Newspaper Page Text
d*»m <»>•
Uoaw.d by fo.r end nnbrlba* »T V .In.
jyThi Clrcui ran art*
knocked It inlnpi.
A Word to UliH iltnto lit Post-Nutera.
We do not propoie to grumble, gentle
men, but to moke ■ luggcttlon »nd requext.
We Itarn that mail matter going up ou the
South-western road forSnvnnnnb, Augusta,
and other points Etot, does not go into the
Poet-offloe at Maoon, at all, but is transfer
red in the through mail direct to the agent
on the Central road. This suits ns exactly;
lint it scorns that matter Intended for the At
lantic A Gulf road, and points in Florida ac
cessible to that line ot commnnicatlon, in
usually put in the Macon mail, and'by thi)
Post-master then sent back ovor the South
western road and by the hack to Thomas-
villc. This is wrong, and the inntter thus
direetod is subjected to unnecessary delay.
Matter intended for points on the Atlantic
in Gulf ltailroad, and the Florida roads,
should bu placed in the Savannah through
r-nil, and not allowed to stop at Stacon at
nil. If agents on the S. W. road will give
tliiH direction to the Tri-Weekly News pack
ages, they will greatly oblige us, aud our
subscribers in Brooks, and along the Gnlf
road, will got their pnpors the second morn-
jpg alter we go to press, provided the very-
gentlemanly and accommodating Postrmas-
ter at Savannah, will see that the paokages
do not lie over in his offleo more than twelvo
hours. .
“Tke Laid We Le»e.”
The December number of the above excellent
Periodical It received. Filled with History from a
Southern view, and oilier more intereeting matter,
and edited by that coholarand eoldier, General. D.
If. nm, It ehould be read by overy one who oherlahei
in memory the "lost oante.”
Published at Charlotte, N. 0. at $8 per anum
Specimen copies 26 centi.
t, Oa., November
a rail ride of
[y tones, your Editor la hoi
mllee ofhii ttftctnm, a little
toMScbworn. It U a ttdlout trip,
the luxury bf patting through Macon
neb, wiuld he more Intolerable than a certain haek
ride we wet of. The day ride on the South Western
Road, ie alwaya pleasant—the Conductor! arc po
lite without Mlf-attumacy, and gentlemanly without
obnoxious airs. Thoroughly understanding tbol,
duty, and recognising the right of paetengere to be
treated with oourttey and aeoommodated ae profile,
bl. goe.tr, they quickly tapr.n .m/ on. with tbs
oonvietlon that the passenger coach le not regarded
ae a stock laf, nor tka passenger*' do^Ald anltohls.
Equal to the responsibility of their station, the 1 In
telligent board of directors entrust to their diseir-
tlon the propriety of admitting ladles and goatlemdn
In the same eoaeh, and the consequence is, that
rello of Confederate provost scntlnflsb!p,at the la-
dies’ door, it abandoned} and gentlemen are no
longer insultingly notified "ladies’ ear sir, find a
seat in the forward oar.” Where there are snob
clever, sensible conductors, there oan he no Impro
priety in returning to the old custom of permitting
the sexes of the same raoe to ride In the same coach.
On tli e Central Road a different system prevails,
aud a sort of military austerity is observable in the
oonduot and language of every ofilola) connected
with it. One is constantly reminded oflae last days
of “The Cause,” when Hardee’s Tactics constituted
tho schedule, and the Army Regulations the disci
pline of Southern ruilrotuin. 1*t what Isoallad “Uip
Ladies fur,,, n sort of one-horse slevping nrraiige-
incaL is provided, und gentlemen lire only permitted
to Inter after the ladlea are supplied with births}
tha, it any be left, the Conductor makes a tour
amkng the males, singing out “births iu the sleep
ing e«r, gentiemenl” and when one is found who
prefers a horisontal to an upright night of it, he. is
relieved of two dollars exlia, and conducted back to
"the ladies ear,” and deposited on a mattress spread
two seats—very eomiortabls, to he sure,
hut one half the ooaoh may he erowded with lould'
talking men and woman who don’t 1 choose te pay the
two dollars, and before whom it is not very polite to
unirese. The palaelal comforte and luxuries af
forded by tho sleeping oar company In their ooaoh
[From the Memphis Avalanche.]
