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fflI€('€S u WISELY *■ «VlHAi
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SPARTA,J 3 E 0 RGIA.
FRIDAY MORNING, Aua. 27, 1860.
Our Corps of Contributors.
'Col. ». T. Harris,
F. L. Littlk, Esq.
Dr. E. M. Pendleton,
Col. C. W. DuBose,
J. T. Jordan, Esq. Esq
Geo. F. Pierce, Jr.
For tho Hancock Journal.
A few Thoughts on the Charac¬
teristics of Our Age
No. HI.
In our last communication we offered
the opinion that every people, who lived
tinder government at all, had just that
form which suited their necessities, and
th at the proselyting zeal, that once char¬
acterized some sections of our country, was
uncalled-for, unphilisophical, and redicu
lous. In-as-much as government was
made for man, it must adapt itself to man’s
peftuliarities. Hence the same form of
government is not likely to answer the
demands of two different people, than is a
given coat to fit too meu taken at a ven
ture on opposite sides of the globe. The
mistake which wc made is quite natural.
We fancied ourselves to be free, and con
sequently, happy, iu a political sense ; and
in our moments of generosity we wished
all other people equally so. Attributing
our prosperity to the form of our govern¬
ment, we imagined that the same form
Would make all other people equally pros¬
perous. Freedom is not an absolute term.
It is merely relative, and has a different
meaning in its application to different
people. What one would regard as glori¬
ous liberty ; another would call slavery.—
Tho bushman Hottentot, even, when
dressed iu holiday attire, is quite naked.
lie scorns the slavery of so little as a,
quarter ol a yard of cloth, dirty or clean,
tied anywhere. IIo sleeps in trees, and
lives upon grass-hoppers, and other of na¬
tures untaxed bounties. Upon a feather
bed, he would dic*of night-mare, or imag¬
ine himself bewitched beyond euro by all
the skill of tho conjuror’s art. Does free¬
dom mean the same thing to him that it
does to us ? Republicanism would affix a
“stamp” of the “internal” sort, to one of
the extremities of every grass-hopper and
lizard in Africa, and the choleric Bushmen
Would go to war, upon the principle that,
if a “tax upon tea” bo a “casus belli,” so
it a “tax upon any other equally’indispcn
ctblc article of diet.
The writer of this communication bus
never wasted much sympathy upon “tho
suffering millions of Europe,” because he
has regarded ull such expressions as deci¬
dedly figurative , and intended to elect
somebody to Congress, or the Legislature,
or, simply, as words spoken iu the cause
of rhetoric and finely rounded periods.—
It is very truo that there is suffering eve¬
rywhere. That is man’s heritage. Yet
people suffer by % thc million, nowhere.—
And we have yet to learn that there is
anything more pceuliar or more distressing
in tho sorrows of Europeans than in those
of Americans.
The laboring classes in this country rc
eeivo larger wages than the same classes
ih Europe, and this fact, doubtless, is
xbade the basis for the belief that there is
nfcoro suffering there than here—a conclu¬
sion which wo think utterly illogical.—
The wages of the laborer everywhere are
proportioned to the cost of living. We
wake this remark in refcrcucc to the com¬
mon, day laborer! The cost of living in
Europe is much less than it is here, and
bonce.a dollar represents a less umouut of
work here than it would there. It is a
nkttcr of deep regret to us that this fact
is not known to the lower classes of Europe,
as it would save many of them a very long
journey, and us, some very bad company.
As to the matter of oppression by their
rbltfs, wc believe there has been vast ex
* aggernttou. Coming to a country, one of
whose fundamental principles is abuse of
kings, it- is 'quite natural these people
should- seek to bring themselves into no¬
tice, and to excite* sympathy, by highly
colored pictures of the barbarities to which
they are subjected in their native land.—
♦Fust to it was before the war when a slave
escaped from his master into sOmo* North¬
ern State. Abolitionists were eager to
hear anything to our discredit. Their
ears were open to the tale of Sambo's
woes, and Sambo’s mouth was open to false¬
hoods, which, for compass, polish and de¬
tail, surpassed anythiug which the Fath¬
er of crookedness, himself, has left on rc
oord. A* a general rule —tako the opiu
ioxrfbr what it is worth—the lower class¬
es, everywhere, are apt to be discontented.
