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I rout the llahimore American.
CHANGES Os OPINION.— Our liif 11*1 I
over till* water, Mr. Bull, isiit; liis I
large eyes with a sort of doubt foundered
expression, at tl>e bold demonstration id 1
tlie Aniei inui branch of the family. Mr.!
Bull is pii7.sr.led. I; never entered into
Ins head that there was or that there could j
he, anything out of England worthy to
he tit all compared with Hugh tad’s own.
Yet in spite of tli.it conviction so pro*
foiintity entertained, lie is obliged to nc-j
knowledge himself beaten on Itis own!
ground and in his own waters by repub
lican couipciitoig w limn lie lias been nc- j
customed to regard as upstarts, only good j
enough to be laughed at.
it is with a mingled air of wonder anti i
chagrin that Mr. Bull looks urronnd him!
and scent to ask whether this unpleasant |
state of things is a reality or merely m j
disagreeable illusion. He ha ait yet a- i
wakened to a full consciousness ; he hall j
indulges the hope that there is some mis
take iri the business. Some of liis statis
tical people have indeed told him, front
time to little, that the progress of the A
inericans in their career of commercial
prosperity gave single warning of their
approaching siipremiry on the high seas;
that the aggregate of American tonnage
was already but little below that of Ureal
Britain, and coasting trade it was far be
yond. lie tins been further told that
while the population of die United Slates
had increased one third during Uin last
ten 3ears, the population of (ireat Brit
ain, so far from increasing at all, had fal
len off nearly otic million.
Tl ■is information was not gratifying to
Mr. Bull; and to relieve his mind he went
to the Crystal Palace and had a chuckle
over the great Exhibition. But even
this pleasant recreation was tiisimbtt!
for one of his own journals in Loudon
found occasion to make remarks of the
following kind:
“Events are daily orcuring which w ill
induce the enlightened British to look
back with shame upon the race of book
makers who libelled the Americans, and
were Applauded and laughed with the
echo in this country. Tills year the U*
j niletl States have beaten England m two
of her pet patent superiorities. />
so generally btferv*-ul, that no English
man though of a (.'tAjbi alum-; it, that wc*
built the best yachts in the world, and
constructed the most useful agricultural
impliments. Yet, the crack yachts of
the crack English yacht club have been
outsailed, with every thing in their favor,
by a Yankee shoonfcr ; and a Yankee im
pliment maker, has proceeded an ngri
culltiria! machine for reaping fields which
excels everything of the same kind ever
attempted in england, and in woftder anil
skill of construction is thought the “clev
erest” agricultural piece of .machinery
yet iirtrodured anywhere. The “Amer
ica” is an incidental contribution to the
general competition of all nations, with
which we have been bored in 1851; and
so far, site lias won a prize which it is dis
graceful to the Eugli-h to have thus wres*
led from them.
But M’Cormack’s reaping machine is
special to the great cxihibition ; and ac
companying Mr. M Cor mack’s triumph,
are consult ration which no proper Yan
kee will overlook, /mtneiise has been
the ridicule heaped upon that portion of
the Crystal palace territory which waves
the dag of the States. The paucity of j
the North American ‘show* has been re- j
garded as evidence of North American
inferiority ; and so it is as respects ibe ftl- j
tigree piienomina which constitutes the
great exhibition, ’ an absurd aggregated \
‘oy baz trr. But it is perfectly evident
that of all the pralical re.-ults ofihe palais;
Paxton, McCormick’s machine is . the j
greatest. 1 1 will produce no revolution, J
hut it will produce a great change in the j
great areno of labor: and beyond all;
question, no other ‘article’ exhibited in.
Hyde Park will produce any change j
whatever. If a good ‘show’ consists of a,
use ltd di-play, then i- the show of the;
States by far the best in any of the for- 1
eigo ‘courts of the ehiystai palace’.
At the last accounts Mr. Bull was ini
the dumps. He does not know what the |
world is eonieing to. Evidently times!
are not as they used to be ; there must
be something wrong somewhere ; (his i
the opinion vaguely entertained, lie
would not be surprised now if beer
should lose its last and turn to cider in
its native pewter.
