Newspaper Page Text
Taylor, Divine & Cos.
JAMES M. Editor.
TUESDAY
CAMPAIGN SUBSCRIBERS.
Wo thought of addressing a few words to
•r Campaign subscribers. But what shall
we say ? The campaign for which you were
kind enough to enlist with us terminated in
jour defeat by the worst enemies you have
•n earth. Another campaign is about to be
gin. Wo should like to go through that
in company with you. Think of it and Ictus
hear from you at onee. Our part of it at
present is more expensive than yours. We
have to expend now between five and six
hundred dollars a month. We look to the
patriots in Georgia and other Southern States
to help us to bear it. The 20th of November
ia close at hand when Campaign subscriptions
•xpirc. We invite our friends, one and all,
to send on their names for the ensuing year.
Kennickell, Taylor, Divine A t 0.,
Proprietors.
Augusta, Ga., November loth, 1 MOO.
■ -•—--
Cotton.
The idea is industriously circulated that
ifthe Southern States secede from the Union
eotton will go down to a very low figure.
This is all intended for effect. Cotton will
go up instead of going down. It is indispen
sable to British prosperity. Other countries
need their share of this peace preserving
staple. The holders of cotton may dismiss
their fears. Foreign gold w ill come to their
doors to buy it ami at satisfactory figures.
—. •. -
The Vote of Georgia.
Our neighbor of the Conslilutionali.it says
the late vote for Presidential Electors shows
•laarly, that the people of Georgia did not
desire the election of either Breckin
ridge, Douglas, or Bfll. Still be suggests
that the Legislature should allow five votes
for Breckinridge, four for Bell, and one for
Douglas. To be consistent he should insist
upon the adoption of one of his other sug
gestions, that the vote should be cast for a
new man, or the election be allowed to go by
default.
We object to cither of these plans. The
election was conducted upon party plat
forms and principles. Let it he consummated
in the same way. That should not disturb
the harmony of all parties in a common re
sistance to Lincoln. If a majority of the
Legislature were favorable to Douglas, and a
plurality of voles had been cast for him, no
one can doubt that lie would receive the ten
votes of Georgia. So it would be in the case
of Bell. Pluralities elect in other States and
no one objects. In Georgia Breckinridge
beats Bell about eight thousand votes, lie
beats Douglas in round numbers forty thous
and. He lacks only two thousand and odd
votes of beating both together. The propo
sition comes with a bad grace from a Doug
las Democrat, to give Bell four votes, and
Douglas one, when the Douglas Democrats
had divided the Democratic party. The Coh
stitutionalist should see now its mistake, and
not seek to take from Mr. Breckinridge votes
to which he is fairly entitled. That paper
ys: May not her (Georgia) consenting to
cast hor Electoral votes, be construed into an
imjdied contract to abide the issue for the
next four years, and remain in the Union?”
Not at all, it will be only a consummation of
an election hcldon the 6th of November. Cast
ing the votes now, will be taken as a part of
a past struggle. It will mean that and no
more. But wo cannot understand the solici
tude of our neighbor on this point, when but
a few days since, he so earnestly urged that
it would be best to remain in the Union for
two years longer, and even intimated that it
might require four. No ! Let every Breck
inridge member of the Legislature vote for
the Electors favorable to Breckinridge and
Lano. Ir is due to justico and the public
sentiment of the State and the South.
.—
The Constitutionalist.
The vote given by the extreme southern
States, on the issue lately presented to them,
is equivalent to a proclamation in favor of a
dissolution of the Union.
[ Constitutionalist , 18tA instant.
That is a candid acknowledgement that
tho South is in favor of a dissolution of the
Union.
The question (slavery) must now remain in
Congress for continued exasperating discus
sion, as long as a Federal Congress exists to
dismiss it, both North and South having con
ceded to it jurisdiction over it.
That is a total misconception of the South
ern view. The people of the South have not
decided, by their votes, that Congress lias
jurisdiction over the question of slavery.
