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OFFIiUCITIf AND COIXTY JOIIX \L
D N MARTIN DR.M DEaVKHPORT
KD■r o H t .
OKIKKIN.ua., (At. 24. :t(. e
“ I Thank Thkk not f**h tuat vVi.uii."
—The Atlanta Era , of » recent date, in re
•errins to what a Washington e« rraspondent
of a Radical paper had said torn Ling John
son's recon.mending to the Southern States
the adoption of the Cooaiitutiooal Atnend
meat, says :
(>ur opinion is, if that lie considered worth
anything, that when President John-on ac
quiesces in the adoption of the atueudment,
lie will do it under protest.
Seo her* ! our good Allan's friend, we do
not )>ke that word “ protest ” at all, at all !
We are all trying to get up our size to the
dimensions of Andrew Johnson's “policy.”
With a few of ua, it is a tremendous tight
sqtiM.sc to grow that much : —but it anew
Isyer or so is to be added on*— and who can
tell where the !a\ eting proce-s is to stop ?
though under protest, ire cannot grow an
other inch. Withdraw that word “protest'
and instead put “fiit justitia ruat cad jm,’’
lor Johnson's motto, and we wiil aii follow, if
even to the death. Be it everywhere agreed
among osimlim lLat the President, as Our
leader, is to yield no more to the Radicals,
whether under protest, or not under protest.
What good, lorsooth, will it do you and me,
and all of us, if President Johnson in his
powci letsnrss does protest, when we are all
periahing in dungeons, or in exile, or swing
ing from the gallows 7
C it Him Loose and send Him Adrift
—Tt is stated that the father of lion. Grant,
though Postmaster at Covington, Ky., and
drawing a salary of some two thousand dol‘
I are a year, is an out-and-out Radical, and
was trying to m :ke a Radical speech in Cin
cinnati, the day befote the late election in
Ohio. President Johnson would raise him
self a thousand per cent, in our estimation
if he would seize this old babbler by the
nape of his neck, politically speaking, and
lift him to such a height out of those post
oflioe boots, that the fall therefrom, if it did
not kill him, would at least tea. h him to
keep his old month shut. We never saw
bo pretty a chance as is here offered for the
President to show that he has iron in his
hack-bone, or that he has something of the
Napoleon or Andrew .Jackson in him.
Were Johnson the truly great man, it
does seem that he would almost jump at ihis
chance of showing to the world that he would
Ottsl any mischievous radical, sire though lie
might be of all the spoiled and petted Gen
erals in the land. Then :
'Off with his head! so much for Buckingham.’
Wdf It is almost confirmed that General
Sherman has come out in lavor of Andrew
Johnson’s policy. Well, i‘ there is to be a
war, we do not know but that we would rath,
er have Sherman for us than against us
What fine fun the Conservative ami Sou h
ern boys will have in following the lead of
this mighty Cotiflagrator, and Atlantuizing
and Columbiaizing some of those combusti.
Lie Radical cities, as Indianapolis, Chicago,
Cleveland, Pittsburg, New Ilaven, Concord,
and Boston !
Mr9. James 11. Field, of Dalton, Georgia,
—as we learn fora the Cherokee, Georgian
of that place—committed suicide on the
1 7th October, by throwing herself in a well.
She did it during a fit of insanitv.
The Georgian says she was a lady univer
sally beloved by all who knew her lor her
estimable Christian and social virtues.
ttfST" The majority for Geary (Radical) in
Pennsylvania amounts to nearly eighteen
thousand. The Radical vote last year was
over twenty-two thousand ; —thus showing a
falling off of four thousand.
A SoiiTtiEKN Invitation to the Jews
The Richmond Whig thus endorses the
world-renowned business sagacity of this
long despised race:
“Terrible indeed must be the industrial
condition of Ireland, when the Israelites
avoid it. Neither climate, distanc', danger,
nor other causa deters them from settling
in a country in which they can turn a penny
N\ here there are no Jews there is no money
to be made. Where there arc no riceficids
there are no rice birds ; where there are no
wild celery there arc no canvass back ducks;
where there is no trade there are no Jews.—
We hail their presence in such numbers in
the Southern States as an auspicious sign.