To add to the perlexity in which Mr.
Bull’s ideas are involved, another one of
liis London journal’- an old one, and a-
English as Mr. 801 l himself, the Spring
ing nod Mrrrhaiilile G iZ"lt*', in fuel,
finds itself oblige I to take nonce of the
wonderful advances made by the United
Stales of late years, in the acquisition of
territory and the development of the gold
mines of California. The Republic
stretches h**r triden over both ocean* !
And behold the enterprise of her during
sous ! Fitey at nothing; they fear noth
ing ; they are foremost wherever tin y go,
and turn everything to useful account.
The Gaztie looks at the subject in n com
mercial point ‘of view, mid admits (lint
the snveigntv ol the. seas must come into
our hands. /1 say s
‘Bit if the A tie! iritis are neqniiiiig
A
ten itory and wealth, they at the same
tune, acquiring people to occupy the one
and to profit I>3- the other. The emgra
tion brm.ghl about by the necessities
and di-traction of Europe is another
source which is promoting the aggrtin
! disinent of she United Stales. \Ye have
’ no .1* sire at .present, to enter upon any
quo-lion ofdi-puted policy ; hot we wish
record our opinion, that the empire (j the
reus muni, Os ire lung, be ceded to Amiri’
rif, its preserving enterprise, its great
commerce. am! its accruing* wealth, are
certain to si cure this ptize: nor will
England be in a situation to dispute it
with Iter. Witt-out this crow uihg capi
tal to its power, tin* onward march of U
nited States to what we believe will he
overwhelming greatness, might not be so
speedily accom.jlUUc I ; but America, as
tlie mistress nf'tlie organ, must overstride
liie civilized would.’
Tin? recent > ictory of the ya* lit Amen
[ ca over the swiftest of British vessels and
jin British water, maybe regarded as a
| significant omen. It was no accidental
!\ ictory. Mr. Bull however, does not
understand how it happened.
CAHOLI X A DIC T A T/ON.
The people of Georgia cannot be too
tie* ply impressed with the importance of
the pending election, h will not only
‘ettle the question whether the Stales will
remain in the Union, but w liether lu-r peo
ple are to elect their own rulers in.'lnetic
ed by the dictation of other Stales.
Ever since the opening of the present
campaign, Georgia has been completely
overrun by political missionaries from
Carolina, who ate openly engaged in
electioneering for McDonald. These
gentlemen are not particular as to the
kind ol argument used. To the Union
rnou they say, ‘ ifCobb is elected Caro
lina w ill c( Plainly secede.” To the Fire
Eaters, they declare tnat, “ if McDonald
is chosen, Carolina w ill go out of the Un
ion in ninety days ! !’’
These arguments, we are informed,
hate frequently been used by the same
persons on the same day, and sometimes
in the same conversation. The appeal 1
in the Union men is ;m insult to their itjJ?
teiligence and common sense. Does any
.man suppose for a moment that Carolina
undertake to quit tin* Union because
Georgia Mr. Radi’s bti
glemun iu tlie Executive Chair ? Her
people are not ailowed to fhoose their
own Governor, /s it iiotjthe height of
impudence for them to undertake to dic
tate to the free-inen of Georgia w 110 they
slut I! select to rule over them.
/f there were no other reason tinder
Heaven for the election of Mr. Cobh, this
ought to he regarded as sufficient. This
insolent dictation ought to be promptly
rebuked. If Carolinians are sincere in
the argument, they ought to be given to
understand at once, that their ‘ embrace
is death” to any public man in Georgia.
We trust the Union men of the State will
arouse themselves from their lethargy,
ami repel the indignity thus offered.
The appeal to the Fire Eaters, how
ever, has in if much more of reason, and
is much more likely to be sincere. The
distinionists of Carolina have suspended
their last hope upon the election of Mc-
Donald. Alabama and Mississippi have
built refused co-operate with them. They
are therefore anxious for McDonald’s elec- ‘
lion. Some of them when closely press
ed, openly acknowledge that they desire
hi- success, because they know lie sympa
thises with them, and because they are
assured tiiat he, if elected, will aid them
in a conflict with the General Govern
ment.
