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II_ ARC RY 28, 1866. h pleasure that we call the (ravelling public to the Dcs stablisliment has just been ;lc that docs credit to theen ors. As they have spared g their house such aB will ^ , a !t>f the people we hope they * jatronage they so richly de -r—rA Ikiietors are old citizens of this *- * 'JTT|>t. Harvey will be found at USjlea, ready to make llis peli ™ gi a good dinner and render tlicm ft *1 generally. Mr. Sim Horne , <rct che*1 If, and Col. Edwards—well |the Col., if they don't they d call the attention of our ct that Boyd & Co. have on —— of Dry Goods and Groceries. Q J his firm being Southern mer -quainted with wants of a «Er> ]\th«s selected this stock with i j,^ey. nee now offering to the p goods cheap. Give them a on venicntla00d8 speak for themselves mhoat T_^_ r canSl|)WIJe Erft,ifyiug t0 a11 t0 know l'uarter.s° «111 fellow citizen, B. B. Allen, ly found U. S. Internal Revenue is, Feb. 28} counties of White, AVoodruff, „ /“\TC same gentleman has also ® •UrSBJpointment of Postmaster at 0/^1»sons wishing mail matter, i JVv*ievcnue office, where for (he of this fbl office will be kept. Hi of Feb'l—-► • ♦ 11 of li. l) gl ad to see amongst the pas- j n and”* tcamcr ^:JS Arc. Mr. AV. s. n *^,,1 proprietor of the Da Arc Crcs- ! ; Intellenfewspaper to be published at All schf extend to him the right hand ; 0,111 ‘Hoc.lnj;hope that his enterprize ! ickness, d ..... . ■ iss ilas it 18 deserving. 0E Fiffilft ziof variety ? If 80 do not ! r ■'n-d ll,u'ge and commodious Grocery tinmar r,iore °f Messrs. Stewart & Bro. ■r Arithnujon hand the largest and best . Physiol ever offered in this market. * jvakt will give his entire at- i imetry, I! h i Keeping jusmess of this House. A more d agreeable gentleman cannot j middle the close_,,,_ 28. lSliC. Iroek & Bro. have cn hand a i _ “ of Tin Ware, Stoves, Family W » , ,, on need such articles give L j , i < r ■. —• ——'i-4illy is a clever fellow and we intend him. Pap Dry Goods * to H. G. Gill | ve a large ns [ling cheap for - j j iyin y » r for your Groceries. ] (i I stlf them to you cheap and also Vour hides, butter, eggs Ac. Give all and you will not regret it. j River Lodge, No. 37, meets on spo- i iness this evening, 28th inst., in the ; | r jMmi of Horne & Edwards. —-- — ♦ - -- u nmiu suns, IjThc Steamer Osage passed up and rc- i m Saturday with a fair trip for Mem j| ’ f . • j I'fThe Goldfinch, Capt. Gere, came to ing on Sunday. The Clerk has our ( for late papers. • The Steamers lies Are and Albert the former from Memphis, the latter * Louis, arrived on Monday bringing ;est freight to this point that has been ged this season. The clerks have our .nks for late papers. ”!h’ Commercial is due to-morrow ^ ' The Justice passed down last Wednes t is now over-due. hr vttoM Gen. Price —We are permit ig extracts from a letter written by erliug Price, to a friend in this coitn *: Cordova, Mexico, Jan. 10, 1800. 'p Perkins, Gov. Harris, Col. (Pawnee) Jnd his family, the Episcopal Minister, IriJhn and his family, myself and uth 4 how living in our new town, Char ■The Americans, that were in Monterey [i Luis Potosi, are now on their way ,s we learn from Capt M. F. Maury. Louisianians have lately arrived hero h of new homes for themselves and ;. They have thought best to pur nproved lands from private individ ,'id have dono so, paying down five ,id dollars in cash, and getting as much they desired for the deferred pay They have now returned to the Uni ■es for their families, i immigration from the States shall be t as I anticipate, property of every ill greatly increase in value, and I 1 re think that those who have made up ! inds to come to Mexico, should do so 1 i. The inducements to mechanics to ' jre arc very great. While the native ' can Ijv ..red at fifty cents a day, out h he finds himself, mechanics earn ex wages. Por instance, the railroad ly offer to contract for brick at twenty lars a thousand, and lime at one dollar [uarter per hundred, and the country ‘ si.i timber and in limestone of an ex- 1 quality; a wheelright ora tanner would fortune very soon. Tliore is one instance of a person hold- 1 Allege Presidency even longer than the 1 fNott, of Union College. Rev. Martin < Mouth was elected President of Mag- 1 Oxford, in 1701, and socontin- 1 t it if is Ut.iij jn 1854, at the age of 00. < 1 I ^°^e8° lOvnident in this country 1 |Bv.. Mark Hopkins, of Williams, who i . Bftd in 1830, J . liV TELeu^APH! Washington, Feb. 23—Tlfre wa9 amass meeting to endorse President Johnson's poli cy. Grover s Theater was ensely packed, and