A Starving Even.
For some lime a great deal of disaatisfkotlon has
existed among the freedmen In the neighborhood
of ColumbuaTMietippi. They had quit work and
left the fields with octtOtt, and would not plnok a
1 cul the reason given fbr this action being that
Eil • share of the orop would not pay their expen-
gw ior the year, owing to the tax on the staple, and
fthi low pries to which It had fallen. A* eoon as
tk>/ refused to work, as a matter of oourss, they
imd i<> leave the plantations, and glvr up their
houses to other laborers who wonld work. They
then took to .the woods and aommeneed a system
of ioiUtorimitUto pilfering and stook killing*—
About two hundred of them have been assembled in
the neighborhood of Columbus, Mlssippi sinoe the
begiuing of the eleotion, and had btoome a per
fect nuisance and terror to the neighborhood.
At thbrequest of the oltiseneaoompany of Unted
* * ‘ ‘at Columbus for
Stales troops had, been stationed
Blit
the proteotion of the Uvea and property of tho peo
idlsed negroes had
pie. When this band of vagabom
exhausted the country of everything that was steal
able, they determined to make a raid upon tho town
of Columbus in full force. They were all armed,
and procuring fife and drum they marohed Into
town, demanding bread. Not one of them asked
for work; they did not want that. Bread waa all
their err, and they were aheut commencing an .in
discriminate robbery, when Unltsd States troops
apersd on the ground, and disarmed them first and
then dispersed them. The ringleaders were taken
into custody. What a soene of bloodshed and rob
bery we would hare had to relate had it not been
for the fortunate prssenoe of the troops, we shud-
her think of.-
This is the first attempt at a broad riot which
has ever occurred in the South, but how long it
will be til) they become common it take* no Artec-
ing prophet to tell. The negroes all thought the
country aro becoming most thoroughly demoralised
under the Radical hyenas, who oounsel and Incite
them at every fenoe corner, to their own dostruo-
lion They now positively in many looaiitiss,
ref.,so to work, will make no contracts with the
planters. ful|v expecting a division of the lands so
long promised them by their lladioal leaders Bands
of from three to fifty are roaming through Mis-
sissppi in every direction, a terror and a nulatnoe,
no only to the planters, but their own color.—
Ilow long this state of affairs oanoontinue without
i of
scenes of riot and bloodshed depends satirely upon
* irk
the forbrarance of the while man. A spark may
ignite th] train which will render the horison with
the blaio of burning houses, and initiate a oonfliot
between the raoea bloody and remorseless.
Accident to (Jastkli.o’b Circus.—A dis
patch from Pollard, Ala., dated Noverabe
Mill, says:
Tho train from Montgomery to Mobile,
1ranB)>orting Caatollo’s Circus and Menage
rie, was thrown from tho track by the
breaking of a rail yesterday evening about
fifteen miles below hero, killing one man
and bruising many others. Also one horse
killed and soveral bruised, Tho Wild ani
mals ail escaped to tho woods, tho cages be
ing broken, but were caught and caged
•without rnuoh trouble, only a few offering
resistance.
Newton, Ga., Nov. 30, 1807.
A respectable portion of tho elt ixcus of
Baker oounty. in obedienoe to a previous
call, having this day oonvened,for the pur
ine of selecting delegates to tho Consetwa-
tiy© Convention,^ be held in Macon on the
5th of December next, lleuben Jones Esq
on motion of J/U Whitehead, was called*
tho chair, and E. B. Smith requested to act
ai Secretary.
On motion ol W. IL Whitehead, Eaq., a
committee was appointed to auggeat initiblo
' *aid Convention,
to i
persons as delegates
subject to the notion of the meeting, consist
ing of W. H. Whitehead, Ecu., Dr. J.