This is doubtless tiie true secret of tile
undue anxiety which the Carolinians are
are now manifesting in behalf of the suc
cess ol McDonald. We sincerely trust
that the people of Georgia have too much
state pride, to much patriotism, to allow
themselves to be thus either cheated or
bullied into any particular policy. If
Carolina is thus insolent and dictatorial
ly in the Union w hat would she be out of
it ? Is it not time for the reflecting peo
ple of the State to look this matter dis
tinrtlv in the face, and frame their course
aceordin fly. We beg them to consider
it well before they cast their votes on the
first Monday in October.
SiNGUi.Ait Geological Fact. — At
Modehti, in 7t;dv within a circle of four
miles around the city, wherever the earth
and a workman arrive at the distence of
sixty-three feet, they come to a bed of
chalk, which they bore with an auger
five f’etl deep. They then withdraw
from the pit before the auger is removed,
and upon its extraction, the water bursts
up great violence, and quickly fills the
well thus made, the supply of water being
| aliened neither by rains nor dioutlt-, at
I die debth of founten feet are found the
ruins of mi uiieent city, bouses, paved
j streets, ami itiosiae wink. Below this n
gniti, i* a layer of earth* and tit thirty-six
feel walnut trees are found entire, and
with lee vs and walnuts still upon them.
At 28 feet soft chalk is found, and below
this vegetables, trees and living anmuls
as before.
GIT” “ Mr. tio you want to hire a nice
house today?’ AtwV'c house? Oh,
\<•. ; budding to keep cool in,”
ti! Rjonrimssf. geo2mn,
L\ B VOIAUBLOOD, EIHTOR. ~
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1851.
e - —lfg||p
Agents for (he South-West Georgian,
Spencer Caldwell, Fori dailies, Ga
Jeter A. Hogue , war Americas, do.
J. P. Gaui.den, Pain bridge, do.
Col. Wit. T. Prn.ciNS, Cuthbert, do.
Cl. Caritheus, Esq. Cuthbert, do.
Gilbert M. Stokes, Slade, Lee co. do.
Dr. Win. M. Stokes, Dooly co. do.
M. L. Holman, Pro oksnilie , Slrw'rt do.
A. A. Blakely, Griffin, Pike co. do.
John YV. Guiffin, Griffin, do.
J. TANARUS, May, Franciwille, do.
W. J. Parker, Ghermbu. Lee Cos., do.
A. J. Williams, Agent for Sumter co.
Rediti-tion in the terms of the
South-West Georgian.
After the first day of October the Geor
gian trill be furnished to subscribers
at the following rates : .
SI.OO far 6 months, if paid in advance, 1
125 “ “ if not paid in adrffcfccjJ
2.0 ) for 12 months if advance,
2,50 “ “ if nojLaaii] in ‘advance,
iiithiccnienwlo Clnbs.
Five Copies 6 montlii for $4,00 in advance,
Ten Copies “ “f “ 7,00 “
Five Copies 12 months “ 8,00 “
Ten Conics* “ 44 15,00 “ ffi
Fifteen Copies 12 mo. “ 20,00 “ ■
Wejhavo been induced to offer the above
terms in order to increase the circulation of
our,paper, and for that purpose we earhstly
soMcit the co-operation of our fiicnds. If
we meet with sufficient encuragement, we
intend getting new material in a few months
and enlarging onr paper.
Cy* The Election returns so far as
heard from is favorable to the Union par
ty. In this Distiict the whole Union
Ticket is elected. And Cobb’s majori
ty will be from 12 to 15,000
ELECTION"NEWS.
Sixty-nine counties beard from. Cobb
fifty three counties bv a majority
of 14,033. McDonald carries sixteen
counties’ by an aggregate majority of 2,-
235—givitur Cobb a clear majority thus
ar of 11,848 votes.
Twbnty six counties to hear from near
ly all of which w4ll give majorities for
Cob!). The Senate will stand about 10
Disunion t 037 Union, the House3o Dis
union to JO2 Union.