the street without, whero,tands for speak ing were erected, was cquallycrowdcd. Long series of resolutions were adfpted, expressing confidence in the President, and favoring the admission of Southern representatives._ Speeches were made by Cox, Hair, Hendricks, Green Clay Smith, and othrs, all fully sus taining the President’s veto. At the conclu sion of the meeting the peejle proceeded cn masse to the White House, aid presented the resolutions to the Presided, of whose res ponse we have received the ftlowing: “I say that when these twites comply with the Constitution, when tliej have given suffi cient evidence of loyally, anl that they can he trusted; when they yield obeiience to the laws of the land, I say cztend p them the right hand of fellowship, and letbeace and union he restored. I have fought thitors and treason in the South. I opposed the Davises and J ombs, and the Slidel.'s anl a long list of oth ers whose names I need tot repeat; and now when I turn round at theitherend of the line, I find men, I care not bywhat name you call them, [A voice, “Call thou traitors,] who still stand opposed to the rcstiration of the Union of those States, and I an free to say to you that I am still for the preservation of the com pact; I am still for tin restoration of this Union; I am still in favir of this great Gov ernment of ours, livingand following out its teachings. (A voice: glre us the names.) A gentleman calls for the fames. Well, suppose 1 should give them. , A voice; We know hem.) 1 louk upon them. I repeat it, asPres ident or citizen, as muo'i opposed to the fuud vmentcl principles of this Government, and bcllOVA tlmr onn o t.. „ - - -e» - r» ~ or destroy them, ns were the men who fought against us. (A voice—“What are the names?”) I say 1 had. Steyeus, cf Pa., (tremendous ap plause.) I say Charles Sumner, (great ap plause,) I say wendeli Phillips ami others ol' the same stripe all amongst them. (A voice— “Give it to Forney.”) Some gentloman in the crowd says give it to Forney. I have only to say that I do not, waste my ammunition upon dead ducks. (Laughter and applause.) I stand for my country. I stand for the Consti tution, where T placed my feet front my en trance into public life. They may traduce me they may slander, they may vituperate, but let xne say to you that it has uo effect upon me. (Cheers.) Let me say in addition that 1 do not intend to be bullied by enemies. (Ap plause, and a cry, “The people will sustair you.”) I know, my countrymen, that it liai been insinuated, not only insinuated, but gait directly, the intimation has been given in liigl places, that if such a usurpation of power hat been exercised two hundred years ago, in : particular region, it would have cost accrtaii individual his head. What usurpation ha Andrew Johnson been guilty of? [Nouc none.] Theonly usnrpation I have beeuguil ty of was between the people and encroach ment of power, and because I dared to say, ii conversation with a fellow citizen and a Sena tor, that I thought the amendments to the Con s tit lit i oil ougli not to he frequently made that it would Itse all its dignity, and that th old instrumeutwould be lost sight of in ashor time; because happened to say if it was a mended, such tud such amendments should hi adopted, it wni an usurpation of power tha would have cqh a king liis head at a ccrtaii time. [Laugher and applause.] In connectmi with this subject, it was maintained hi the same gentlemen, that w< were in the m ist of an earthquake, that he trembled and could not yield. [Laughter.] Ves, there is m earthquake coming; there is a ground swell -oniing of popular judgment and indignation. [A voice—“That’s true.”] The American peqdewill speak by their interests, mil they wi Ilk now who are their friends and who are theiicneniies. What positions have I held under tits Government, beginning with in Alderman and running through all branch es of tho llgislature. [A voice—“From a ailor uii.”] Some gentleman says I have been . . i xt_*i.., ' - L .i r.