Fleming, Thomas Allen
Ob motion, Gen. Colquitt was added to
The eommittW having retired, after .
ahortnbaenee, returned and reported the fol
lowing named persons as suitahledelegnte*,
to-wit: Gen. A. Colqnitt, Maj. W. D. Wil-
liama, ilni.Pemroc, Dr. Hand, Dr. J. P.
Stevcna^Alfred George and C. D. Hammond
Ba<|t*.,jrhtch report was unanimously
' Gen. Colquitt entertained the meeting
pr* — — — ——— * - - - - - _ a
tpm*
- and-Wbtolj.VwlHr the'present emergency,
- -'ch were appreciated liy our attentive
reordered
«r«Lk
[Communionled.]
l °»* ^'* b »“'* 4 ■Wla*saw- ^ Jj ne ratlbn many areuntitled by previ
nf I I anlra Kniil. anil llm wlinln arranaamanl <? . •. . a* < a... a * is
well-
some-
your
render* the important subject of Soutl -rn
immigration. It wonld be sti;l more pleas
ing to tee^tfchb important subject ot
Bouthern immigration. It would be still
more pleasing to see this important subject
frequently discussed, M ^jUilbesringt, by
the Southern press, and to sec the Southern
^'^VoTOrMln earnest pur
pose to woA oOMtl conswpmntiU*ii: To lb-"
sure inccess, however, requires something
piore than more statements of t he advan
tages of soil and climate, and the kindly
feelings of welcome awaiting new comers ;
and '’also <5 jtljiflfciOft); Vujlcr reolira-
ion dy tho (Joqthernpeople sf their pres
ent cMttlftfoU, and of tlie elemtnts essential
to tho future prosperity of their section.—
Too many^ljli* M^pleof Geprgin, in com.
with tkoaeof olficr Southern States
I beop anU arc still looking vainly lor a
chontro in Norlncrn politics to effect some
great good for them, overlooking the fact
ilrat ono great need of the country is a la
boring population, which tho negro, what
ever may be liia political or social status,
never will supply. History uud experience
aliku teach us the stubborn fact.
( The ' fertile plains of his native Africa
lavelain fallow for centuries beneath his
die luiuda. The rich .fields -of tho West
India islands, ont-o teeming, under his com-
pulsory labor, with the choicest fniita of the
earth, havo relapsed to a largo extent into
primeval lorest,and in the South to-day the
tame story is writton, in unmistakable char
acters, upon dilapidated plantations and
grass grown fields.
Tho great need, then, it a white laboring
ofthsCsnlrtl Rond, and the whole arrangement
amounts to but little more than a "sell”—"dead
beat” probably expresses It better. We saw one
poor fellow ruled out, whose wife woe inside,
and though he boldly made his points, and eloquent
ly urged his claim to the society of hie wife, "Obe
dienoe to orders” was brought to boar upon blqif
and he gained admittance only through the tails-
manio Influence of two dollars extra. Ws don't
muoh like the custom, and to.our mind it would be
"more honored in the breaoli than the observance.
But, the Central Road it a “big thing,” and not
only Condaeloft and the travelling public, Idt^tW
interest of the vthole country—commercial and ag-
rioultural—must bend to its iron will, and yield, to
tbs enormous demands of Us Insatiate maw. 8o
stern and cold, and rigid is the spirit that controls
lbs institution, ^hat employees have become so
many pieces of tnaoMnsry, with as little geniUllly
ae a oowoftloher. OfdoslUtle soul as the corporation.
They aro all gentlemen, hofrever, and''remarkably
efficient.