Instead of diminishing here they have proba
bly increased. In this city numerous squares,
alrnoat entire streets, are monopolised bv
thetn, and a soberer, steadier, and more in
dustrious sod law-abiding class of population
doaa not axiat. They interfere with no one,
mind their own business, observe their religi
ons ceremonies, and puna: tbeir own pecu
liar enjoyments and indulgences. We hope
they m*y never leave ns. When they do,
we shall begin to fear that we are giving
over to ruin—that what a distinguished ei*
Governor would call “the doom ot Devergoil”
awaits ns. It there is to be a Jerusalem, let
Richmond be the place.”
I®. Gen Washington Harrow, intimately
and cmitn ntly associated with Tennessee poli
tics for many years, and known, too, person
ally, by many of the Giffinites— be having
resided here, as refugee, a short wh e dur
ing the war—we learn from the Xasliville
papers, died iu St. Louis, on the 19th of this
month.
A project is on toot in the city of New
. rlt to make their gaa a hundred and fifty
les off in the coal regions of Penn*y vam a
to be conducted thence in pi j-»* to the
ty.
An -»!d divine stid to a >oung f eactK-i
ho h - just pt ii : a >i■ mm ot t e ir
kUMi) liotribie or ii r : "ka j.i t . ii-.w c—
ry. and your flower* are all the flower* of
sulphur/'
Telegraphic News.
Nfw York, O t 22 Gm > 14'.t
Canon cl *o - quiet, with safes ~t 2000
lialcs Mnidiiog- 3Si '■ 41 CCIlf!9.
TANARUS» e la* i»<l«M. lin is. -i-e..L ng « f th* erev
meeting of working 111 "ii, «d-. - to.
|oll'lC.,l inoveliienl f,,i a • g in, ,i
tract* ii su null atl< 111 ion, as « is pi0.,,1 „
Mondav bv tin e lledmg i.g. ihirgr« .•
a ■jiulimnl*-. iu ordt r to and-■ us- i.l >u| j rt
•he prii.c pi— ot it„- Manse and Suffragi A
s Clalion.' 01,.ch have t cell *a! aLli.-Leti in
| i.e- its.
I he cb.,l els still roi linilo- in Jail.don
Ala rilling r. ports are mirin' in France
concerning llie health ol the Kcquess ol
Mexico.
The Kmperor of.\naira has (lec.lhd to
1 renounce the title ol King of l.oinl.aidy and
' V euctia.
| The patent annexing Hanover u> l’ru-sii
wa- promulgated in the former place on the
! *th ot October.
Foreign papers and also :lie I!' r.Jd'.-
I’ans Coirespondent, a—cits [list the Liu
! prea- Eugenie has become m-anc.
j New Ori.KA.vh, (let. 2'2—Cotton steadier;
| sales ot 1 ,t)UO bales; low nod liing- U : > in
I (sold, (4til) forty six Mod a h t.l (hl»«*r
‘ market* unchanged.
Mobile, (). t 22 —Th • Sales 10-Jay w» ic
, twelve hundred hales. .Mi filing- lili c utn
I Market film.
j Oil Cut, Pens., ot. 22 A fir« o
-1 curred tins morning, desiiovin" nearly
I one quarter ol the oil shipping pari id the
j c ty. 1 hrnug'i the bupt-rliuumn etloi Is of tin
tire department tt.e ffiiinca were prevented
; from spreading into ti,e eiiy, or its c-oiuple e
[ destruction would have followed. Thu to'.ai
loss ia about $50,000.
St. Louis, Oe.t. 22 —A violent storm
prevailed here yesterday. Several build:, g
were destroyed, and a number of person
injured.
Baltimore, Oct. 21 —President John
son vi.-ited the city to-day. in aciepfan -e ot
an invitation fiom the Catholic Friends's
Society, to he present at the closing session
of tire Plenary Council. He is accompanied
by .Mrs. Patterson.