—• J .. lid not discenfort me in the least, for when 1 jsed to be atiilor I had the reputation of being i good one, .nd making close fits, [great ap ilause,] alwiys punctual with my customers, md always lid good work. (A voice: no latehwork.) No, I do not want any patch vork—I wait a whole suit. Hut 1 will pass by his little licetiousness, my friends. Some nay say ‘fou arc President, and you must, lot talk abiut such tilings. When principles ire involve!, my countrymen; when the exig ence ofmycountry is imperilled, 1 will act as 1 have on firmer occasions, and speak what 1 hind I was saying that 1 had held nearly ill position from Alderman, through both tranches oiCongress, to that which I now oe supy. ami vho is there that willsay that Andy Fobnsonever made a pledge that he did not ■edeem, or make a promise he did not fulfill. Alio wills*/ that ho has acted otherwise than n fidelity to the great mass of the people? [’hey mar tilk about beheading and usurpa ion; bm when I am beheaded I want the A nerican people to witness it, I don’t want by nuendo«s,or by indirect remarks in high [da les, to see the man who has assasination irooding in his bosom, exclaim that this ’residential obstacle must be gotten out of the fay. I make use of a very strong expression fhen I say, that I have no doubt the intention fas to iac te assasination, and get out of the ray the obstacle from place and power, wheth r by assasination or not. There are iudivid lals in this Government, I doubt not, who rail! to destroy oiir institutions and change he charter of the government. Are they not atisfied with the blood which has been shed? )ocs net the murder of Lincoln appease the cngear.c* and wrath of the opponents ofthis rovernment? Are they still [Lost four words iy lightning.] Do they still want more blood? lave they not honor and courage enough to btain their object otherwise than by the lands of the assassin? (No, no.) I am not fraid of assassins attacking me where a brave nd courageous man would attack another. I only dread him when lie would go in disguise. I his footstep noiseless. If is blood they want let them have courage enough to strike. [ Ap plause. ]If my blood is to be shed because I vindicate tbe Union and preservation of the Government in its original purity and chasti ty* let it be shed. Let an altar to the Union be erected, and then, if it is necessary, take me and luy me upon it, and tbe blood that now warms and animates my existence shall be poured out as a (it libation of the Union of these States. [Great applause.] But let the opponents of this Government remember that even if it is poured out, that the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church. Gentlemen, this Union will grow, i( will continue to increase in strength and power, though it may be eementedand cleansed with blood. I have talked longer now than I inten ded to; let mo thank you for the honor you have done. So far as the Government is con cerned, let me say one other word, in refer ence to the amendments to the Constitution of the United States. When I reached Washing ton to be inaugurated as the Vice-President of the Ini ted States, I had a conversation with Mr. Lincoln. We were talking about the condition of affairs, and in reference to mat ters in my own State. I said they had called a Convention, and had amended our consti tution, by abolishing slavery in the State—a State not embraced in his proclamation: all this met his approbation. I gave him encour agement, and, in taking up the amendment to the Constitution, lie said, when the amend ment to the Constitution is adopted by three fourths of the States, wc shall have all, or pretty nearly all. I am in favor of amending the Constitution* if there was one other adopt ed. Said I—What is that, Mr. President? Said he—I have labored to preserve this U nion I have toiled four years; I have been subiectcd to cal illinv. ami miarnifpnanntnfivxn let my desire has been to preserve the union of these States in tact under the Constitution as they were before. But, said I, Mr. Presi dent, what amendment do you refer. He said he thought there should be au amendment ad ded to the Constitution which would compel all the States to send their Senators and Rep resentative to the Congress of the United States, yes, compel them. The idea was in his mind that it was a part of the doctrine of secession to break up the Government by States withdrawing their Senators and Repre sentatives from Congress, and therefore she desired a Constitutional amendment, tocompel them to be sent. How now does the matter stand in the Constitution of the country; even that portion of it which provides for the amendment of the organic law, says that no State without il3 ' Here the line gave out. 1 --— — »*« -to- --— 1 Washington, Feb. 24.—The Senate, yester i day, was occupied in the introduction of bills i and resolutions forbidding the admission ol i Southern members, until the Stales wereenti , tied to representation. It was argued that it . was the intention of Congress not to act on the . credentials of Southern members until it hac , passed a law for the admission of the Southen . | States. ' ( Wet.lbvillb, Ohio, Feb. 24.