The Half Road le conducted very muoh on tho
style of the South Western Road, and the traveler,
coming from the Central, feeie ae If ho .had jual «a>,
......1 it A n >
ooped from a Bureau or a
OUS habits and modes of life for rannuul la
bor. To obtain this accession of population
difficulties and prejudices, numerous but
not insuperable, must' bb overcome. True,
there is an erroneous ides among immi
grants and their friends that tha clinmto of
the South in nnpropitioun to the white rseo
—that the people aro hostile to strangers
and that the present unsettled condition of
aflsiis does not afford adequate security to
life and drnporty.. Assiduous care should
ho taken to remove these false impressions
.But that is not alt. The tide of immigra
tion has far yesfs fiowM towards tho West
and wofri channels In that direction. Ties
of race and kindred draw many of those
HOW coming thither. , •
Above all else, tho cheapness of Western
lands Offers tho : greatest lnm to the
laboring man. Now in this last pstticnJar
cannot Southern people afford in their pres
ent condition to coinplet* successfully with
tho West? Muoh or the richest landin the
Sottth is owned in Targe trade. Let the
Itnd-holderein every country fornj them
selves into “Inimlgrimt Ala Association,”
Guard.- Puha- and soll st nondnjnpricei 6r »iue aio(iy one
Eaitss.ni
exuberance of a Byington, the hospitality of a
Brown (not Jot, but E. B. & Sons) and tha cordial
ity of a Me Aflat do not mort surtly satisfy wtarlsd
and hungry guests, than do tlit gtulnl glow Of good
fttUiig and polite atteatirtoas* that every where
art teen an 1 f«lt along this lint.
The South Weslern line, from Macon down, beats
any route iu the world for fsediug. Brown aud
Byington, at Maoon, both feari as if their guests
wore gods, and tho occasion a carnival, while Ivy,
at Fort Valley, and MoAffse, at Hniiihvillt, get up a
regular Christmas dinner every day in lbs year, and
surfeit their guests with ai) manner of good things
aud good treatment.
We found Savannah at horap, and though tka
merchants were complaining of the dullness of the
■eason, and the stringency of money matters, we
experienced nothing of the ennui, and saw no signs
of gloom or decay. Tho harbor was full of shTp*
ping, andtho8tevedorss were busy st every dock*
Much aotivlty was exhibited on tbs streets, aad
trad# was not half so bad as many pretended. Tbs
newspapers seemed to bo doing n flourlehiehlng
business, and the Editorial fraternity wore the rud
dy glow of cheerful hearts and tha olty’e beet. The
Hotels end “Our House” were doing a smashing
business, and oatsring to the entire satisfaction of
the most fastidious epicure.
Quitman ii n sad sight. The recent disastrous
fire stripped her of one-half her business houses,
end seriously crippled her of her finances. She U
now doing absolutely nothing. Thrritrohtqtacfcd-
not afford to sell on time, and tho planters nave
made nothing to buy with, or even to pay aid
ncoree. Afraid of being dunned, they do not oome
to town, and apprehending harder limes next year,
they arc closing tha asoapa valvae and husbanding
the remnant of their rasouroes. They are wise ill
this, for poverty has no friends, and starvation bnt
few sympathisers.
The cotton erop in this seotien was literally a
failure, and betwaen landlords, tha laborers, and
the Freedmen’a Bureau, to say nothing of tha buy*
era, tha whole country la likely to ha attgwUfcd in
irretriavahla bankruptcy. Many of our frianda aro
borne down with the pressure, and seam to cart
but little for tha Aiture. Bat few spank af trying
cotton another year, and none aro inclined to ex*
p.rim.sL cxt.&kj.eljr. Utwr *1111» Mtren.J* )ow
h»r«, and thonund. of rra«dni.B will inr.lt.blj b.
l.n but Is lb. .old. What will become of the peer
dt.1)^ ,IU be a serious problem for lh.tr radisst
friend, in GnnrMt to tolro. tb. prop). 0 f lb.
South e.nnet giro them t.ber, and th.j bate no
Prtrl.lon. lo keep body and eoaf to(«h.r. Such
U .the complexion which radicalism hoe aliost
brought upon the country. (i, fl, .
Gkn. Pop* tolegraphi Gqn. Swnyno, Do-
comlier 2, asking, cannot tho Convention be
indiire.l tq^ilipurp wjthoiit fi)rther,legisla
tion, nn.l pays tlio Convohtioti is doii% tn-
calRiilshlo injury to Hoc'onotrnction by its
late action. Tliin is the eeooud dispatch or
the same tenor IVom Gpu. I’opc.