Sound Suggestions
VS ould not a given nuuili, r ol acres plant
cd in wheat yield more profit to ihe pi.inter
than the same number in cotton. c. u-iderme
the cost of the tirodm tion of eaeli U heat
Would only have to he planted, reaped and
Harvested; to accomplish all of which, la
borers could be called in at will ; in-t ad id
hiring them all the year. ( I his is the i cm
pursue lin wheat grow.nge unir i- ) (> u,n
lias to be plowed, hoed, liiidcai. fu.ly Watch
ed from the time it is p anted until rea.iy
| lor market, wiiieh involves he neci ty ol
I hiring regular all the youi r uinl.
j Would it not he better eiuiioiuy to put
|in a good breadth of rye tor feeding - o k
| in the I -Iter pm t of winter ami early s,.i n_;
than to halt s arve them, or hoy so much
Western Corn and hav !
Would not a smalt nuiule rof acr s plant
cd in cotton, properly, thoroughly fertiliz'd
and eultnah and, \ led inoie pu ll; than double
tlie number not alt fi oa ly fe tifiz and ami
thoroughly cullivalcd. W e think it would,
with thu additional ativantaaa ol r.ijuiring
hut about one halt the amount of labor.
W e ilnnk these plans are Worthy of eon
sideratiou. It Would cost less to buy fir
tlltzers than lo hue a double toreu I lahui
111 older to produce a given quantity, to say
noihmg ol ihe auipius land upon winch tax
lias to f>e paid, and wliiili nogiu be sold til
toother iariueia N',,rj .mety Advertiser.
Affairs in ,mi.-sisml'i-i.—The Miv.i-.sip
|i legislature lint on Mondiu in extiu
I session. 1 lie Governor in hi- message says
that necessities ot the State (.'unstrained inui
to call the Legislature together. ,\u speciu
emergency exist and, hut a general exigency,
resulting from the altered and deiunged
Condition ot our F* det ul and domestic atlairs
lie states the removal of negro troops
from the Mate and the transfer of the
Freednieti's llureuu t.. officers ot the R- gu
lar army are subjects ut c.iigraiu at ion.
I He deplores ttie state of the country. lit
j inelo-ts the constitutional amendment, hut
presumes a mere reading of it will cause its
rejection. He recommends the admission
ot negro testimony in all the courts.
lie requests that provision be made lor
the education of indigent children ot Con
federate soldiers, amt for the relief of desti
j tude and disabled Confederate and State
>soldiers.
Jt2T Gov. Humphries, of .Mississippi, has
set all the Southern Governors a wood e\s
amdle in his treatment of the infamous con
stitutional amendment In his message to
the Legislature last week, ho thus referred
to the proposed dishonor ;
Though our voir e cannot bo heard n, r
our rights respected in adjustment of our
Federal relations, tun y questions present
themselves for our coti.odeiaiiou and action
as citizens of the State, that in i. affect our
conditions as citizens in the I ni- n. Prom
inent among them is the amendment plo
posed bv Congm-s a- No. 1 I, which, at the
request of llio honotalhe Secretary of State,
Win 11. Seward, 1 herewith report for your
action. This amendment, adopted by a
Congress of liss than threefourths of the
States of the Union, in palpable violation of
the rights of more than one-fottrih of the
States, is such au insulting outrage and de
nial of the equal rights of so many of our
worthiest citizens who have shed lustre and
glory upon our section and our lace, both
in the forum and in the field, such a gros
uturpalion of the rights of the State, and
such a centralization of power in the Fed
eral t' -v.'inment, that I presume a mere
readme oi it will earlst* its rejection bv uun
Pi.ni rtivcr —The \,-w Voik Hbr’i/ lias
tics paragraph, alu mg olhets. Ml regard to
the late eleet.ons:
<iod bless theol.l Pemoeratie party! W th
I all the contumely and almse wlucli has been
showered upon it, it Cotues out of the contest,
I worsted for the time, hut with its colors fly
ing, its honor untarnished, its numbers in
| created, ami its courage higher than ever,
i A party that can stand Where it h»s stood
for the last s x rears past, is indestructible.