Those, following in the wake of that
•traoge, wild, grand, sane and in sane* vis¬
ionary, Victor Hugo, may attribute this
dissatisfied spirit to tbe “crimes of socie¬
ty ;” wo tliiuk it arises from the fact that
they are— wlutt they arc.
We hold the belief fttat the location
dffih’rent people’s within their respective
boundaries, all over the face of the globe,
was not a matter of chance. We think
France tho best plate iu the world for
Frenchmen-; Germany, the best place for
Germans—upon the principle that we arc
utterly at a loss to know how it could hap¬
pen that home should not be the very best
place oh earth for everybody. In this
broad world, that is just what we make it,
every man has a country, and every man
may have a home; and if there be not
affection* enough in him to bind him to the
one, or the other, wc have no faith in the
love which he may profess for the home
and the country of strangers.
GEORGIA.
For the Hancock Journal.
Necessity.
It is no uncommon thing in the En
glish language, for woida to have many
different significations on shades of mean*
ing. Even those that are in most com¬
mon use, are sometimes so very compre¬
hensive in their signification, as to be ap¬
plicable to almost all subjects of a similar
and even of a dissimilar character. Such,
for example, is the one we have chosen for
illustrating partially, our views oil the
present state of our affairs and on the na¬
ture and condition of the Government.—
That we have a Government, in form—
quasi in character but iu reality, not the
Government created and established by
the people is a fact so transparent to
every man who has given the subject a
moments thought, that must be admitted
by every candid thinker. That the Gov¬
ernment which was established by the
thirteen States or the people thereof, iu
their sovereign character in 1789, was a
Government so long as it was free from
usurpation, which commanded the lespect
and affection of tho masses, is also a fact,
so clearly written upon pages of History,
that none can be found even in* this de¬
generate day, skeptical enough to deny it.
That all good Governments instituted for
the benefit of the governed, is equally
clear. Nor can it be successfully denied,
that any people under the sun, have been
disposed to bear their wrongs so long as
they were not insupportable, rather than
redress their grievances by the sword.—
The tyrant-and usurper may resort to it—
do resort to it, for the purpose of riviting
the chains which they have forged, but
the people themselves have ever avoided
it, until forbearance was no longer a virtue
until forced by necessity to do it
The usurpations and wrongs, with which
our Government justly stands charged,
did not have their origin in necessity.—
Its enemies denounced it as weak, yet
none was stronger in its structure, to the
extent of its delegated powers. In its
infancy it only lacked the power. This
was undenied and undeniable. Every
good man in the land accorded these pow¬
ers to it and to sustain it, was ready “to do
and die.” There was—there could be no'
necessity for any stronger Government
than was thus established, for all the pur
poses of Government, If it were we.ik
as some pretended, it could be amended
in accordanoo with tho prescribed terms.—
They were expressed in the instrument
itself. Tho sword was never contempla
ted, by its founders for any such purpose.
it was intended that the Union should be
perpetual, but the great fact must not be
lost sight of, that it was intended also,
that the Constitution should never be dis¬
regarded by any department of the Gov¬
ernment or any portion of the people.—
Perpetual and exact fidelity to all its pro¬
visions was the price of perpetual Union.
For it cannot be presumed, that any of
the Statos of that day could have enter¬
tained the idea for a moment, that it was
a Government of unlimited powers in any
sense of that term, that they wero thus
creating. It never could have been rati¬
fied if any such idea had prevailed
and of course, could have never been
formed, if not ratified. This being
a truism, the States respectively, must
have power remained sovereign and
independent, so far as a Federal Gov¬
ernment is to be considered So long
then as the government was administered
according to the Constitution it was strong
enough and good enough for all and for
every wrong. Every evil had its appropri¬
ate remedy. None were incurable by
peaceful means. There could be no neces¬
sity for force or eoerciou to secure obedi¬
ence to law exoept as against the lawless.