_ The Convention has not-ycHUed s day
that Gcnnjal Pnixj’u dispatohes lire tnsnlt-
hxroua rnx GsaXu ilaf.—OaVCS B. Hi,bias
A«..«r «r lmarmat RorMu'fb, this MMo,
Vr i njnw|q}n~i"-iTr'bxgjijliir ‘
gere feat a. if .bey oar. mad. tb. ..penial ear. Jt
the Direction, Conductor nod Eagle.are; and- tbo working wnlfo men, jtpott the stipulation
ipon nod improve
The immigrant
that the;
them IB!
requires bnt fifty or » hundred aores for his
farm. Think how many honest, Indualrl-
otta, monoy-maklng-citizona tho proprietor
of a thousand aorta could settle around him
niton ono bail of hia land I Once lot tho
idea of cheap hind bcconto current, and prej
ttdicea ofcliumto and Iqoation failo away,
the trdo-OfintttrtgHition lx tnrhed, and tho
country booomoa filled up with a thriving
population—a population, too, with which
the native whites of the soil, like Norman
and Sntem,-so.lniilnto and become one, now
threatened with an inferior-race.
The Southern land proprietor! constituti
on intelligent aun patriotic data. This tub
jout addresses itself at onee to their intelli
gence and patriotism. But will they be
pecuniarily loaera by the experiment pro
posed! Qo tho one hand let a knowledge
of the valne of lands in tho West, increased
twenty, sixty, an hundred iold, with the
growivg population in five, tcu, and twenty
year, answer, while on the other hand, they
The President's Message.
xnioXj December 8.—The followlai
nf the c ivtl war wan to repair iq|tsri<
the benefits of ifie civil warVtessona ai
possible momeul. Thh duly was promptly ae
eeptad by lbs Executive, and the restoration of lbs
EMPORIUM
m 'ff
lo.urrccllon.ry .Slate.', in th. Snit moments of
■ bcllcr.-l 10,-1*,‘a. HI] amt Certnln a.
HgSK!?
These expedalions were diaappoinled by legisla
tion, nnd now there Is no Uuion, where one Statels
as free av another to regulate Ua Internal affairs
according te its own wilt. (An.elaborate argument
follows the proposition, j
~ THTTnldn ami CAnlrttfiffton are tnaeptntbhfc-rtw
long as one ia obsye<l the othr^will be preserved,
andlf one is deslrfi^ed. both most perish together.
There is no military or other necessity, real or-pre
tended, which can prevent obedience to fbe‘Consti
tution, .UtoWorthroioutb, Th.bo*. 1,«h«,.
may ultimately concur in a plan of fte'.tlement flfin-
siatent wi^h otir true Interest and sworn duties, la
too natural and too just to he easily abandoned.
It In r, ear to the Preeldeni’js apprehension, that
the States lately in rebellion are still members of
the Union. The Executive—my predfcesaor—if
well ns myself aud the bead* of all Departments
have adopted aud acted upon the principle that th,
Union is not dissolved, but is indisoluble. Congress
submit led an amendment to the Constitution to the
Southern Hiates and accepted their acta of ratifica
tion. The JmJgoN of the Supreme Court have In-
V .eluded Southern States in their Districts., :If tho
Southern Staten »rc component parts of the Union,
'then the Constitution is the supreme law for them,
ns for all other State*. They art bound to oboy It
nod »o are we.
Being sincerely conviuoed that these views ora
correct, the President recommends the repeal of
aots placing tho Southern States under military
toasters.
The conflict between the Reconstruction Aets
and the tights of the people under the Constitution
i« argued atnl ilium rated at length.
Alluding lo negro suffrage, the President savs
the subjection of States to^negro dominion will be
Worse than the existing military despotism. People
will endure endless military oppression, rather
than degrade themselves by subjection lo the negro
The blacks arc entitled to be well and humanely
governed, but if it were possible to give them a
government of their own, it would beoome a grave
question whether we ought to do so, or whether
common humanity would not require iw*to save
them from themselves. But it is nol proposed that
they shall only govern themselves, biit that they
lhall govern the white race, and, lo a greater or
teas extent, control the destiny of the whole coun
try. The itogro character is contrasted with the
virtue, intelligence and spirit of progress of th*
white raoe. Tho negro population is contrasted
with immigrants, and the different terms of acquir
ing citizenship aud franchise are stated.