To our Subscribers. —You mu-t ex
cuse the late appearance of our paper
this week. Our editor is absent from
home, and also, one of our bands was
taken ill on yesterday, which has threw
us back considerably.
\Ve would cite your attention to Mr.
M. H. Meyer’s advertisement in an oth
er colum. He has opened anew store
and is now ready to trade with all who
will give him a call.
Banlu & Co’s. Baot and Shoe Store.
YVe would call attention of our readers
to the Advertisement of Messrs, Banks
lx Cos. YVe have examined their Stock
of Boots and Shoes and priced them—
they are an excellent article and decided
ly the cheapest we have ever seen offered
for sale in a Southern market. Messrs.
Banks Cos. manufacture the most of
their Boots and Shoes themselves, and
those that they do not, they have made to
order. Every body will do well to cull
and see for themselves.
DONEY Iz CO.
YVe would call the attention of onr
readers to the Advertisement of Messrs.
Doney &; Cos., who have on hand a large
Slock of Dry Goods ami Groceries, and
no doubt will sell as Cheap lot Cash as
they can be purchased in any Southern
market.
Call and examine the Slock of Doney
&, Cos. before purchasing elsewhere, and
that will enable all to judge lor
selves. *
Cuba. —The following, says the Na
tional /nttlligencer, is an extract of a let
ter from a gentleman in New York, whose
correspondence in England is fiom the
most respectable and well informed sour
ces. He says :
‘ 1 have a letter by the British steamer
which states that Spajn, France, and En
gland arenegoting a Treaty respecting
the guaranty of Culm. The conditions
are that Cuba shall have a Local Legis
-111 re—a Representation in the Cortes at
Madrid—ami that provisions shall he
made for the gradual abolition of slavery
in the /stand. I consider the information
very reliable.*
I Accounts from Jefferson city Mis
jsonri, report the cholera ns prevailing to
j a ('out-idi 1 able extent, mushing much a
t ‘atni among the inhabitaii's,
Singular and Fatal accident. —A
young man living.in Suffield, Connecti
cut, went iuti) a steamer, a short time
‘since, in company with someone or two
friend* to bathe. After diving seveal
j times anil rmaiuing some time in the wa
iter, he concluded, to come out ‘after ta
lking one more dive.’ By way of ad
ding a little variety to the operation, he
made this last dive widt his hat on; and
the result was, that as lie plunged into
J the water, the elasticity of the air contain
ed in the hat was such as to force his head
suddenly to one side, with such power as
to break his neck. He lived long enough
to make a sign in the water, to his com
panions, who brought him out and con
veyed him home, where he died shortly
after.
‘short SPEECH.—GOOD EXAM
PLES.
Judge Duncan, in a recent address dug
liven'd at Clarksburg, Va., on histfflHj
as commissioner from the great Jpondou
Exhibition, thus refers to his the
British Parliament and tlmg|Kurts of
Justice :
“I was present on in the
House of Commons, ifben a measure
came up, which whole finan
cial policy of tlia*\government, and the
state and conditWi of all the industrial
classes. It w’i® debated by the prime
Minister, Lord John Russell; the Chan
cellor of j4*e Exhequire, MrD’lsraeli;
many others cf the leading
tnembers. The debate opened at six o’-
clock, P. M., and closed at 12, w hen the
vote was taken and the question settled.
Thus, in a debate of six hours, a great
measure was disposed of, after a discus
sion so full, that every one present was
satisfied that all had been said, an both
sides, that the subject required. Yet a
measure, of a similar character, in (lie A
merican Congress, could not have been
disposed of under six weeks’constant dis
mission. I was forcibly struck w ith the
adherence of the English speakers to sub
ject of debate. There was nothing ex
traneous or redundant; no flourishing or
ornament; buy which seemed to charac
terize the speaking particularly, was their
plain, particular good sense, and an abil
ity for condensation.—Yet they are in
some respects, not good speakers. Their
manners are cold, without action or flu.
ency. They hesiiate and sinmer, and
frequently seem to be at a loss.