It is w 11 .; cn in lie book of destiny t hat is
future will ho as glorious as its past. To n
w id yet be committed the task of restoring
the Union.
c. ... \ ' ! n !
ot iiN-ui mi I# „ ; N
tuaoe h s car ape to Europe, witti twu’i'y-iwo
thousand tlofars in gold
£ Fi •111 the Meiro;M*t!taii Hrtoid.
■ rcaum-ui cf Inti ledrrk|l a a in
N nriei n Priioßt- it nil a <| Conduct
vt t lie Jailor
Tnick’em Ga Si pt lßotj,
M Kniruß —We h ave s' Iha aid a great
• 'ebo: .eil'e an I Confederate pii*-
i’ii- go m-i.i v Vi i.l you permit one wh • baa
had - ti.e . x, eti- nee of Northern prisms, lo
-uy a f. w w id- <>n dial subject!’
I W,s c.ip'uriii M,.y the sth, IRG4, at
tlo- bait'. o| d.e W t denies- it Virginia
*itl. several others. We w. r.- kept in rear
'•f * fie Vintie army tintd 15th, when we
were jit on b -ir Ia transport and shipped
to lut it ess Mi,n-e, thence to Delaware,
wlier. »e aiiind on the 17tb. (_)ur fare
win e tl ,re ci n-isretTof from three to four
' rackcr-, one quarter of a pound of pickle
poik, i r l eaf and ball a pint ofdi-bwatcr
cili.f „ean soup. (Ju the 2"th Augu-t six
hutior»-d of us were sent to Morns laiand,
>. t'.. to fx-j ico.| illicit r fire, cs we were told
'h it s x bundred Yar.kce iiffie, rs were under
file m ('barb-.-ton. We were earned down
on die steamer t rcsceiit, and several of us
were put and iwn io the hatchway or hole, as
«e Were io' pern itud to oc< iipy the u; per
i< > k ;o- !y one of us was permitted to go to
.tie pruy a' a lime. 1 u can imagine the
fiidi we w. re C'linpciied to lie in ; the water
we blank wa> Condensed on board, and was
Inqiicn'iv wjrm enough to make Ua or cof
fee, * ’cli f-Cort was a Captain I* , and
ah er fif’y or seventy five Ohio hundred
days mm, the tno-t uncivilized set of bar-
haric.'is 1 ever -aw. VV'e were kept in this
condition until the 7th of September, when
we were landed on die Island, and marched
bei wee, n forts V\ agner a.,d Gr*-gg. and put
a stork ole hue t lor our accommodation.
W« had small tents furnished 'V(,; we had to
repair to our tents at sundown and remain in
them until ,-unr -e next morning. No one
was allowed lo spe..k above a whisper;
do re was a i ne stre tel .1 si.iiind our tents,
and it any one approached near enough to
ouch if, he was shot without warning. '1 wo
w( r shot. Our lare was Irom one to two
cracker-, one-eight h of a pound of beef or
poik, and a half a punt of boiled rice—half
-and—p er day ; the crackers Noah had left
Me vnie guarded by the 51th Massachusetts
eidoicil iegimect, ot whom a thing called
II- w.s colonel. It was there 1 came to
die conclusion that the office: sos negro regi
ments were the scum of Yankcedom.
During eur s.j.tun there several shells
exploded over an t around the stockade, and
-everal pieces tell iu our midst, but fortun
ately untie of u* were hurt,. We w-re sent
I "‘fn that |> ie<: to F .rt fula-ki, Gj., on the
21st of October, rations about the same un
til the Ist day ol January, 18ti5, We were
put on ten ounces corn meal and a jiint oi
pick it s per day; the meal Was ground in
1802, was full of win ms and hugs, sour and
musty —not tit fora dog to cat—Were kept
on such rations u .lil the 12th of Februa.y
We eat every house-cat about tile Foi t. —s x
iu ~1l Ibt lieve. We had no wood furnished
us ti) make liivs to sit by. Wo had no
blankets, they being taken from us by tlio
brave Captain 1’ . We were nor per
mi'ted to ivrc.ve any tnonev, clorhing, or
provisions s.-iit to us hy our relatives or
lii-nd- ,\ irth or S(iu!|i. We were guarded
by Ihe I■>7 tfi -V ) . commanded i y Colonel
I’ I*, lir-’tvii • they wer.T the mo-i ordei ly
and eleVir set of fe : o fs that e’er guarded
us. C&Tcmel 1 >ri>vvTi and l. eut, ''oi C,.iuii
chad were ge: th men.