f ho President yields to no man iu attachment to
.* rule for general suffrage, but it,requires of some
classes a time suitable for probation and prepara
tion. To transfer our political inheritance to the
negroes would, iu the President's opinion, be an
abandonment of a duty which we owe, alike, to the
memory of onr fathers and to the rights of our
children. Depictiug the horrors inevitable from the
proposed Governments, die President says: It will
require a strong standing army, and probably more
than two hundred million* of dollars per annum,
to maintain the aupremacy of these negro Govern
ments afterfhoyars established. Without military
power they are wholly inoapable of holding in sub-
jootion the white people of the South.
The effect on pubiio credit and trade of resist
ance in the Congressional scheme is discussed,
showing ruin to both. The President's financial
policy has already been truthfully foreshadowed.
The message makes no special allusion to the
cotton tax.
Iu discussing the President’s duties, ke says: Af
ter grave consideration eases might Arise wkfire,
oonsi^. _ r .
after laws had passed all the constitutional fotros
aud been placed on the statute books, it would bs
the duty of the Extcutivc to carry ihti
less of eoht'equflntfri. This would be involving the
oountry in justifiable civil war,
Tho Telegraph learns that General How
ard has issued an order removing alt officers
and agents of tho Freedmen’s Bureau who
were candidates nt the recent election for a
convention.
.. . _ ... an
idea what their lands, already tut>k to a
nominal vJrtW.NlHi btwdhbdndwthe ]>ros-
eut system continued for the same periods
of time. Hut in tbo very nature ol thing.,
till, state of affairs cannot last. The day
must soon come wheft im'poverhked- men
can no longer nffofiTWTii
upon largo lo
the dream
in his ovrn
the interveni!
by the
delui'
tho
In a
aooei
onl;
the'
or
M
ways
the future7
cally sinks into comparative insignificance
in onr midst. But tne lands of the South
ern people are still theirown. With the*
lot them work out a brighter destiny than
now appears, and by-wkst may seem a pres
ent sacrifice cecure eventual wealth, hapmj
*oi<«nw
m a^w^i&s
ev'&oiraiihffdGHattKispo
to. tha Mow Orleans Picayoue, copied elscp
w^sVs, ex presses a different opinion.- What
ever mat belt* prithte opinion of the mom-
probable that this Question will
,«d -only by the Radical taerabeia; aad expe
rience has proved that the whole party ere
lawi
Bdf^re'eJe nd'ddntrtdictloi
By Telegraph.
*ED AN ESTIEK
«M Sli
Consisliog in part of
DRY QOODS,
Groceries, Boota._Shoe8, Hats I
MERCER & SMITH
TOMBS BBO.il> H iSIllHTMV
A GOOD STOOK OF GOODS
\ Consisting in pnn pj
Ba^on. Ptour,
■j Sugar, Ooflco,
Hoyt & Gale,
|toii Street. Albany< Of
DOOir 'TO COOPER * CO.
HOTEL,
ehtrry Street, - . - Macon,,
The subscriber having lltred up his Hon
with entire new Furniture in
The Most Elegant Style,
Guarantees to his old patrons and (litpublicgJ
orally, that Ihey
equal lb auy hotel
i IN THE ST AT;
j call and eee -me.
J- It. Byington. I
no 00 1
Dealers in
Stoves,
Tin Ware,
Cast Iron Piping
Britanin Ware,
g . Crockery
nnd Glass,Lamps
HOUSE FUSNISHIHe GOODS
of every description.
Wo have on hand a fino lot of Cooking
Stoves of all sixes, nnd tho best patterns,
and a/ro, prepared to pul them up and
FlT PIPES. E'Ij'C.
We also have a lol of the AMERICAN
SUBMERGED-Pl T MP, themost perfect,
simpip. and durable pump over invented,
nnd peculiarly suited to. Jhis section.
•Wo ata prepared to do ail kinds of
Tin, 8hee| Iron and Copper H'ork at the
shortest Notice and heat stylo.