—The stcamei Manchester, with a heavy freight, including ' i hay and oil, was burned at the foot of Babb' Island. Capt. Shepard thinks fourteen peo pie were drowned. The Manchester's pas sengersand crew numbered one hundred. Madison. Ind., Feb., 24.—The steamer Hill j man collided w ith the steamer Nannie Byer : this morning, sinking the latter. It is report ed that thirty lives were lost. Memphis Market. Daily Avalanche Office, 1 Saturday, Feb. 24 186(5. J Cotton.—Tho market opened dull an drooping for the want of more reliable new from Bui ope. There were no dispatches ye! ter day to confirm the previous news. Iloldei generally withdrew from the market,. R< quests were limited and very little offering consequently there was little doing. W learned of a few sales of Good Middling at for mer quotations. The market closed dull a the following quotations: Ordinary, 82 (^33 Low Middling, 37 @,38 Middling, 30 @40 Strict Middling, 41 @_ Good Middling, 42 @_ Cincinuatl Market. Cincinnati, Fob. 21. Fi.oim—Quiet without, change in prices. Wheat—Dull at $1 80 for No. 1 new red. CoitN—Is steady and in fair demand at 52@ 53 for No 1 shelled. Oats—Dull at 35 for No 2. Itye dull at 70c for No 1. , Provisions—Firm but quiet. Mess Pork—Is held firmly at $29. Bulk Meats and Bacon unchanged. Laud—Is inactive at 18c for prime city; but holders ask \c higher. Groceries—Dull. Cotton—Firm at 41c for Middling. Whisky—Dull and prices nominal, with small sales at 25c in bond. Gold—127. -A benefit was given for Mrs. Stonewall Jackson at the Opera House, Norfolk, Vir ginia, on 'Friday evening last. A dramatic and musical entertainment., by amateurs o* the place, was the attraction. A grand con cert was given for the same purpose at Odd Fellow’s Hall, on the 2d instant, We learn that the demand for tickets was very great among the old Stonewall. “Foot Cavalery.” The Pall Mall Gazette says tha! the passage In the Emperor Napoleon's speech, relating to America, it is believed, originally contained a definite period within which the French troops wonld be withdrawn from Mexico. At the last moment, however, Mr. Seward’s dis patches became known to the Emperor, upon which he altered the passage to its present form. -Gen. Butler says ihat if Gen. Lee is not punished, then has he “shed his blood in vain.” Tub Labor Systb.m is Mibdlb Gbob (ha.—An intelligent gentleman, writing t the Augusta Conalitulionaliat on this subjce Hays : It has become evident that the older sec lions of Georgia, especially the “Black Belt, as Middle Georgia was formerly called, wi in the course of a few years, be drained, no only of their surplus labor but of that whic will be necessary to the cultintion of the soil Without any interposition of the Frecdmen’ Bureau, such a result must sooner or later b consummated. Following the immutablenn' irresistable law of supply and demand, fre labor will go where it is most valuable. Oi the rich prairies of the West, and on the al luvions of the Mississippi, negro labor ismor profitable and better in other rospeots that white; but on the lands of upper Georgia am throughout all that hilly and healthy bcl which extends between the mountains andtlt “low country,” from Virginia to the Missis sippi, white labor must tako the place o black, and as the Frecdmcn's Bureau onl1 hastens the emigration of the negro west ward so it becomes those who wish for the future welfare and prosperity of Georgia to hasten so far as in their power, the filling up b; white emigration of the vacuum caused by th< departure of the blacks. fta?" The Charlottesville (Va.) ChronicI thus good-humoredly speaks of the straits t< which the Southern States are driven by tin Radical disunionists: It seems fo ;iufto be as hard to get in tin Lnion as it is to get out. The Mouth respect fully asks to move one way or the other. Wi are like the fellow that was forced to go to tin show, and then not allowed to go any furthc than where he had paid for his ticket W have been dragged into the doorway of tin rcuciai tent, ana are not allowed to see air of the performance except to settle with ta: collectors. IV c can hear the animals growl ing inside, and the cracking of the ring uiaste s whip, but wo can't soc the show un less we pay for two, and take in a colored lady And the worst of it is, they keep a great cagl perched over the entrance, which, if you at tempt to go back, swoops down upon you am picks a hole in your head. We justly thin] this is unreasonable; they ought eithertolc us pass in or re-l'und our money and tie up tli eagle. Leaun a Trare —Teach your son to work to work