Colon* I If own's l'egi nent was rcl eved by
ilie 17-> h N. Y. a tolerable c ever set ol
lei! .ws. VV’e remained at i'ulaski until the
hli ot .Marel . when hc were sent hack to
Delaware, where we arrived on the 12vh;
remained there until the 17 h of June,
when he wete rr! by tak.ng the oath ot
allegiance. 1 laud lat home near 1 riek em
on the 26tt., h here i found a plenty to eat,
not corn meal and pickles, nor tats, but
some!hing more substantial.
i am sir, must i espeetlully yours,
Corn Meal and I’icklks
Okoanizk for War. —Says the Knox
ville ('oixiinwreial :
‘‘We are informed that Judge liouck in a
speech at Crippcn’s mill on Saturday last,
made this statement :
Houck said that if a convention was call
ed in the Slate ot Tennessee lor the purpose
oi changing the Slate Government, h? could
and would throw a regiment into Knoxville
within twenty four hours, and that any Con
vention of the people for the purpose would
be dispersed. Gen. Cooper also stated that
if there was another war he should not do
as hc had done before. That so far as he
went, he would not leave any thing behind.
The true meaning of which is that wo
men and Ghildretv, houses and homes would
share the same fate, complete destruction
ami annihilation.”
I liise declarations cotrpied with more out
rageou- ones from Rrownlow, indicate what
the Radicals of lenucssee would do if they
could. I nuided hy the l-'ede al Govern
nu nt, they would simply destroy themselves.
ltyersbury (iazelte.
I.il(!i< «' Mentor in I Association .fcriif
tin. G corgi a.
The members of this Association never
seem to “wca yin well doing.” They take
the most trni/rr < are ot the graves of our
brave Confederate dead. Nearly five hun
dred of our ri’ib/t departed heroes sleep tbeir
last sleep h. re Tbeir graves are adorned
with beautiful evergreens, flowers, Ac. Not
a sprig of grass is a lowed to grow upon this
hallowed spot, ever, rvrr, dear to us.
J he Wink is done by the ladies themselves,
and not entrusted to tl e (p. rliap-) careless
hand’, of a servant. Their own tender and
delicate hands dig r.id plant, thereby show
ing what a dear treasure lies beneath.
While on a visit to this remetcry, last
evening, I «>w a fair and beautiful maiden
smoothing the sand and dirt, with her snowv
fingers, over the graves as tenderly as il
they were own bro her’s. If I only knew
that some sweet and lovely maiden was at
tending the spot where roy own brave and
noble boy lies huri»d, it would, in some
degree, soothe my aching heart; but alas !
he lies far, far from the home he loved so
well, his grave unmarked.
"Ouly those who have writhed 'ucath the heart
crashing thou - lit,
And who have lived upon hope'# brittle thread.
Can know the sad tnals with which life is
fraught.
Brings the longing to be witli ike dead.”
What have the ladies of Fort Valley done
for the Confederate dead ? They have only
i t ws-T-ivc- of deceased soldiers there—ara
1 •■- c I *o as they would their own
ihi i;\ -i •;>< 'ey t 'A i must “do unto others
as we would have them do unto us.” S.
G/ffin, Ga . Oct 16. Fort Valley Ledger
BUM MARY.
The tiholerm is on the increase at Chica
go Dr. Bra.nard, the feuader of Rusk
Medical College, died of the disease on the
night fit the 10th.
An officer recently returned from South
Carolina, states that the old TWeniy ninth
lebcl regiment of that State has reorgan
x-d, and off! r*-d its services to the Presi
de nt to assist him in suppressing Congress.
From the decidedly loose manner in which
Fresid- nt Johnson is swinging the Presiden
tial scythe, there is reason to hope that, after
all, he will establish a cltfim to he consid
ered a -VoK-ses.