Public opinion was the great corrective of
ull public evils and when this failed, pow¬
er enough was lodged in the hands of the
Executive of the National Government,
for their correction. What more could be
desired ? There was uo necessity for more
power to enforce law, if resisted than was
given, for the reason that enough was giv¬
en for each and every emergency, as ex¬
perience fully proved, for nearly a half
century, during the better days of the Re¬
public. And we are bold to declare, that
au honest, just and proper administration ;
of the Government would have secured
its perpetuity, for all time to come, beyoud
‘ SU r r rtr -
among the people who eKcted them
gradual demoralization of the masses—sec-,
tional jealousies degenerating iuto section
al hate—the inordinate love of money aud
*■* *" « rv tc *““ 6 thc Fiu, °
causes of the late disruption, lhere nev-,
er was any necessity for these. The I*ul» !
pitr failed most signally in the discharge
of its duties. It cried not aloud, against
these mighty evils—these grievous wrongs
which were silently but surely preparing
the way for the destruction of more than
six hundred thousand lives, and ten thou¬
sand millions of treasure, with a National
debt of three thousand millions of dollars,
and sins enough thrown in to damn a world
and populate tho lower regions to the ex¬
tent of suffocations. Let it not be thought
that we are harsh in our condemnation of
the Pulpit. \Ve have the greatest confi¬
dence iu its power for good as well as for
evil. But while we would not have it to
ally itself with party politics under any
circumstances wc would have it proclaim
at all timse, the principles of virtue and a
sound morality, and against every vice
that corrupts the heart or is opposed to
justice and truth. A corrupt people can
no more maintain a good Government than
can a corrupt fountain send forth good wa
ter. It was its office—nay it was its im¬
perative duty, to keep the morals of the
people pure, as far as it was in its power to
do it. That it has not exerted its whole
power to this end, cannot be questioned.
Now theie is and has been no necessity for
any failure iu its efforts in this direction.
Wc leave the guilty in the Lands of their
final Judge, believing that He will meet
out to them their just reward for all their
delinquences here. It had the Bible !—
The Bible with its sacred precepts
and teachings were trampled under
foot. It had the Scriptures! But the
Commandments were “too grievous toover
come.” It hud the truth as it fell from
the lips of the greatest Reformer the world
ever knew ! But what of all that? The
Savior of the world no longer influenced
their hearts by bis word or through his
Spirit. Hence all our evils—all our woes.
The plea of necessity, will not avail in
anything connected with tho past. Chris¬
tianity recognizes no such doctrine outside
of the ten commandments, and the New
Testament. By them wc judge, and
by them we condemu the whole
batch o f political preachers, from
first to last. To the extent of their influ¬
ence over the minds of men, are they re¬
sponsible and justly so held, for every
crime, whether moral or political. Called
to preach the Gospel of the Son of God
professedly, they have prostituted their
calling, for party objects and are mainly
responsible lor a fratricidal war, with all
its honors and all its guilt. Even uow
that the battle is over, they are not silent
rn their advocacy of wrong. What do
they mean ? Is it their purpose to drive
the country iuto infidelity Where is
their love to their fellow/ man? Where
their coudemiutiou of the most barefaced
sins that ever polluted a Nation ? Where
^ ,e * r effort as peacemaking ? They may
^ uow their duty but they d > it uot. They
are U,ue,i0 lekcl upharsin”—weighed and
Found wanting, J hey love not the truth
“they regard not either the principles of
j U: >ticc or righteousness and the best that
Ca 11 he claimed for them is, that they are
“ w hited sepulchers iuii et rottenness with
* n * We mean political preachers ODly—
party hacks—“wolves in sheep’s clothing”
— nothing more nor less thau such. We
loath them as we do the foulest stench that
ever emanated from the vilest sinks of cor¬
ruption aud iuiquity. But they have hud
influence—great influence in some sec
uops of the country and they have it now ;
and so long as they exort it, just so long
will it bo found difficult to re cstablith
such friendly relations between every sec¬
tion as every good man must desire.
GIVIS.
— -d—------— -
A A’oblc Retaliation.
A Havanna letter of the 20th ult. states
that the patriot General Quesada leceutly
seut a flag of truce with a letter to the
Spanish General Lcsca, proposing to ex¬
change some prisoners. Lcsca responded
by sayiug that the death of a dozen Span¬
iards was of no cousequence ; besides, he
had none of Quesada’s men as prisoners, for
■as soon as they fell iuto his hands he had or¬
dered them shot, aud he should continue
to puisuo this same coarse. When this
answer was received by Quesada, he called
the Spanish prisoners together and said :
“Senors, I hold in my hand a death war¬
rant issued against you, drawn up by your
own chief, Lesea. The reading of it in¬
spires me with horror;” so saying, he
handed the paper to one of his aids, who
read it aloud. Seeing that the prisoners
were full of indignation at the sentiments
contained in Lesca’s note, Quesada said to
them : “Senors, General Quesada is not a
General Lcsca. I pardon you all. YTu
can. leave when you will, and to effect a
safe exit for you I will issue the necessary
passports.” When the General had fin¬
ished speaking, the liberated Spaniards
burst forth in shouts for Quesada and free
Quba. Only two of them asked the nec
C5Sar y protection papers to go to Havanna,
—“ “ -
the liberating army.