They have decided that when a Terriorial
Legislature shall fail to protect slave property,
it is the duty of Congress to protect it. In
another part of its article the Constitutionalist
speaks of the profligacy of the Buchanan
administration.” We refer to this simply to
say, in general terms, that the South owes a
debt of gratitude to Mr. Buchanan and his
administration, which it will he unable to
pay. He and his friends have been true to
the South in her contests for her constitu
tional rights. Mr. Buchanan, in all pro
bability, will live in history as the last of the
Presidents of the United States of America.
He will be chronicled us one of its best. His
tory will associate his name with its ruins,
but will preserve his reputation untarnished
as a national patriot and a friend to the con
tituiional rights of every member of the lie
public.
It is evident, front the whole tenor of the
article of the Constitutionalist under consid
eration, that it is opposed to secession, at
present, and prefers to wait for an overt act
*f aggression. It goes on to speak of the
rhe division
at the South; hT the public pro
perty, the army, the navy, the public lands,
, the arrangement of treaties, the national
debt,’ imagining that “the beginning of a
Southern Confederacy would be but the open
ing chapter of and
wrangles infinity *ojrc hara^ai*^
1 siion lrht* JkWted W
what does all thilkpean?
dvtlil ITWss as two, or four years
hence, upon dissolution, as now. Does the
writer mean, that during the two, or four
years longer in the Union, the Southern
States should he negociating with the Nor
thern a division of the public buildings, the
lands, the funds in the treasury &c.? Does
be mean, that during that time the South
should be negociating treaties with foreign
governments?
He certainly cannot. Hence, we infer that
lie seeks a prolongation of the time, for ac
tion, in the hope that political affairs may
take anew turn for the better, and existing
difficulties be altoge tier and permanently re
moved. We are led to infer this from one or
two passages in the article under review. We
quote as follows:
“The existing Confederacy, with all the
imperfections of its practical workings, has
thus far proved infinitely the best govern
ment known in the history of the human
race. The South has greatly prospered un
der it, and her people arc, us a body, at Ibis
moment, probably tlic most prosperous peo
ple on the globe. It would not be easy,
therefore, for the wit of their wisest states
men to improvise a government better adapt
ed to their wants and interests. The people
of Georgia should hear in mind that it is
much easier to tear down the present govern
ment than to erect anew one.”
“A thousand years scarce serve to make a State,
An hour may lay it in the dust.”
That is an appeal for the Union if it means
anything whatever. All things being ready,
after waiting two or font- years, the writer
says:
She can thus march out at her own good
time—like an army equipped for a triumph
ant inarch, with banners proudly unfurled and
lances couched—rather than as a disordered
host flying front anticipated attack, and leav
ing its baggage to be plundered by the ene
my.
Doubtless most of the readers of the Con
stitutionalist regretted to sec this paragraph
in tho article in question, because it is calcu
lated to encourage our Northern enemies to
count up on our divisions and to look to them
for our weakness. But few brave Georgians
or Southerners entertain the fear that upon
separation now, our people would bccomo “a
disordered host flying from anticipated at
tack, and leaving its baggage to be plunder
ed by the enemy ”
We now come down to tlic ltitU inst., and
find the following sentences in its issue of
that day :
There is no goad of necessity urging them
to precipitate themselves out of the Union.
The necessities that will force Georgia out of
the Union are plainly foreshadowed in the
distance, andean be contemplated in all their
bearings. But they are not immediately at
baud. They are at least two years oft'. Un
til the Black Republicans obtain control of
the legislative departments of the Govern
ment, which they cannot do earlier than two
years from the 4tli of next March, no en
croachment on the Constitutional rights of
Georgia, as specified in her platform of 1851),
is possible. Therefore, her honor and her
obligations to her sister States, and to her
own fame, do not require her secession short
of that period. The precipitate action of
South Carolina might drag her unprepared
into disunion, but such conduct would meet
with deserved protest from the best citizens
of both States.
If she were, ready to go out at an earlier
day, wc would not question the wisdom of
her acting more promptly. If she were in a
condition to secede to-morrow, and could do
so without very great injury to important
interests and investments, we would, from
the reluctant convictions of our judgment,
be an advocate for immediate secession.