“In courts of justice, the same brevity
prevails, in the of the Barristers,
that distinguished # the speaking m the
House of commons ; and the Judges, who
seemed to be a learned, dignified and
hard-working set of men, deliver their 0-
pinions so conclusively, and yet so dis
tinct and clear, that the minds of the most
fordinary persons present can understand
them.,’
Were this example adopted in the A
merican Congress and American Courts,
it would be of inestimable value to the
administration of government and of jus
tice.
VARIETIES.
Fontenelle, at the age of 97, after saying
many amiable and gallent thing's to a
beautiful 3 oung lady, passed before her,
without seeing her, to place himself at ta
ble.
‘See,’ said the lady, ‘how I otnflit to
value your gallantries; you pass without
looking at me.’
‘Madam,’ replied the old man, ‘if I had
iooketl at you, I could not have passed.
A sudden gust of wind took a parasol
from the hand of its owner, and a lively
Irishman dropping his hod of bricks,
caught the parachute, and presented it to
the loser.
‘Faith, madam,’ said he, as lie did so,
‘if you were as strong as 31111 are hand
some it would not have got away from
you.’
‘Which shall I thank you for first, the
service or the compliment ?’ asked the la
dy, smilingly.
‘Troth, madam,’ said Pat, again touch
ing the place where once stood the brim
of what was once a beaver, ‘that look of
your beautiful eye thank me for both.’
The Christiana Outrage.— The Phila
delphia North American states that on
Monday next Judge Kane, will, at the
suggestion of the United States Attorney
for the Distritl of Eastern Pennsylvania,
charge the grand jury of the United states
upon the law of treason ; nntl that it is the
intention ol the district attorney then to
send bills of indictment to the grand jury
ngunsi all the persons chaged with partic
ipating in the late unfortunate outrage at
Christiana. If true bills should be found,
they will be certified the United States
Circuit Court by the United States Dis
trict Court, and will be tried at e term of
that Court which commence on tile 6th
day of October next.
Refering to the same subject, the Phil
adelphia Ledger of Tuesday has the fol
low ing paragraph ;
‘lmportant Disclosures anticipated. —
A young man was examined yesterday
before Commissioner Ingraham, who is
understood lo have made some important
disclosures in reference to the origin of
and actors in the late disturbances at
Chiistiano, which resulted in the death
of Mr. Gorsucli and the wounding of
others.- The examination was private.-
The witness will detained until the trials
of the persons charged with the outrage
referred to shall take place.’
The late Gen. Fragay. It has been
mentioned in various accounts of the Lo
pez expedition that Gen. Pragny was bad*
ly wounded at the battle of Las PouMf
He was left there in the Hospital Jm hen
the serviceable men of Lopez jJm.—
The Spanish troops soon jJgf entered,
and massacred every man ®the wound*
ed except Pragay, who sc* mg them en
ter the Hospital, blew hijiflkn brains out
w ith a pistol. TLp’ statement of the
manner ol his dead® contained in a nar
rative of the eiJSedilion, by one of its
we find in the Washing
of Thursday ; —Among the
]ms or, 3 massacred on this occasion, were
4psptaine Goti and Brigham, and Lieu
fPmtnts Dunn arid Ciley, Captain Ellis of
Washington city, was saved from the
same fate only by the extraordinary faith
fulness and preservance of Lieutenant
Thomason, ol Dallas county, Alabama
who carried him from Las Pozas in his
arms, - when the expedition left tlie place.
Both Capt. Ellis and Lieut. Thomason
are among the surviorsuow on their wa)’
to Spain.
The Victims of the Lopez Expedition.
—A letter received in litis city from Rob
ert H. Ellis, a captain in the last expedi*
tiou of Lopez against the Island of Cuba
and who is now a prisoner at Havana,
states that amongst the many promising
young men who have lost their lives in
that unfortunate enterprise arc Beverly
Waugh, formerly of this city, and a son
of Mr. Gustavus ‘Harrison, of George
town.
