line, it consists of— Kir 1, Lb. of ntv own manufacture ; ■f Double G I'.vs, By the best makers. Steel Barrels • “ Stub. Twist, all varieties • Mttgle Barrelled Gb NS, Twist Barrels ; e artVeie; 0 ’ AdaUIS * Do ‘“ ie ’ s I’ISTOLS, a superb 1 'iy\j I s all sizes ; also, Allen’s Six Barrelled PIS e IlS^. Ban * lled Se!f - Cock, nK PISTOLS. Ivory and Wood Single Barrelled Rifle ns n)7,s. Steel Barrels; Powder FI. ASKS,shot BELTS. Game BAGS, DogCAI LS U' r V",V- 11 " 1 * A|, ‘ s - U, l varieties; Gun WADS. Drlttki"! »:ti, E W V%, ' i'OWDEIv : s<-iiSsi^RA l «r t J’;-M x :^- licits a continuance. * ‘ ll " D'wkod and Repaired neatly and ]>romptlv. , arid Rifles matlv to order and warranted. 1 _J )Ct * lv W. I>. BOWEN, Broad street. AUGUSTA STOVE DEPOT AND HOUSE FUR ■ .NISHING KMPGRiFAr. \\ M. 11. GOOIHIK 11. Sole Act i t and Proprietor On ♦ 1 hand, a full assortment of the .vkbrate.l Vi, t, , 0.,,k ■ MtU l-.-s, manufactured in this citv from Southern in,n heir tile best constructed Cook stove now in mailed. llaviuK been Vi i' ’’ llaa proved to be all that its name Uupliesf" she r Also, a large variety of Parlor, Hall ami Box STOVFS_r,f Soutuern manufacture—all of which are now ~tiered at whole > sale and retail prnas, amt warranted to give sad-ft. tine . CHEAP NORTHERN STUVF* ■ 1 - WiUßellcl ' eai)to room; among 'lhe Light Street. Cook STOVE 1 “ Empire State do . " Blue RUlge do “ Morning Star (double oven) Co,.k STOV E . T V; J, * :l 1 Tl Drwaium (flash ovm) ; nipited oveii*."" S A!r !i ‘ s,il - S "' 1 RU ' "hh co r I yf H k “° wn Knickerbocker RANGE, the ( hist and most rauae nmv heforethe i 10,1;,. Parlor and office GKAiE.s, GOAL BI'KNKKs ~ I choice vatn-ty just received, all of new designs aud’l ite’i'ni -1 cUAh'i "be h . : 7 v> ' ■ > 111 lUerw pSt- Sifi’em. Ac/ "' S Standards, Fhe Cartiers,’ Cal ABo a full stock of HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS vGikh, for variety, is unsurpassed by any similar estal-tishTw • t tit the K mil, My fmrlliticiror business an•-u. i, that V ,5' • suit the Unics U “‘ 4U '' SUon - h ‘ vin « deterndned to sli low to i oe-vo y e. 0,, ~ WM - H. GOODRICH, . -No. oDtKalb Range, Broad o„ A u s ust;vGa. 1 ivn i ADMINISTRATORS’ SALE. • Also,'V nnmlir ft of Wagons “piUwsUUow GeaUc V 1 , toil Seed, Ac. Terms on the dav I'f’.dle ’ tot ‘ I JOflN DOU SE. ) i «,d i ~ , ~ FOR SALE. \\ , , L- ’L on rmstlav in DECEMBER water Power, Houses f.rtr.e oiieratives t„ .A A f- Klt . ; Brick Store, ami ot her appurtonan.eesheiot tola'llFai-rorl* i< 1 \mi A *»<« place will Aid. Om GKls\ ; * XV A V.’ A 1 ?' 1 ' «>'‘r setts of rmuers. A Iso, one large-Kiwi * and »ix mub-s. Fhc Buildlmrs ba *b- -isi , ad comfortable rd well built. TKAhim-Uhi,h teen I,S A‘i!!“ ts i-' sufficient to tuamtfait refromfoor- ThLllAki 'UU hcttuls of cotton per dav. aHon «eA h n Hi a « f is A l,!a ’‘-d OU Appalarhce River, \v it n m 1 Hikin'Vll le, and upon the line oi ■ Pr vft - ;„ M< gar ? nd rl; "ke cuintnThe Power m 3 1 - ; BavalShiU;;;AkAT Lya,iyi " t!l( ' S,;i!0 - 1 underagued, residing near tin place. High Sm-als, Ga„ Sept 10. lU7 A< 1 "i'Jid I “ '’Ae'nto’ 1 ' i X'*TH » L—All persons indebted to the estate >f M 'UI -w : ! g Mi ('arroll, late of Richmond county dect->s.-.r \ | ( l ueß V" d to , nu4ke immediate payment; and thosV havlbluA : mands against said estate, will render them In dulv ; i fei t : | lU\b rn, '° ! ,he ,UW - RHI LU£‘ Adm'r."' | 3rbuetliscmentG, CONCERT HALF. WE COME WITH SONGS TO GREET Vt-I Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday November liOth mid December I Ulll ( mHE Original EMPIRE MINSTRELS,, , X wild reorganized in 1857, with H. 11. sLiTEP 11 . ~i pinn Dancer of the world—.IOHNN V BooKE p ‘ UI “ uiari, ami TEN STAR PERFORMEUS, will upA-A-A ■ in a series of " SOIREES D'ETHIOPE, New Songs, Glees, Dances, Witticisms, Comical Uh-s i lesques, <Stc. ' ' ' Our motto, FUN WITHOUT VULGARITY See Programmes. CHARLES J. WALTER . nov2B ' ■ WANTED, VYOI'XG MAN. for a Grocer-, store A’ Negro, for attending the Oy.-t-.r U:ir, 1... ' ' S POY - 6 ? LOUIS KUAlT’tt DISSOLUTION. milE copartnership, under the firm of Kn.vucn .i- p - I this dav dissolved by mutual consent. The businA " herettlter be eonducted tinder the name of I.m is ki-'o", who is alone authorized to scltle the account- of if, - *, - LOUIS KRAUCII ! ■ £ MIL IK lUi-V . WANTED, 4 WHITE GIRL, to do the 11. n.-eworkofaam;.: IV Apply East sideoi Jan,son stre.-t, tlhril j. ~, y . Telfair. re. f BOARDING. ONE or two families can be accomnsodoted wit) , BOARD, in a private Boarding House, in utv try \ of the city. Also, a few young men. For partiu!i!u*-.. Y ( -; ! - r : on Jacks’ll street, opposite Reese & Linton’s WarvU - : nov*24 . dfi SITUAI ION WANTED. VGEVIT-EM W acquniiitrd with the Ancient eral Modern Languages, besides the differ. ■t’ V branches, and recently Professor ■>!'Ancient l/uicr . Belles-Lettres at a Military College, wish* - t-. .