The attention of planters is especially
ealled to our establishment, as we take jobs
in tbn country,-and work with dispatch.
Albany, G*., Nov. 1>, 1807. 111-1-17.
To the Albany TrMVeekly Nawa.
GENERAL NEWS.
MOJtNIKG DISPATCHES.
MoNruuMiar, Dee. 4.—Tha Commutes oath*
Constitution if phi ted it to the Convention, when it
considered artiols by article, and various amend
ments were proposed, consuming U19 whole day.
1 here will be at least fifteen 6r twenty rotes against
the Constitution ou the final vote.
[Right here, tho rain ednunoaeed find the
wires, with duo deference, stepped elieking;
or it may he, that tho news was rather dry
and stopped tSjjmhilie. At any rnte, we
are advised tiint Sve may “hang up” 1
morning. ]
THE MARKETS.
MORNING DISPATCHES.
LiyxspooL, P«c. 4, M.—Cotton qni.t snd.tcsdy;
isle, 8000 bat... Breatlalufia quiet.
Nsw Yosx, Deo. 4, M,—Cotton .toady st l&|o.
0**187}. I 14,1 ft p
tiivXarooi, Dee. 4, P. M,—Cotton firm; aalM
10,000 bale.; upland. 7|d.; Orlaan. 7jd.
> Special Market Reports.
Nsw.Yosk, Dee. 4,11 A. U.—Cotton Ueady sad
unchanged. Cold 137 j.
1.1VMF00T., Dec. 4, 11 A. M.—Cottan quiet at
7jd; .ale. 8000; [I ; - .
Nww Your, Dee. 4, 8 P. M.—Cotton dentan'd-ae',
tire; full price., lGe.; .alt. 8600. Gold 187 j.
Live.root, 3 l*j M.
h—Obttbn^rmirol^^va
Libel for Divoroo.
cmridor Paine 1 ix WnSv* SerroroaCor.r,
• Vs.' > Ootobier Term, 18«7.
John W. 1-xillla* )
It appearing lo ilia Court, by the return ef the
Sheriff, that tha Defendant I. not lo be ronndlnthe
. it*Uisraf.tre ordered on n ‘ r ‘ rc -
Mlato,
tri'ht.
red oamoflpajM.irm. A.
|this Statf, as the Rtatata requires.
. A trttf extract front th* minutes of tho Comt,
'this 20th d*y of November, 18G7v .. i/ . r g
Wm. 1 L, HUNT, Clerk. I
119 1 «w for 4ms.
For Bent
Ball’s new Building, * ftqofitor*-room, 80 fast
• " 4 B. £. i W*lcb, and
Jdcop; now oaanpUd by L.<
IVelch & Co.
j Apply to
Not.. 88, 1867
L. E. Woloh.
119 44
8. W- HENRY’S
E MANUFACTORY
ci 10
WINDOW GLASS
{ALL SIZES,)
UIIJ, .U.HIOMUO,
And Complete Stock
Painters’ Materi
—AT-—
DO YOU SMOKE ‘
TTTE still hasp thoaa FINE CIiUM
TT ‘THAT TOBACCO’ or
. . . -verylol
brags oa who uses. .MERSCHAUM PIPES, irtii
wa warrant genuina, from $U to $40 ecoh: 1)1
i Smoking Tobaooo, and other fine braail*. I
l. E. ft II. E. WELCH, Drugging
H* For sale by
X. E. * . E. Welch, I
Agents Albany, 0J
July 18, 1807. -,l
Medical Liquors.
O UR Imported Liquors are warrant#.! port, i
as good as c * ’ '
s can be bought in the market:
Fin* Fr*noh Brandy,
Scotoh Whisky,
win*,
Old Port Win*,
Madeira Win*.
Qln,
Egg Nog.
L.
St. Crol* Run,
Old BourbouVbtiJ
Bhprry \Vin<.
Claret IV inv,
Schnapps,
Ac., Ac., /Ac.
S. fit If. E. WELCH, Dnif|i
UP 8TAIU.S,
IN THE
OLD
FLAG BUILDING,
[J.-lCA'.W.V STREET.}
Near Anst & Johnston’*
OLD WAlIKIlOrSK.