In the very article from which the above is
taken we find our neighbor saying :
African slavery, though panoplied by the
Federal Constitution, is doomed to a war of
extermination. All the powers of a Govern
ment which has so long sheltered it will be
turned to its destruction. The only hope for
its preservation, therefore, is out of the
Union. A few more years of unquiet peace
may be spared to it, because Black Republi
canism cannot yet get full possession of every
department of the Government. But this af
fords to the South no reason for a moment’s
delay in seeking new guards for its future
safety.
Such is the reasoning of cool-headed men
in Georgia, who were a few days ago among
the most conservative of Unionists.
Our neighbor coins, in his own brain, and
writes, with his own hand, these words which
he says is the reasoning of cool-headed men
in Georgia, &c. Does he think as he makes
them think ? Let us see. He says:
The election of Mr. Lincoln to tlic Presi
dency, gives a tremendous onward impulse to
anti-slavery sentiment. So far from the pos
sibility of its being induce 1 to recede, its
steps are now nerved with new energy, and
soon its arm will be clothed with Hie huge
power of Executive patronage—a power that
permeates through every nook and corner
of the land—a power exercised not less by
seductive persuasions than by the intimida
tion of authority—a power not felt alone in
populous cities anil at commercial points,
where wealth and commerce concentrate —
but felt along the far stretching highways of
travel, and in remote recesses, wherever a
government contract is to be awarded, or a
government soldier is marched. What army,
flushed with long wished for victory, after
many years of toilsome struggle and reverses,
ever stopped its onward march when on the
very threshold of most tempting plunder?
Some of the Southern States see, in the
tremendous popular majorities which have
elevated Lincoln to the Presidency, the huge
mountainous wnves that are bearing down on
the South with resistless force, and if she su
pinely waits for the deluge, must cngulph the
whole social system of the South in the re
lentless waters of anti-slavery fanaticism.
With them the question is, secession Irotn
the Union, and a self-defending, homogene
ous Southern Republic: or submission to the
Union, and the fate of Jamaica and Si. Do
mingo.
The. conviction that this is the issue is in
eradicable. No soothing words, or honeyed
promises, from the lips of Mr. Lincoln him
self can up-root this conviction. He rides a
wave he cqnnot control or guide to conserva
tive results, even if so disposed. Or if lie
should, for his short term of office, check its
will glvo new fury,
and it will carry into the same office, four
years hence, a man of more revolutionary
ideas.
Then, why wait two years, or four, to tako
Uie position of independence. The North
will he stronger then, and the South weaker.
The evid.ntly, counsels his fellow
. citizenfcjfcbo the supposition that war will
dissolution. The South
preparation. IVliat will
the North he doing during the same time?
Will she uot, also, prepare for the conflict of
arms, aided, as the writer says, “with the
huge power of Executive patronage ?”
We trust the Constitutionalist will re-study
this great problem of Southern dosliny and
duty. Perhaps he will see that no more fa
tal policy could be pursued than the adop
tion of vacilating and temporising expedi
ents. The consternation which prevails at
the North, at the prospect of separation, re
sults from her want of preparation to meet it.
The secession of Southern States would be a
coup de main for which she is unprepared. It
is a strategic movement imperiously demand
ed by Southern danger. Now is the time for
action. Let the South clothe herself in the
robes of sovereignty at once, and independ
ancc will bo achieved without the music of
bugles or the thunder of cannon. Delay four
years, or even two, and it will be accom
plished, if ever, under the bloody auspices of
death-uealing^Mjfrrg^^"Ny
f WasUinston <'orrcspontlencc^^
Washington City, Nov. lli,
| 1 send you an article from the fiaslenij^M
gus, Portland Maine, which 1 think present J
the true state of things at tho North. Titus’
far there is not a particle of evidence that the
Black Republicans desire a continuance of
tho Union, unless in their programme. If
the South will give up slavery, they can
have p ace in the Uniou, but to expect arc
cognition of tlicir constitutional rights by
the Black Republicans, or a change of opinion
at the North which will defeat them, is to
count upon impossibilities. It is a very
mistaken notion that sonic entertain taut
the will give way.—
They are the party of the Pulpit and the
schools, and hence you must overcome
education before you can reach their pre
judices. Material interests and their jeo
pardy have no influence. But it is use
less to reason this question, I give you the
opinion of one who lives among them. It is
true, the paper has been Democratic, but
that does uot weaken the confession that they
arc now powerless at the North.