•*. ~ .7 ter at the South, and implies for a pia< e :t» T< a. • , r ' or family. Refers to Rev. Dr. Forth Augusts «; Vll i ticulurs, apply to lIIEO. NIKMAN' t‘OV’22 6 at Planters’ifotej FOR THE HAIR. !)HOF. WOOD'S HAIR RESTORATIVE i_ TRICOPHEIioUS: Mrs. AllenN II vilt I'Fsi and XYLOBALSAMI'M ; Lv.m% K\Tli\m ,\- < “ • HAIR TONIC; Phalou's fNVIGi iRATuIt ■ c YTiiVi'-V - H.MU TONIC. Alsu, a (arc- assortment ~ - f’UU N American POMADES ami HAIR GILS m, i. . : 7 —" < ' v - 5 . _ vtM. n. rcTT. SKATES SKATES, / 101.0 weather has runic. .Y.w , . , V. sort merit of SKATES m.iv be f, u,| —SSSS . a. hatch: A GARDENER WANTED 4 N iut,.-ili4«-„t Mar : : GARDFXEK V. ■ >ed iY- U H " i ! i,!; G--I . Appiv :,M, ' IMPORTANT TO THE PUBLIC. ♦ 10.000 WORTH OF BOOTS AM) SHOFs i nmlal- iTdcP-gtla tin:,-- 1)' , r ' U ''"’i"' ■ this day, tn - I iinir-ls' , ,i si; . gether with TRI N KS, LEATHER, Ac ■ v.'. " a' pensesadded. The t-üblic -eu, 1>- ..i,. -, vi, l -\ ' NKTIVUXs Vu't ' \UUUU'"' armichael * Bea ?’ s Hardware establishment, • l " • lrn MAGAZINES FOR DECEMBER. M .. , i>, GUhan,VMSUU‘U7a-U; , ''UiU r; (Jl>k:kSr , Tbe7h7vc t'l^ !b *' Uny TOUr - u- APPLES. T* -**T !s. North, l- APPLE *£_ HENKV .1. SIBLEY. LAND WARRANTS WANTED f r<lK I - : I. ; WARRANTS „r anvd*. L ltnn.i: ..lions. Applyt 10.11 WM. 11. HOWARD.' UTERINE CATIIOLICON. TJ \m IIISE'- UTERINE t .VITIM.I, t . .., * Ti . 'y>- . '-\ M. H. fl -||.' .. . YELLOW ONION SETTS. \» HlaJ-II •.; p!v - ; \ eiiovv y>Nlo!s sETTs * • I cc-ived and ißr sale hv WM. HAINEs. \ •, i i V j t.,.. OKANGES AND POTATOES. 'l'WhM'l H .- matiRANGEs; I. It hills, prime Eating POTATOES ; Just arrived this day and forsale hv I ~ ft'M. H. MUWAHD, EOVH «*mti.: --ton Mercbt-ttl. | „ Tl , ARGYI.E BUTTER. \\ Y E have iiist reach -;a li - - : H .;v of t T 1 ' ’ LL’l'lElt. DA DENTAL INSTRUMENTS. 4 < 011 I*l.l i I -- i ■f r . - V : auuta :i ar, r's prh-c--. hv ppvS ' PLUMI! * LEITXEU COATS, JACKETS, &C. IJ 1 !' - "O.VIS. li:;-,'OATS. R -nnd JACK! !- 1> I AMs ■■ : it'lS, lor 1..--;--s. ■■■. -,. h; -t ' ' at rn vi A. P. BHi.NoX & (-o.’S EXCHANGE. CHiHT EX, li \V.E on New \ „rk. ,'..r sale bv F? noviu D.VNIKL U. wild I , SUGARS. I.’IITi hols. Stuart's A, Bn.a,' SUGARS.C •t.ofVsT' ar,d f " r l,} FLEMING A ROW 1. A A • 4 \ „« me^ ARFS AND gloves. 4 \ MUOt *• - 'B-rtmeiit, vi-rviheap. A - nov - 1 M. o. PUB i i-M NOTIOE. MV. RAXXO.M is mvlegallv antic,: • my ahsenee loun the .State. Augusta, N .la.iaw. MAGAZINE. H VKPEHS’ Magazine, leaves cut, ha- : -■ t>- Also, llarjiers* Bible, No.i>. . novli> GEO. A. OATES A ]!Ri>. I (t K i n °pf,K'!' I'yeing E--■: IBhm.T.t, Gn | ' “ • ■■•■ "'VC K.-linn-; street. DYKIN' 1 -h;rn . BLEACHING and PRESSING ,',f ih.O , -. 1 ; i,d,a"fr CLEANED ami REPAIRED;.! si...;t i 1 -loiusiati 15v>2. 'a FORSALE. OL\( h. M nting nail M.t.