W
HERE I nmko and kfep for sale all kind* of
Cabinet Furniture,’ Matrasses,
Chairs. &o.
AH ordfrv fbr
CABINETWORK,
MATRASSES,
BEPAIRINO FURNITURE,
RE-CANIM1 CIJAIB3, .
UPHOLHTKRtNQ and
RE-CANINO 90FAS,
Tele sifi Tele Easy aid Rocking Chairs,
Promptly and faithfully done at suoh prices to salt
th* times. 1 will engage to make
OLD J’lMlTUM
point
*y
of COLOR,
Send jn rourorderstud I will•
WSatisfRCtion.
HoioronccB, those I lmAf worked for.
On hand, nnd for sale, i
BEADSTEADS
MEAT SAFES,.
WARDROBES,
% % f^ASHSMlW* BTC.
N. B. Turnfhgdoiib to order. 'Rbmerft-
ber, up stairs in tne old flnj building.
l®|lWyyOct:20-100- - v
WELCHS! DRUC STORE
vltutpjM-iprrt—. ,
ESTABLISHED 184»>
TXTITH onr increuing SprlngTrade, V.ar. la
oreatiu^ our Stook and ferities (or kustfi*M.
■buying COTTON, ■
BilniMi bb ssfim.mtamMlei
W* have made our lar^e trad* by . kSspiag tkf
Best Stcik and Beat Goods,
and intend to itiTrct; o it in th* «un* Way. 1 • Ton
can always
need in the
' get at Weieb*’ everything yon
Drug
rlMb im.
Partisan Life with M&Nby.
Muhlbaok’s Historical Novel*.
Louisa of Prussia and her timrs.
Frederick The Great and his Family,
" »• " " " Pouir.
Tha Merchaut of Berlin.
Berlio and Sans Souoi.
Joseph tha IL and His Court.
Henry the VIII. and nia Court.
The last ehronioal of Barset—By Tt*ll*i* I
Raymond’s Heroine—A Kovel.
Diavola—By M. E. Brandon.
—AL80-
8tandard Literature.
Blood and Thunder Novels.
New School Books and Stationery.
IApy Book published promptly onifi'M I
nstomers. ;
L. E. WELCH A TO, I
Bookseller* and Jewelerf
GOLD MEDAL SHERRY
PORT AND MADEIRA,
HARVEST BOURBC
:BON,
WHEAT NUTRIENT;
OLD HOMESTEAD R' M
,r sennnxb.
FOR FAMILY AND MBDICTAL Ol
To adJUionto an. ballpen of ulllng
in original paokag.a, and in order to ii.iirr t-
tom.ro Pur# Liquor, in a oompool aodconwj
form, wo oothamood the onttrprlM
packing In Oaroo onr w#U known Wind,.
Whl.kioo, fto., nnd ho.o aont them o '
thpt would preclude the pouibllijyj
tampond with before IraaoWnftYho ytt
general appraoiation and grnUIjii* ■
hoc rewarded our effort# ho. .neouto
malotoin th. itiiidard an regard.
rnalir iuereaaed afforla to roloin. tb* W»#
patronage which be. broa no Ubotdill
' BlMNONB*COo
orters of
•sref street, > “
promlbant DrnggHta Orororo. ftq.
For oalo by
JOHNSON ft On
Smllh.ilK,
i M anil .i
I.U
Balt, Cheesa,
Irish Potatoes,
Tobacco, Begsrs,
•^“■fl'. Potash,
n ii
-v,, „ . Sardines*
Oaadlas, Soda,
a Llquora,
Powder,Bhot,
Lead, PercuMlsn Caps,
Holloware, Iron, Nell*,
Plow-Steel, Trace-chains, Hoes, Plew-Uasa L
Bdoti ? Shoes, Brooms, Tuba, Bueksts, Sslvss, J
»0L The blghesi market price paid for nil kin
of produce. - oclL’4 -iJ
will find the *ocominn(|«ii„l
Welch! st CorneM 1