with h:s hands—to combine muscula power with brain power, and he will seldot: turn thief, vagabond or vagrant. The gren misfortune with a majority of our young me: is that they have been taught no regular trad or employment. They now feel sadly th want of this useful training- Impress a bo with the value of time, teach him some honor able calling, however humble, and if lie ha the man in him it will develop itself in tim< lie will teach himself, fom observation an association with the best class of person; who always recognize and appreciate tru merit—to be, and not merely to appear to be gentleman. The silly notion, so prevaleu heretofore in this country; says-the Atlant (Ga.) .Veto Era, that physical labor is inconsif tent with good breeding, must now give wa to a more practicable, a more sensible, an ! more healthy sentiment. We will then hav fewer forgeries, fewer gamblers, fewer drunk ards, and consequently a less demand for spac in our State Prisons. Wc will have mor workshops, more factories; more schools, mor , and better filled churches, and a more thrift; selfreliant, intelligent, hardy, aud enterpri; | ‘nS population. -The National Express Company; ( which General Joe Johnson is President, hav instituted a suit against the Virginia Centri 1 Railroad and other roads, who have, for tvv s millions of dollars, sold to Adams Expre; . Company the exclusive right to carry expre: s matter over their respective roads for a pcric . of four years, unless other companies pay ; equal amount, which, of course, no oth B company can do. -The Selma Iron Works has just prose: i ted a claim to Maj. Gen. Thomas for a pa tonne property sola by ttie united mat j Treasury Agent, belonging to that compan General Thomas directed -General Wool commanding the Department, to restraint delivery of that part of the property to whi the claim referred. General Woods within the whole of the property, and the matter now being adjudicated. Tiic Catholic Bishop of Toronto 1 given tlie Irish permission to inaka the us demonstrations on St. Patrick’s Day. TL will be out in full forco and a conflict w j Orangemen is feared. On last Sunday l | Bishop announced, from the pulpit, that t Fenian agitation had at least the good etb of calling at tention to Ireland’s grievanc. Petitions for redress, he said, were bei J circulated, and if some change was no-t ma j in Ireland before summer, desperate conflii would nndoubtedly ensue. -There are reports of the appearance disease among the cattle in Montgomery cou ty, Penn., which resembles rinderpest. Ti State Senate-lias appointed a special coni mi tee to make an investigation. The disea first made its appearance in the spring 1805, and since then a very large number cattle have died. It has every appearance j rinderpest, and the Country Medical Sociel j and the Agricultural Society are both invest ! gating it. | -The Savannah Herald says the Georg I Senate has passed resolutions appointin j commissioners to proceed to Washington an j request the withdrawal of negro troops fro: j that State. The Mayor of Columbus, Ga., hi I ordered no liqnor to be sold to negroes, an a committee to wait on the United States ofl cors, to see if some measures cannot be pci fected for the removal of the detachment < j colored troops there. -Jesse It. Grant, the father of the Lieu General, who has been appointed Post mast i at Covington, is a very Conservative Kopubl ! can, and strenuously opposed to negro su ti age or negro equality of anv kind, ° The two railroad depots in Montgomery. [> j together with machine shops, and nearly nil t j the rolling stock, were destroyed in the Inst days of the war. The energy displayed, - however, in refitting and restocking theta lias ’ been commendable. At tho West Point depot 1 a neat and well arranged building is rapidly t going up, which combines many comforts for those who wish to take tho trains, and much convenience for the railroad company. The passengers who go out on the Alahnmn nml Florida railroad, now get on the cars at the West Point Depot, and for tho present it is not likely that another depot building will ho con structed, The offices of the west Point road arc in the old Murphy warehouse, and of the Alabama and Florida road in t lie winter iron i works building. ' -A letter from the widow of the lamented hero, Stonewall Jackson, will he found in our supplement. It will bo seen that she corrects the misapprobension that she is in a condition to suffer from want of the comforts of life. A kind father extends over her and her child paternal enre. Still she is dependent, and the country of Stonewall Jackson would have her independent in her own righ*, and for this reason we hope the good intentions of the Southern people to honor the great hero by substantial compliments to his family, will , not cease on the appearance of Mrs. Jackson’s , modest letter-—Macon(Ga. Telegraph. ' j Tin; Happy Family.