-kin,- LYKS ,f s- f ] Htvene stre. T, f ajt ■ ' 11 By the barrel , ■ sor 10gallons U":. '- ■ Single gallon. Augusta, t ia.. .Bine li.'isOT.' j' be ONE THOUSAND ACRES OF FLINT RIVES 9 , . LANDS FOR SALE JIIIK uud. rs.v, U "; -... .K-slr-nsot v. fvicup: •Vi’ , - , \\T"t l, iT" ! .-‘s •''r',.. 1 1 1 ou3an<l Acres of LAND. U| i. l ’* ■', 11 P* F River, teu miles r ( orta ~f,i. - h§ . > D.'d ~‘ U Batch ■ urv UaerrN, entirely .swanm. The »•.. m i . ftS- L U: I ou ne- BROUGHT TO JAIL, r m | v -1, tin- tot.,, ■ ■ ---m. ac J.'.ul thv •; ce: I*; l am, mie uuu; u "'' d ' i,ruv « M P 11. w. GERALD..! ( bf DISSECTING CASES. tb H a-.;-;..,:,. s,i S . re FIGS AND ALMONDS. 9f‘ ' Vi*'wl- vs ■ a '"! :i I' ! > of figs, I f * , h KADiNs. m wnole. hair ! uuam Ais.t -J bl-ls, >■ it Sln-11 ALMoMis • I bhl. Paper-Shell - a , i , »V - r '" vli ttENii*Y J.'Viu; B in NEW FLOUR. V I »> - MCKS ---ett’.-..- FLOUR. |1 UN D CAMPHOR ICE WITH GLYCERINE if tf U 'rU;-Um' ,! ’:' , ' ! ,i',U VM, ' IT ; ,l 7 ■' - v 5 -''* : , 1:r t j H A V 11. m t - SOUTHERN FRUIT TREES. FRUITLANI) NURSERY, AUGI -1 V. GEOB -M- «#:i r IMIE suhserih. r , ih -s f r . ;h, 1 Southern FRUIT and ORX.YMK.VI M. TB: is ! TW, Sis, mg, m part, ot Apples, IT-ai-s. f. ■; - p.-.- - \ >*» ti Apr., -is. Straw),eriks. Raspberries, Gran, s, Fi,-.-, It-. -.£ ela,. greei >, Omuer.rtital Shru! s. A, “ A new Descriptive l ata .; of Fr-dt 3rd -- { M 1-nm I t.-.-s, etc. With Hints pr, per- .r • t of, V , . D. I!EDMOND, A . I t-i- Orders received and I’ataUigucs fiirr,i-'i , ‘l-v Ml.' ». Vh k :i!;d Wm. II a ix! s, B ui >’* . \ -\ . i• ran ■- vl • lauu* T e| it CHEESE. of, UOXEsi Etigii-I Dairy CHEESE; . mm*} ~j “ V\ oic-rn “ y, ««ki 4t _ Ki KM ma PAPERS. t . hfc " 11 0 T receiv.-d ,- hr sale at 11. D. NOKKr.T. *1 il4 Bread Street, Augusta, G-or-'H Jtl Harpers' Magazine, for Deccn-1 it; bt-ii New York Journal, for Ti-. A■: . r„r November 11. , ' SUNDRIES. j* rjnYEVIY do*. Has- t!eh PRESERVES; 2, X -- O*. assorted Pie KRU ITS; PICKLES. I.alfg-.h %-fi 10 “ genuine English PICK 1 Em tat 2.00 b halt and quarterxes SAKDIN 1 ' ; * 10tlo*. Le lHardVreli-.rated BITTER.' 7- p j. Oft. ; Y (WE \ : ; • , 1 *»ut , fag' i £ I RICH AND POOR - HARD TIMES AND -k jY Cl.t-THKS. my-r I \ om-u quvncu «>f the hard timi--, -ts- ■ u: 1 uitiietusending In tlteir OIHm i.v »1 HK> them made N KW, by t!ie imrivellt-d and >ui-i■;i‘T •» 4 ’ which abuie is used by the undersigned. It etit|r« v -i' _ I IK i ■ w DRESS TRIMMINGS. s ,Wdiu A HEVI TIEI L a rtiiant ofri.-h Dr, : iKIM'-= . IfUic ix fur sale at n, OKA -V lU-B 1 H