---
We were informed, on yesterday,
a difficulty took P ,ace on Tuef<J ay between
o Ilt . 0 [ rhe combatants was killed.— Chron.
ifc Sent.
Rumored Impeachment of Gov.
Bullock.
Wc learn from persons who profess to
know whereof they speak, that a deter¬
mined purpose is expVessed by a large
number of members of the House of Rep¬
resentatives of our Legislature to prefer
articles of impeaohment against Gov. Bul¬
lock immediately after the General
Assembly mcet3, and that the movement
is daily gaining strength amongst tho
members. T here are said to be many al¬
leged grounds of impeachment, the princi¬
ple of which are the spending large sums
of the public money by the Governor
without authority of law, the conversion
of the State’s funds to his own private use,
and the abuse of the pardoning power.
It is confidently asserted that State
Treasurer Angier is prepared to furnish
abundant and conclusive proof of the two
first charges, and as to the third, abuse of
the pardoning power, almost every county
in the State can prove where legally coni,
victed criminals of the deepest dye, many
of whom have confessed their guilt, have
been let loose upon society by the soi-call
ed clemency of the Executive, until the
people have almost abandoned confidence
in the protection which the law affords
against evil-doers .—Journal d> Messenger,
Aug. 23<?.
We stale it as our candid opinion that
the General Assembly will do well to give
its attention to subjects of more interest
to the people and the welfare of the State,
than that of impeaching Gov. Bullock.—
The reseating of the colored members,
and tlie prompt passage of the Fifteenth
Constitutional Amendment are matters of
much greater importance, which should
first of all, occupy the attention of the
Legislature at it* next meeting. We look
upon its impeachment rumor as a first class
humbug, which will end in empty air.—
Any movement in this direction would be
highly detrimental to the political, social,
and material interest of the commonwealth.
Our people want political quiet and repose,
Impeachment means revolution, aud as"
stated heretofore, (in these colnnms) we
shall oppose any steps looking to such del¬
eterious result .—New Era, 24/A.
Grant Taking Ike Back Tratk.
Grant is exhibiting his chronic political
vacillation in his conduct to Mississippi.
The policy of conciliation that he favored,
and for which a heavy wing of the Repubs
lican party has been battling, proved suc¬
cessful in Virginia. The ultra Radicals
were promptly thrown overboard. The
same policy has triunmphed in Tennessee.
The thing has frightened the ultraists,
North, who have come back upon Grant
so heavily as to frighten him into a craw¬
fish out of his conciliatory policy, aud
even to some backsliding on his own dear
kinsman, the Dent.
The bugaboo that has been rattled about
bis ears has been tho split in the Radical
ranks. Our own Democratic press has
helped the cry, by claiming the triumph
cf Walker aud Senter, as a Democratic
victory, when, in no sense of the word, has
it been a Democratic victory. It was won
by conceding the very thing the Demo¬
crats opposed. It was really the result of
a grim necessity. The radical party was
divided, and the rebel vote was the turn¬
ing weight. So the moderate Republicans
weut for getting it, and gave the rebels
enfranchisuient, if they would support
them. The disfranchised were fighting for
freedom, the Republicans for place.
The extreme Radicals were too fanati¬
cal to go strongly for rebel enfranchise¬
ment and they were whipped. Aud now
they are trying to drive Grant from his
conservative Republicanism by the scare¬
crow that the thing is a sharp Democrat¬
ic dodge, “to divide the Republican par¬
ty,” and scramble into power through the
divison thus created.
lienee we do say our journals have been
impolitic as well as untrue iu claiming such
visitors, as Walker’s aud Senter’s, Demo¬
cratic.
They had better pass for just what they
are—triumphs outside of party, growing
out of necessity, and establishing no prin¬
ciple, but that, if one man plays friendly,
aud anotner hostile to you, that you arc
very apt to side with the former, when
you can do nothing of and for yourself
alone.