The workmen in the CbCerninent pfial
ing office have at last rucceeded in getting
eight hours fixed as a day’s labor. The
time acquiesced in by the Superintendent,
sud the Treasory Department, whii h pays
the salaries.
France is getting afraid of the United
States. The Opinion Nationale, a promi
nent newspaper oT i’aris, Las a long article
urging t- e necessity of a confederatinn on
the part of the Western 1 nations of Kurope
to oppose the alliance between the United
Mta e» and Russia. It thinks that Russia
should be driven back in Asia, and that the
l uit.d estates ought to attend exclusively
to the Anieiican continent.
The cxpieriment of tfcing peat for fuel has
been tried on the Grand Trunk Railway.
It is said to be an entire success.
Its j- ffects.— The S-ient;fie American
says that “during the last t*n years the
value of the industrial products of Massa
chusetl- has increased seventy-two p'T cent.;
the pioulution at the same time auly three
per cent. This difference in ten year* ts a
value given by a high tariff. It is one
whose expiense Is borne by the people of
the other Slates.
The railroad bridge over the Tombcckbee
river at 1 Jeiiiopoiis, on the Selma and Me
ridian railroad, was completed and the first
trains passeo over on the llTh ot October.
This connects Selma by rail with Vicksburg
at a distance of 2SU miles, and with Mem
phis at a distance of about 380 miles.
Annual Conference. —The next annual
meeting ot the Georgia Conference of the
Methodis: Kpiscopal Church will meet in
olmerieus on the 28th of November. It
will be piesided over by Bishop McTyere
Dr. Craven, author ot Prison Life of Jeff.
Davis, has been appointed postmaster at
Newark.
The next Georgii Legislature will assem
ble on the first Tuesday in November which
ib the first day of the month.
A sausage maker in Paris, having an
nounced that a five-ffanc gold piece con
cealed in one of every hundred sausages
lor sale iu his shop the demand for sau
sages immediately became enormous.
A Pennsylvania woman, who beat bes
daughter nearly dead with a base ball club;
attracts no attention, being whito.
The Montgomery Advertiser character
izes *S.ifluid and Fingures, the Alabama loy
alists, who are flgui ing with the Brownlow
faction, as a brace ot as infamous liars and
poltroons as ever disgraced ho inanity.
Artemus \\ ard s photograph is all over
London
I lie telegraph announces that the devil’s
p-irtun f.xs got home. He wiil have to di9
hist. 8b says PieTitice.
One us the oide.-t papers in the world, the
l’usizielting, of Frankfort, established in
lGl'i, lias just disappeared, suppressed by
Bismarck
J sines Stephens Wade a speech at St.
Louis yesterday, in which he declared that
tho battle of Irish independence would oom
metice cn Irish soil before New Year.
Ihe Jews are the only religious order in
Greal Hrrtain who entirely provide for their
own pour without casting them upon public
chanty. This jr the more noteworthy from
the fact that many poor jews are shipped
there from the Continent to get them oUt of
the way. There is a Jewish school in Lon
don presided over hy Miss Miriam Harris,
where 1,300 Jewish children are instructed,
none of whom are over six yeats of age.
This also is a magnificent monument of Jew
ish charity.
NEW AITv iTf TANARUS» EME NT S
INTERESTING
To the Ladies.
MRS. TAYLOR
Will have her entire stock of
M IL LI N E R Y
AND
Open for EXniß'fTiON arid ini*pectron err
Thursday and Friday!
TIIE LADIES of GRIFFIX and vicinity are
cordially invited to drop iu and take a
took.
GENTLEMEN, accompanying Ladies will also
be cordially welcomed at
‘•THH LADIES’ STORE.”
oct‘23-3t
FRESH FISH !
A few bunches of those delicious fresh
TROUT & SHEEP-HEAD
on hand and for sale elieap !
FRESH OYSTERS
In any quantity, to arrive.
SEND IN YOUR ORDERS AT ONCE to insure
having them filled.
We have made an arrangement that will enable
n» to keep regular supnlie* of the above delicacies,
and which we will sell at the very lowest Cam
})licA
We have also on hand a niee assortment nf
I* ItEsil GROCER! KS, which we offer in exclvangc
foi Coumtry i “reduce or cash.