Hawk Eyk.
It is Time to Come to an Understanding. —
Dangers now threaten our Uniou greater
than ever before encompassed it. Every in
telligent person who lias chosen to study the
effects of abolition agitation in ilte light of
human nature, has become convinced of the
danger. 11c lias only to imagine himself a
southern man, as sincere, as conscientious,
as brave and as proud spirited as any at the
north, entertaining the sentiments (and pre
judices if you please) common to that sec
tion, and as ready to maintain his rights as
we arc to maintain ours, in order to appre
ciate the effect which the insulting and en
venomed tirades poured out upon them from
abolition throats, must have upon citizens of
the Seuth. He must be convinced that in
stead of being strange that they are now
preparing to go out of the Union, the greater
wonder is that they have submitted to the
vituperation, insults and bad faith so long.
This has been done on the part of the great
mass of Southern people only in the hope
that they should soon see the end of it. Is
this hope to be realized? Is there to be a
return to the friendly relations and kindly
spirit of earlier days ? Senator Wade, in a
speech in this city in 1855, said :
“There is no union now between us and
the South—the pretended union now existing
is all meritricious—the heart does not parti
cipate in it, and 1 believe, from all that I
have seen, and I am one of those who dare
speak what 1 believe—l believe that there
are no two nations on earth—not even the
Russians and the English at this day—-who
at heart feel more enmity towards each other
than the men of the North and the South.”
and there was far too much truth in the
statement —all the result of abolition vitupe
ration. Is this to he continued? Are our
Southern brethren to be constantly denoun
ced for everything bud, held up to scorn, rid
icule and contempt, and their constitutional
rights scouted in advance by the mouth
pieces of a dominant northern party? If
this is to be so, and tiie hatred which is thus
engendered is to be exhibited in the policy of
the party, what candid, fair minded man
could ask our Southern friends to submit to
it ? What man, witli a particle of spirit, will
say that he would, if a Southern man, tamely
accepts gibes and taunts and intermeddling
of that sort ? No one : especially when it is
considered that this thing has only to go on
for a time in order to excite servile insurrec
tion, and make a poverty-stricken Jamaica
of the now fruitful South. No one would do
it. Southern melt will not do it.
Tlic question, then, is—Do the majority of
the people of the North mean to countenance
and approve the exhibition of such a spirit
toward the South ? If they do, it is vain to
talk of the perpetuity of our Union. It can
not endure. If it survive this storm, its end
is not distant, l’ut it to vote to-day in the
South whether they would be in favor of con
tinuing in the Union on such terms, and the
response would be a unanimous No. The
Union could not have been formed in such a
state of feeling and it cannot long withstand
it. It is important, therefore, that wc should
come to an understanding on the subject. If j
there is to be no change for the better—if
the same hatred is to be fostered and festered ‘
without rebuke, let it be known. Tlic South !
may as well form an independent confedera
cy this year as next year or the year after—
thus save the necessity for any further abo- |
litioti gasconade—any lurtlter nullification of ;
the provisions of tlic Constitution, auy more
ridicule of patriotic men of the North and of
the South for endeavoring to “save the
Union” by fulfilling in letter and spirit the
conditions on whicii it was formed.
Now, is there any hope of abetter state of
things ? The conservative men in the Repub
lican party can alone answer. It is they on
ly who have the power to turn the scale. Will
they demand a change ? Will they say so to
the South, and thus give our friends there
who desire to preserve the Union, some
ground to stand upon? They arc now pow
erless, because they can hold out no promise.
The disuuionists say there is no hope of bet
ter things—all agree that separation is bet
ter than submission to ltlnck Republican pol
icy as it lms thus fur exhibited itself—amt
what answer can tho friends of the Union
g iv e thnt
it is not counterbalanced by pr jhabilities ?