We copy an extract from the St. Louis
Republican :
If it is really intended to reconcile, the
administration must do right throughout,
and not talk conciliation and act disfran¬
chisement. aud thereby please nobody. A
reconciliation, by which is meant that
Southern men should elect Northern'car.
pet baggers, or send to the United States
Senate politicians who grind them in the
dust, is no reconciliation at all. It is a
phantom created iu the imagination ut
perhaps a well-meaning man, but evident¬
ly not of a man of ciaer understanding.
sub agent for Georgia and Florida, has
already upon his books orders for upwards
of six hundred Chinese, the treater num
ber of whom are for Savaunah and its im
vici “ ,ty -
Sno.v fell in France aud North Italy on
the 29th and 317 July.
The IVewg.
STATE.
The Thermometer stood at 103 in Ma¬
con last Sunday.
New corn is selling in Bainbridgo at
81 per bushel.
Jasper county has had meal from now
corn.
A gold mine has recently been discov¬
ered in Forsyth county.
first Forsyth paid 35 cents a pound for its
new bale of cotton.
Georgia has forty-seven cotton mills,
against thirty.five in 1850.
Tho Menroo county Superior Court is
in session, with 243 cases before it.
The Dawson Manufacturing Company
is furnishibg freight cars at the rate of
thirty a month.
T. S. Garner is canvassing Hall coun¬
.
ty in the interest of the Air-Line Rail¬
road.
Governor Bullock has ordered that
tax of four tenths of one per cent, be as
sessed and collected for the present year.
The Governor has pardoned Jim Jones,
a person of color of Dougherty county,
who was convicted of burglary in the
for night, and sentenced to the peuitentiary
life.
New Cotton. —The ‘Augusta Chroni¬
cle & Sentinel of yesterday says : A far¬
mer, whose plantation is on Broad river,
in this State, brought into this city yes¬
terday thirty bales of cotton of this year’s
crop
Last Sunday, says the Courier, was one
of the hottest days ever known in Iloino.
The thermometer at 3 o’clock p. m.,
stood at 103° and at 9 p. m., at 89°.-—
The nights during the past week have
been unm-ually warm tor this locality.
TOKEIGN.
Serrano puts on the airs of a sovereign.
The Pope returns his thanks to the
Emperor ^ of Austria for pardoning the
Bishop of Linz.
Tw nty thousand elephants furnish
Sheffield its annual supply of ivory.
It is said that Marshal McMahon will
j succeed Neil as Minister of War.
At a meeting held at Waterford and
Thorless, the Government was urged to
issue a general amnesty to Fenians.
Encounters are still reported between
the Spanish troops and the (Jarlists. in
which the latter are unfortunately defeat
ed.
Two American prelates, who had been
detained in Abyssinia, have been released
through the invention of the British Gov¬
ernment.
will Malaiga raisins in crop, it is thought,
be one-third less than last year, when
it was 1,950,000 boxes.
The famous Clychy prison, Daris, was
put up at auction the other day, the first
price being 8300,000, but no one would
take it at that figure.
A gang of English pic-pockets, which
infested the German watering places have
been arrested.
The controlling idea of a French “girl
of the period”—to dress as every one else
dresses, and yet to dress as no one else.
The Governor of Espiritu Sauto has
conscripted all in his jurisdiction between
the ages of 20 and 50.
Sickness is decreasing at Havana.—
Heavy rains arc falling daily, and tho
thermometer murks ninety-eight degrees
day and night.
eight A wealthy Dublin geutleman keeps
printing presses busy, printing tracts,
most ol‘ which he writes himself, in seven
different languages.
The Kuipcroi is still suffering from
rheumatic pains, and will not visit the
camp at Chalons until September. The
I’rinee Imperial reviewed the troops at
Chalons in the absence of the Emperor.
GENERAL.
Gen. Sherman is going to camp meet,
ing with Senator Sprague of Rhode Island.
The Arkansas negroes propose to pre¬
empt lauds, and hire Chinese laborers to
work them.
Grasshoppers are at last utilized '“Io¬
wa is teaming’ with grashoppers, 6ays a
paper of that State.
The remnantof the Seminole Indians in
Florida, complain of Outrageous treatment
from their white neighbors.