J. W. S. MITCHELL,
oct23-»f , Wee? side of UiU «r,et
DRUGS & MEDICINES
AT WHOLESALE AND RET AIL HT
w. w. lismi,
CtfUftEß BtiLL AND CONGRESS STREETS, SAVANNAH,GEORGIA
I have oi hand a fafee and Wei! sdacted stock of pure Drugs, MetMaa,
Fancy and Toilet Articles, Sponges, Brushes, Perfumery ,fcc., &c.
These articles have been selected with great caie, both in Enropean and America
markets, and 'frill be sold on the most reasonacle terms.
"vtoQ.Rni
lOEWENSTEM S PFEIFER'S,
FALL AND WINTER OODS,
CONSISTING 0?
LADIES’ DRESS GOODS.
SILK DRESS PATTERN’S, SILK POPLINS
FRENCH MERINOS ALPACCAS
• ACIFFPJ AND ALL WOOL DELAINES,
And every variety of PRINTS'. Also a large as.-oi to ent of
SWISS JACtfISET,. MULL MUSLIN, KAXSOOK ML'SLiy
EMBROIDERIES, all description and of every styia.
FLANKLS,
WHITE AND RED FLANNELS, OTERn" FLANNELS, CANTON FLANNELS.
DOMESTICS*
A large lot of BLEAOHED and BROWN DOMESTICS.
XOTIOXS.
Our stock of NOTIONS are endless in vari-'v, and riot t) be et.-elVd in •; i
Hoisery, Gloves, Handkerchief*, L'tien, J-» konet Edging and Inserting, U.»ir Biuvhe*
Toilet Articles, dtc. A splendid stock of
Boots. Shoes rtxxcl Hats.
The largest Stock of Heady
made Clotliiiip; ever brought
to Griffin. The most accom
modating Clerks always in
attendance,
Thanking (be Public for former liberal patron.age. we invite Special attention to our
new Slock of Goods, assuring tho I‘nbl'C t at we cm give as
As it is possible to be had in this, or anv other Market in the interior of the State.
LOEWENSTEIN ii PFEIFER.
0.-t 15, 3in
COTTO>! COTTON!!
We are prepared to make liberal
Casli Advances
To Planters or Hovers, on Cotton shipped to our con espondents in New York or Savan
nah, with whom we have arranged to sell Cotton shipped through us, on the best terras.
We will also
Hell cotton for Planters, in this market, irko do not intend shipping’
A. MERRITT & JOIIXSOX,
Hankers and Cotton Brokkbs
/AT W V « will receive Deposits and pay Checks on demand, Huy Gold. Stiver, Bank
Notes, Co'nnty Scrip, Stocks, Ronds, and other securities. Collect paper payable in
Griffin and vicinitv, and make prompt remittances. Will endeavor to keep supplied
with 1 Hriyht Enchnmje. on New York in stuns to suit. (se2l-lm) A. M. <fc J.
Office in Halliday’s Htiilding, reaViy opposite the Hrick Warehouse.
PAINTS, OILS, TOILET ARTICLES, &C„
_A.t Rcduccci Prices,
ARE SFLLING OFF FAST AT
J. N. HARRIS& OO’S.
, sept3—Sm
DRUGS & MEDICINES!
nar . 33 . DUE WIV Y,
EAST SIDE OF IIILL STREET, (Near the Post Office.)
Griffin Georgia,
ll\s ON HAND A GOOD ASSORTMENT. AVD RECEIVES WEEKLY SUPPLIES
OF ALL ARTICLES PERTAINING TO DRUGS, FRESH AND
GENUINE
IT" Also, a fine lot of FANCY AND TOILET ARTICLES, Window Glass, Paint*
Oils, Lamps, <fcc., Cooking Extract*, Tobacco, C'gars, <kc.
PlHß6Cßll*T»ON*promptly filled DAY or NIGHT, under the direct =a f m *[*.£,
D»kwbt, M. P., (Chemi>t and .Uharmaceutiat,) who ha, been in regular and eatei-eu*
for over tea year*, both < ivil at J military, or Dr. J. L Mo- v.e sept—.