Let the real Union men in the Republican
party then speak out. Let Mr. Lincoln, if
he does not intend to be an Aholition Presi
dent say so, and thus give the Union men
courage and weapons to meet their adversa
ries. Ifthe Union is worth shving, an effort
should be made now, and it is only Mr. Lin
coln and his followers that can, here at the
North, do anything. They can do much, do
all probably, and if they neglect the duty, on
them shall rest the responsibility. If they
will speak out, the Union men at the South
will be able to counteract the revolution now
in progress, and avert the calamity which
threatens.^
Northern Coercion of the South.
We have heard a great deal about the North
coercing the South. It is down-right foolish
ness. The North will be fortunate if she can
prevent a bloody revolution at home. We
make an extract from the New York IleraUl:
“ The movement that is now going on in
the South, in defence of what the Southern
people consider to be their indefeasible rights,
is preparing a financial and commercial re
volution in the North which will sweep a
flood of bankruptcy over it. It matters not
whether they are right or wrong, they think
they are right, and it is their acts, not the
principles on which their acts are founded,
that are producing the evil. The . black re
publican leaders and journals must ab andon
their tone of scorn and defiance towards the
South and its rights; the black republican
messes must recede from their fanatical war
upon Southern interests, or they will bring
disaster and ruin into our midst that will pro
duce revolution here. It is not the discus
sion of the political question of secession,
but it is a practical question of trade, work
anil wages. Are they prepared to meet this
in the midst of a half employed community ?
|fc^ni^ieT!lTca l go"T>eniocr4i. I,fn<rotlifc£v
K’ Home Organ.
Wr The election is over and Lincoln is elected,
by a larger majority of the popular vote than
was anticipated, and by the electoral vote of
every free State.
Thus, not only has the consummation
which the fire-eaters es the South have for
“years proclaimed as the inevitable prelude to
disunion been attained, but the job bas been
done so effectually, completely and emphati
cally, as to leave no doubt that the free peo
ple of the North meant they should be un
derstood. When eighteen millions of free
men speak as they spoke on Tuesday, they
make a noise that even the most stupid seces
cessionists cannot fail to hear.
Thus the people of the free North say to
the slSvc oligarchy, “We will endure your
insolence, suffer your tyranny, bear with
your assumption, no longer ! We have lis
tened to your threats, as insulting as they
were cowardly, of what you would do, if we
dared to carry out our convictions of right, at
the ballot box, and elect a man who would
not bow the knee to you, and who would place
your accursed institution of slavery where
the public mind would rest in the belief that
it would become finally extinct.
“You have sworn that if wc dared to elect
such a man you would dissolve the Union.
We have elected him, and now we want you
to try your little game of se ession. Do it, if
you dare! So long as you remain in the
Union, peaceably and decently, you shall en
joy your constitutional tights. But every
man of you who attempts to subvert this
Union, which we prize so dearly, will be hung
as high as Hainan. We will have no fooling
about this matter. By thk Eternal ! thk
Union must hk ihikskiiveii 1”
Such is the lecture read by the people of
the North to their Southern brethren on
Tuesday. And now what will the chivalry
do about it ?
Will they cat dirt? Will they take hack
all they have said about disunion, a Southern
Confederacy, the rights of the South, the
blood of tlieir enemies, and all that sort of
thing? What will the Yanceys, the Rhetts,
the Keiths, the Jeff. Davises, and all that no
ble army of traitors, do? To what dodge
wpl Wise, the doubty champion of the Hay
Stack war, resort, in order to cover his in
glorious retreat. Where is the army with
which lie was to march on Washington, and
seize the Federal city ?
The chivalry will cat dirt. They will back
out. They never had any spunk anyhow.
The best they could do was to bully, and
brag and bluster. John Brown and his sev
enteen men were enough to affright the
whole mighty Commonwealth of Virginia out
of its propriety, and to hold it as a conquered
province until recaptured by the Federal
troops, and to this day John Brown's ghost is
more terrible than an army with banners, in
the eyes of every Southern cavalier. These
knights of the Sunny South are just such
heroes as Sancho Panza was. The are won
derful hands at bragging and telling fantas
tical lies, but when it conics to action, count
them out.