Trot. Julius II. Seelye, cf Amherst
College, lias determined not to accept the
Presidency of Michigan University.
If you want all your neighbors to “know
all about you,” give a party and don’t in¬
vito the folks “who live next door.
A man iu St. Louis committed suicide
last Thursday, because the sickness of his
wife rendered Lcr unfit ro support him.
The talk i3 revived of bringing to
France with the pomp, the remains of the
Duke of lleichstadt, the son of tho first
Napoleon.
The Russian Government is said to
have ottered thirty-five million francos for
piclurc sal,e -
B«. Liebig state, that the .and of
Hesse has risen 300 per cent, in value
in °° D9eq “ CnCC I
Tho invitations of the that wedding in
Atlantic City, Wyoming -Territory, were j
sent that kind on playing cards, the only article of j
that the country afforded.
Ihe Hon. Horace Greeley’s knowledge
of agricultural affairs is improving. The
turnips him which he raised last year only cost
one dollar aud twelve cents each.
None Philadelphia is in sore straits f.r water.
can be drawn from Fairmount re.
servoir. New Y T ork on thc contrary, is
blessed with an abundant supply of Cro
ton.
The Cotton Crop of Georgia.— A
feeling of profound disappointment per¬
vades the mass of Georgia cotton planters
just now. The rust has clean dissipated
every prospect of a “bully crop,” and
knocked down anticipations l’rcm twenty
five to fifty per cent. We have heard
much talk and speculation about this rust
whether, in truth, the plant is rusting
or burning undor the drought and the in¬
tensity of the solar heat, We think it
must be a good deal of both. At all evbnts,
the disease saps the vitality of the plant
at once. It wilts, droops, and frequently
falls prone upon the bosom of Mothef
Earth. What bolls are sufficiently matur¬
ed, will open prematurely and develop
their contents of rather inferior cotton,
and then the account of the stalk is closed
for ever. Georgia will make as much
cotton as she did last year, and that was
a very scant crop. Whether she will do
better, and if so, how much, is yet to be
settled — Macon Telegraph.
Cotton Tax (Jlai ws.—W e have seen’
a circular from Washington, which states
that it is now the entire Supreme Bench,
with one exception, are of opinion that
the cotton tax was unconstitutional, and
will have to bo refunded. A case is to be
made in Court next December, and is no
&mbt is felt about the ultimate result. l£
is further said, that, a company is being
organized in New York with a capital of
five or ten millions to buy up these claims'
and that parties are now selling them tor
a song when they are worth their face.—
Planters and others, who have paid th a
tax, arc earnestly advised not to part with
their claims for the present. No doubt
they will be collected at the proper time,
at a very moderate per ccntagc.— Macon
Tele'gruph .
THE GREAT
CHILL AM FEVER
EXPELLER.
L1PPMS PYRAFUGE:
4 -
il’ IS IN FACT A
MOST WONDERFUL
Fe vc r Cure,
ON ACCOUNT OF TUtS
Instant Remedy
MAKING A
LASTING AND PERMANFNT CURE,
NO CASK
II O W E V E11 O B S TINA T E,
Can Resist its Health-giving Properties'
PYRAFUGE
Creates an Appetite, Brings Color to tha
Cheeks of tne Emaciated and
Strength to tho Feeble.
EVERY BOTTLE SOLD IS AC¬
COMPANIED BY A GUARANTEE
OF ITS EFFICACY.
The Proprieton of the PYitAFUGE challenge*
every case, no matter of how long standing,
to try this GREAT CHILE AND FEVEK
CURE, and then deny its wonderful curat iv*
properties.
ASK FOR
Lippman’s
PYRAFUGE, AND GET RID OF THAT 7
Miserable Disease,
CHILL AND FEVER.
For sale at Wholesale, by the Sole Maim-'
facturcr for Lite Un'.ted Stato*, by
JACOB LIP' MAN,
l’BOJ’It JETOH or
LIFTMAN’S WHOLESALE DRUG HOUSE*
Savannah, Gu.
K A Y T ON'S
OIL OF LIFE
CURES ALL
Pains and Aches,
AND IS TI1E
Great Rheumatic Remedy.
KAYTON’S PILLS
Cures Sick Headache
AND A l I,
BILIOUS DISORDERS.
May 21—ly.
K. li. stedman;
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June 18—Hut SPARTA, GA-