We are reminded, by hearing of the
above letter, of the propriety of calling
upon those concerned as chiefs in getting
up the expedition to publish an authentic
list of all the persons who proceeded to
Cuba as members of it. In the case of
at least one of the young men above mim
ed as having been killed in battle, his pa
rents, as we are informed, were not aware
that lie had left New Orleans, anti sup
posed him to be yet engaged there in the
line ol business. The parents of others
who were killed in skirmishes with the
Spanish troops and the peasantry are no
doubt not only ignorant, but auspicious
of their misfortune.
Oftfife number who embarked in the
Pampero, which has been variously stat
ed at from four'hundred to five hundred
we yet know positively of less titan one
half—the fifty who were executed at Ha
vana, and the hundred and fifty who are
notv prisoners. All the rest have most
probably perished, and it is due to their
friends and relatives that their meianchol
ly fate should be madeknown.
The Union Soi.d. —Mrs. Parting
ton, on being told that Mr, Ritchie had
soultl “The Union,” exclaimed, Alas!
alas! I feared lie would do something
awful when 1 heard that Congress had
dejected the bill to identify him ! / wond
er if he sold the people with it, ami if I
have got to become a nigger slave ? 1 1
so, /shall emulate to the South, where
they know hntv to treat the poor critters.
And Mrs. Parting sighed deeply and said
no more.
Another New Store*
InCabani's Building,
Oglelhot'iic. G:a ,
THE Subscriber takes this Method
of informing the Citizens of Ogle
thorpe, and the Surrounding Country,
that he has just opened, and offers tor
sale, Itis well assorted Stock consisting of
DRY GOODS, R-ady made Clothing,
Saddlery, Truks, Valise’s, and almost
anything that can he called Ar, usuly
kept in a Dry Good Store.
M. H. MEYER, Agt.
October, 10, 1851. 26 3m.
Georgia—Msicon county.
Mary L. L. Slappy
Y V applies to mo for letters of Admin
istration on tin* estate of Wm F* Slappy lute
of Macon County deceased:
These ara therefore to cite end admonish
all and single the kindred and creditors of said
decease ! to be and appear at my Office with
in the time prescribed by Law, to show cause
if any they have or can why said letter should
not be granted.
W. W. CORBITT, C. C. O.
October, 10111, 1851. 26 Im
Georgia—Macon county,
-¥7-mfHEREAS George 11. Sloppy np
ianship for the Minot flnldien of Jasper J.
Slappy deceuscd : --w
‘These ate therefoie to cite and admonish
all and singular the kindred and creditors ,q 1
said deceased to he and appear at my Office
within the time prescibed by Law, to show
cause if any they, have or can why said let
ter should not be granted.
W. W. CORBITT, C. C. O.
October, 10th 1851, 26 lib
Jewelry.
A FINE lot of Jewohy jest received and
for sa 1b by, KA U FMAN &. BR O.
Oglethorpe, Oct. 10,1851. 26 if.
Over 10,000 Pairsofl
BOOTS & SHOES*
Keep it before the People that ‘■
Mil# kU\
ON SUMTEaJsTRF.PT j
JHL£, V £ TjJr' Wo doors f0.,1
Ml. y&Co., a „.i k '; I
mg conStaiSW n hand the lartrest and k ■
STOCK OF BOOTS AND SHOEsI
ever offered ill South-Western Georgia *1
large portion of which is of their own m, 1
nfaclure, and warranted not to rip, consistin' l
of all qualities and prices; 2,000 pairs h o i/l
made Negro Shoes, double soled; ] oml
pairs and Kip Sewed and Pegged Boots'-.I
250 pairs Men’s Double-soled \Vater-P r ’ 0 7f|
Bools; 500 pairs single and Double soled I
Calf Brogans ; 1,500 pairs Ladies’ Leather!
Cloth, Morocco and Enameled Bootees and!
shoes; 1,500 pairs Misses’ and Youths’ Boots
and shoes, all kinds ; 1,500 pairs Boys’
Kip and 1 hick Boots and slices ; 500 pad.