As if to add the last cap-stone to this ab
surdity of disunion bluster, the telegraph
yesterday brought us the news that the Le
gislature of South Carolina on Tuesday elect
ed her Presidential electors, and they had
concluded to postpone arming the State until
tiny had ascertained that Lincoln was really
elected! Poor devils ! The smallest kind of
a knot-hole will be sufficient for them to,
|eraw^Hiimnodi^n(m
Wshinytun, Nov. 17.—Tho State Depart
ment lms received advice from Minister
Harris, dated Yedo, July sth. It states that
tho Japanese steamer Candinmnrrah had ar
rived trom San Francisco, and that on her re
turn voyage she was navigated by the Japan
ese alone. This is the first instance of a ves
sel, conducted solely by Asiatics, successful
ly crossing the great North Pacific Ocean,
and strikingly proves the Japanese to be so
capable of improvement that they might soon
place themselves at the head of Oriental en
terprise if they were allowed freely to culti
vate the great powers they possess. The
Tycoon had conveyed his thanks to Mr. Har
ris for the friendly and cordial manner in
which the Commander and officers of the
steamer were received by the authorities and
people of San Francisco, and particularly for
the complete repairs made to the vessel at
Mere’s Island, and the kindness and courtesy
of Commandant Cunningham. The report of
the officers of the steamer, and letters re
ceived from tlic Embassy with accounts of
their reception at San Francisco, and the
kindness shown to them by all classes of our
people, have produced a lively sensation, es
pecially mining the nobles heretofore op
posed to the treaty of Yedo.
Mr. Harris is of opinion that when the
Ambassadors return, their narration of travel
will lead to a better state of feeling on the
part of the Japanese towards us and towards
intercourse with foreign nations generally.—
Charleston Courier.
New York, Nov. 18.—The steamship Colum
bia, Capt. Berry, left this port with tile Pal
metto flag flying in proud defiance from her
mainmast. Three cheers for the Columbia
and Commodote Berry.
N. 11. Wolfe, & Cos., large flour and grain
dealers, have failed,
z'l'lie large manufactures have discharged
l£>st of tlieir hands. Some of our wisest
Bni predict a general crash.
V Dispatch to Char. I'our.
serial jjotires.
LOST— A Gold Breast-Pin, (Ma
sonic,) with the letter M and the Greek words
Alpha, Omega, engraved upon one side, and a
name upon the other. The finder will bo suita
bly by it at this office.
i^p'2o
AST
taclA(by a servant,) between
er’s and Mr. V. LaTaste’s residences in the county.
The owner, b * calling at this office, aud paying
for this advertisement, can obtain them.
nov2o ts
B©"People’s Loan Association.— Thesth
monthly meeting of this Association will bo held
at the City Hall TO MORROW (Wednesday)
EVENING, the 21st inst., at 7 o'clock.
EDWIN RICHARDS, Sec’y.
nov2o-2t
IIHAI) QUARTERS, )
Augusta Isd. Voi.. Battalion, >
Nov. 10, l *6O. j
Ail Election for a Lieut. Colonel,
to command this Battalion, will be held at the
Oglethorpe Infantry Drill Room on SATURDAY
EVEVING> Dec. Ist., next, at 7 o’clock.
By Order of
Capt. C. A. PLATT. Commanding.
Lieut. J. V. H. ALLEN, Adjutant.
nov!6-tf
®®“Removal. —The subscriber begs to in
form his customers, and the public generally, that
he has removed from his old store, opposite the Au
gusta Hotel, to the Store recently occupied by
O'DONOHOE WRAY, a few doors obovo tho
orders. >ho may
favor him with their patronage.
His Stock consists of choice old Brandies,
Wines, Whiskeys, Ale, Cider, and Segara. The
Montebello Champagne Wine constantly kept on
hand. THOMAS WHYTE.
sep29 ts
®S>“Oysters! Oysters!!—Fresh Fitz
gcrald’s Norfolk Oyters for sale, during the
w nter season, at the Augusta lee House, on
Campbell near Greene street, which T will sell as
low as anybody else.
Orders from the country (cash orders) will bo
promptly attended to.
oct 20-dlrn JOSEPII IIEITZMANN.