—The Chicago Journal divides the late Republican party into the following factions. It will be seen that the list is well arranged and contains none that are ! not in actual operation. This is a very happy ' family: The Radical Republicans, generated by ! Thaddeus Stevens. Tho Conservative Republicans, gcncrulcd by Henry J. Raymond. jl uv; uuui uoavi j;vnti ui ed by Senator Cowan. Tne Abstract Republicuns, generated by Senator Sumner. The Practical Republicans, gencralcd "by : Senator Fessenden. The Black Republicans proper, witli Fredor * ick Douglass at their head. 1 The Woman’s Rights party, led by Mrs. *■ Swisslielm. ; The Garrisonian Abolitionists. The Wendell Phillips Abolitionists, The Gerrit.t Smith Abolitionists. 1 J. SIMS ALI.KN. N. S. GRAVES. 1 t Allen &■ Graves, 1 DEALERS IN ; Produce and Groceries, AND ! GENERAL, RECEIVING, FORWARDING 1 -AND : COMMISSION MERCHANTS. i t DES IRC, tltKWStS. i febl8-tf. ; MOORE & CO., 0 L» L* e > f c (At Haley & Erwin’s Old Stand,} : r ~ ■ J TITE KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND, A n \V large assortment of ;r Plantation & Family Supplies, lt HOOTS, SHOES, C EOTIII\G L‘s AND ‘s Staple Dry (roods. *'e Also: Corn, Oats. Cotton Seed, &c. eh ,jj Will pay the highest market price for Hides is and Peltry, Eg??s, Butter and Thicken*. iJVS m] ted"1 Please give us a call before pur cy chasing elsewhere’ ,h fcb20-ly. MOORE & CO. he ----- he WILLIAM II. BROCK. JAMBS T. BROCK. W. H. BROCK & BRO., ig DEALERS IN S STOVES, TINWARE. HARDWARE AND l groceries 0n Kuena Vista St., one door West orR. U. GnrSfe if WEi,keCp a ^°°l1 S"PPW of Cooking am v T Heating Stoves, Hardware and Tin It ware; also a good assortment of Faiuili y Groceries. All of which we intend sellim j. as low as can he sold in the market W manufacture our Tiuware, and will furuisl wholesale lulls as low as can he bouirht in tin a Memphis market. Our friends and the public generally wi! , find it to their interest to give us a call d W. H. BROCK & BRO. n Des Arc, Feb. 20, 18GG. J IVOTIOIS j Ts hereby given to all persons, wishing JL work of any kind done in the Tin line, either in the way of making or repairing; ■- must make their wishes known, and give ,f their orders in the business part of the house: Or, any person having business with any per son in the shop can see them by applying at . the counting-room of the establishment. No r person, under any circumstances, will bo al - lowed to visit the shop, as it hinders the ’- workmen and retards the work. fcblMHf W. H. BROCK & BRO. ■9*. ’ A. STEWART, 1 ( W. STEWART, i New Orleans, / \ Memphis. H. STEWART, Dcs Arc. sssw&ms * :COMMISSION MERCHANTS, AAD DEALERS IN General Merchandise,' DES ARC, ARK. STEWART &BR0’S HAVE for sale a largo lot of Groceries, Hardware, Guns anil Ammunition, Iron, Nails, Castings, Stores and Tin-Ware. Sash, Glass and Putty, Coal Oil and Lamps, Linseed Oil and Paint, Wooden-Ware, Saddlery. Agri cultural Implements, &o., &c. Also, DRY GOODS, HOOTS, SHOES AMU HATS. All of which will bo sold at the lowest rate* for CASH OB COUNTRY PRODUCE. febliO DES ARC DRUG STORE. __ >#> _— JOHNSON, DAVIS & CO. ! Wholesale & Retail DRUGGISTS, DES ARC, ARKANSAS. inn uii urtuu mu mr^ufib mini most complete stock in their line over offored in Dcs Arc, comprising §x\ip & TRUSSES! TRUSSES! LIQUORS! LIQUORS! SPICES, DYE STUFFS, Etc. PAINTS, OILS, COLORS, &C. GLASS & PUTTY. Onr stock embraces every thing coming within tho Drug Business. Give us a oall and we will guarantee satisfaction. All orders intrusted to our care tilled with promptness and accuracy. N. B.—Our establishment is in the hand* of an experienced Druggist, who can bo found, at bis Post at all hours—day and night. Dus Auo, February 20, 1800—tf. R. G. GILL & 00., DEALERS IN STAPLE and FANCY DRY GOODS, Keidy-Mado Clothing, Hats, caps, hoots, snocs. Hardware, Hollow Ware, ((iiei'iiNtvarc, &c. VLSO, KEEP A FULL SUPPLY OF Fam ily Groceries and PLANTATION SUPPLIES constantly on hand. Will pay the highest market price for Cot ton, Dry Hides and Produce of all kinds. T EE ID CITIZEN B OOK A N I) JOB OFFICE IS NOW IN OPERATION! I | -■-I ^ I ALL. KINDS Ol" BLANKS PRINTED ON SHORT NOTICE \ ANO IV THE : AT THE LOWEST RATES, G IVF US a CALI. AND WE WILL OUAR untcc entire satisfaction. i’ok a nAi.mxo,