Men’s Home-made Double soled Black Bro.
gans; 250 pairs Boys’do. ; 300 pairs ge,,.
tinmen's and Ladies’ Rubber Over shoes’
800 pairs Nothern Negro shoes at 90c. ;-I
10,000 lbs. Sole Leather, Crlf, Lining and
Binding Skir.s, Lasts, Shoe Thread, Pegi (
Shonniakers’s ‘Fools, &.c.
All we ask of Planters and others is to ex.
amino onr Stock before they purchase, hj
we expect to sell exclusively for CASH,
which will enable us to sell lower than any
house that does a credit business.
Give us n Call!
And if we can’t sell we will charge noth.,
ing for showing onr Stock. Any amour! (if
BEEF HIDES taken in Exchange An shots
or Leather.
Oglethorpe, Oct. 10;h, 1851. 26 6m
Liquor !
L \RGE quantity of Liquors, consist
rue ing of Brandy, Rum, Gin, Whisky,
Port, Madeira, and Champaign Wines, all
of the best quality, just received and for sale
by KAUFMAN & BRO.
O -letliorpe, Oct. 10, 1851, 26 if
Cigars.
A LARGE lot of fine Cigars just re
ceived and for sale cheap bv,
KAUFMAN &. BRO.
Oglethorpe, Oct. 10,1851. 26 ts
® UfJAR, Coffee, Syrup, and Molasses,
Ist received and for sale low bv,
KAUFMAN. eV BRO.
Oglethorpe, Oct. 10, 1851. 26 ts
pTjpOOTS, Simas, Hals, Gaps of eveiv
JaLia? varietx just leceived and for sale In,
KAUFMAN & BRO.’
Oglethorpe, Oct. 10, 1851. 26 if
Fi LADY made CLOTiil \G, a verv
Ilk I ngfc assortment just received and for
sale by, K AUFMAN & BRO.
Oglethorpe, Oct* 10,1851. 26 ts.
DRY GOODS ofall desi^aip - ions, juct
received and A.r sale bv
KAUFMAN &. 800.
Oglethorpe. Oct. 10, 1851. 26 if
To the People of
South-western Georgia.
Remember, that wTu n you come to trade
i hat money saved is money made.
DON BY &. CO., have
„JPjsL just received a large lot ol FALL
& WINTER GOODS, of every vai ici \ .
Also a splendid assortment of
Heady Made Cotliiiigv
.list's, Caps, Boots, shoos Ac.
All of which they will sell cheap enough to
enable the purchaser to save half his money.
They also have on hand a. large quantity of
Choice Groceries,
whirl) they will sell very low. We* would
therefore say to tlie public.
Call in, before you father go
To trade with Greek or Jew,
And you wiN find that Dom-y St Cos.
Con sell cheap bargains too.
DONEY & CO.
Oglethorpe, Oct, 10,1851. 26 6m
Family Supplies.
U GAR, Cos flee*, Flour, Tobacco &c.,
constantly on hand and for stile bv,
DONEY &CO.
Oglethorpe, O*. 10, 1851. 26 6m
Shoes for the Darkies.
/$ U.iirs of well made Negro
shoes, just received and for
sale by, DONEY & CO.
Oglethorpe, net. 10, 1851. 26 6111
SOUTHWESTERN RAIL ROAD.
yCIFI A DAILY TRAIN for
iaaaigM 21. Passengers and Freight
leaves Macon at 6-2 A. M.— Arrives at
Oglethorpe at ! 1-2 A. M.—Arrives at
Macon at 3-2 P. M. Connecting each
way with the Central and Macon YA’es
tern trains, and the Tallahassee Mail
Stage Line. Passengers dine at Foil
Valley at 1 I*2 P. M.
GEO. \V. ADAMS, Sup.t. a YV. R. R.
Oglethorpe, Oct. 10, 1851. 26 ts
■W Notice.
rpitK South Wdtorn Kuifryad Company, winlies tn
■Mll/tr. until ti.ju lstofjanltoiry next, twenty fivo Ne
groes for repairs! onjhe Hoad; for ligisen dolUts
; punnnnth vviil be paiSathry will also tie fed and clbthPJ.
GEO YV. ADAMS, Snpt S. YV. R. R.
i CV'e’tliorpe. Octebea W, 1151. SKJ if