Setts. —We have just received
our supply of Onion Setts. Dealers supplied as
usual. PLUMB A LETTNER.
oct3l-t
Goats ! Goats! ! Goats !!—After the
15th day of SEPTEMBER inst., the City Ordi_
nance in relation to Goats running at large in tho
streets of Augusta, will be strictly enforced.
JOHN A. CHRISTIAN,
sepl-dtf City Marshal.
0T Augusta A Savannal& Railroad.
—On and after WEDNESDAY, October 3d, the
Evening Passenger train will leave Augusta at
at fifteen minutes past two P. M.
oct2-tf W. C. JONES, Agent
All Persons indebted tome, eith
er by note or account, will please call and settle,
as I wish to close up my old books, having formed
a co-partnership with John C. Ciikw, or the 10th
of last month. M. J. JONES.
oct4-tf
Dutch Bulbous Roots.— Now in store
Hyacinths, forty choicest varieties ; Tulips, fif
teen varieties ; Gladiolus, four varieties; Cro
cus, seven varieties j Imperial, five varieties;
Lilies, four varieties; Narcissus, seveu varieties,
etc., etc. Just received by
PLUMB A LEITNER,
oet2-tf 212 Broad street, Augusta, Oa.
Schol—Mrs. Mountjoy will re-open her
school for boys and girls, on the first Monday iu
October, at her residence on Reynolds street, be
tween Centre and Elbert. septlfi
GLOBE HOTEL,
AUGUSTA, GA.
AUSTIN MULLARKEY,
oct3o-tf PROPRIETOR.
FLOYD HOUSE,
MACON i GA.
\VM. DOODY,
nov4-ly Agent.
WILLIAM H. WHEELER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Augusta, Georgia
Offico, Corner of Washington and f/road-*tn
IS COMMISSIONER FOR
New York, Mississippi,
Connecticut, Florida,
Rhode Island, Tennessee,
Vermont. A'ihiin a. nuP-dfim
WILLIAM J. VASON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, has changed his resi
dence from New Orleans to Augusta, Ga
He has opened an office at the corner of Washing
ton and Ellis streets, where he can be consulted,
and his services retained to attend to any legal
busiuess in tho Circuit Court of the United .States
for the District of Georgia, in the Supremo Court
of this State, and the several Courts of tho coun
ties composing tho Middle District of Georgia.
sep4-ti*
P. 0. HARPER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
WEST POINT, GA.
sept2l ts
ASHTON & CORKER
Attorneys and councillors at
LAW, Waynesboro, Ga., will practice thoii
Profession in the Courts of the Middle District
and iu the Supremo Court at Savannah.
JOHN D. ASHTON.
jy!B-lv STEPHEN A. CORKER.
R. Toombs, I D. M. Dußose,
Washington, Ga. | Augusta, Ga.
TOOMBS & DUBOSE, •
A"I I Oft NICY S AT LAW , will practice in
the Counties of Richmond, Columbia, and
| Burke of the Middle, and Tallil'ero, Elbert, .Wilkes,
j Warren, Hancock and Oglethorpe of the North-
I ern Circuit. sep22-ly
JOSEPH GANAHL,
Attorney at law, Augusta, g.
will practice iq all the Courts of tho Middle
Circuit, and the United States Courts for the
Northern anil Sourtliern Districts of Georgia.
Office on Jackson street, opposite Warren Block.
aug29-lnt
G-EORG-IA
CASSIMERES.
x \m \
l SUPPLY v
EXCELLENT GOODS>
From the
Ivy Ivlills, OobU Go.,
JUST RECEIVED,
And for sale by
Jackson, Miller & Verderey,
novlS-d.ft 248 BROAD STREET.
SCHNEIDERS
RESTAURANT,
RE-OPENED,
Will'll! 14 all the GOOD THINGS of th
the season will be kept eoustnntlv on hand
.on-?'-”
THE MISSES SIDSWIGK'S
SCHOOL
Tb E-OPENED on MONDAY, Oct. Ist The
includes all the English
hraijßTes?eutiXtoaSk^ ,u r h Education, io-
with tho Fonch and fV’ n
The French Department will be unuer ttio sjnpor
vision of Prof. Raoult,
Tuition in English and Latin, $lO, sl2, and sls
per Term of Eleven weeks, payable in advance.
An extriijckarge t'l $1 for Fuel during the win
ter Term.
A Primary Department will be added to the
School the ensuing year. Tuition $8 per term.
School Rooms on Ellis street, in rear of the
Masonic Hall. sep9-d2m
Order !Vo. 10.
Head Quarters, i
10th Regiment, G. M., Nov. 12, 1800./
IJURSUANT to Orders of Brig. Geu. R. Y.
Harris, to organize the 10th Regiment, G. M.t
an election wi 1 be held at the United States
Hotel on MONDAY, December 10th, 1860, for
Lieutenant Colonel and for Major to command the
first and second Bata lions, 10th Regiment, G. M.
Lewis Levy, Esq., Edwin Richards, Esq., and
Mr. J. A. Van^Winkle, arc hereby appointed man
agers to Superintend said election.
J. L. KNIGIIT,
novl2-td Col. 10th Regiment, G. M.
INCORPORATED 1819.
Gliar-ter LPerpet/uaA.
/ETNA INSURANCE COMPANY
HARTFORD, CONN.
CAPITAL $1,500,00
SURPLUS 550,000
ASSETS 2,194,000
This Company is well known to this city, and
throughout the Upion, as the leading Fire Insu
rance Company. It lias earned a reputation for
prompt attention to business, and an honorable,
liberal and equitable performance of its obliga
tions, unequalled by any other Company.
Duringjoijy-one yean*_this Qoaiftujfty lias luffrr
$13,000,000 losses.
li. 11. BROADNAX, Agent,
for Augusta and vicinity,
oct3o-3m opposite Bridge Bank Building.
MACHINE
Cracker Bakery.
rpHE subscriber, having added several im
I provements to his BAKERY, is now pre
pared to furnish the community with any and
everything in the Bakerj liue, at the lowest
prices.
On Hand, Made every Day,
Mil!! BREAD.
Crackers— Biscuit-
Butter, I Soda,
Extra Butter, Boston,
W liter, | Wine,
Fancy, I Milk,
Ginger, Seed,
Lemon, | Sugar.
Pilot Bread.
Fine CAKES and PIES, Fresh every day, of
all kinds. JAMES BOWEN,
No. 311 Broad Stroet,
oct2s-2m Augusta, Ga.
WM. B. JACKSON &C0 V
FACTORS
AND
Coinmissiou Merchants,
CORNER BA Y AND DR A YTON STREETS,
(llp-Stairs— A Freeman.)
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
WM. B. JACKSON,
Formerly with Cupt. Jno. W. Anderson.
F. M. MYRELL,
I.ato Suporintondant Florida Boats'.
RI'JTvK TO Capt. Jno. W. Anderson, Sa
vannah, Ga.; E. F. Ki.NCHt.Er, Augusta, Ga.:
Claghorn & Cunningham, Savannah, Ga.; Swa*
A Bro., Ferraadina, Fla.; Boston A Vii.i.alon
ga, Savannah, Ga.- Bisbee A Canova, Jackson
ville; Erwin & Hardee, Savannah, Ga.; H. L.
Bart, Palatka, Fla.; Jas. 11. Raymond, 187 Wa
ter street, N. Y.; Simon Merritt, llawkinsville.
Agents for Steamer EVERGLADE.
“ “ “ TSAAC SCOTT.
“ “ . “ OAK.
OCtl l-diwl
IRISH WHISKEY
I HAVE received via Galway, in bond, two
Puncheons of “Meehan’s pure Irish WHIS
KEY, which is now in store, a few doors above
the Planter’s Hotel, Broad street. Those wish
ing winter supplies, will please send in their or
ders early to tho subscriber.
octli-dtf THOMAS WHYTE.
DENTISTRY.
F'’ OFFER MAN, Resident DENTIST, would
. respectfully inform the public that he is
doing his work at New York prices. All work
warranted. Give him a call. Office, No. 284
Broad Street. iy22-.y
JOHN MILLED.GE7jL7 ~
Attorney at law, whi practice in
the Counties of tho Middle Circuit.
Office No. 3 Warrer Block/} J 0ct12~17