The gazette. (Elberton, Ga.) 1872-1881, February 26, 1873, Image 2

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THE GAZETTE. Wednesday, February 26,1873. That Postmaster. —The A bbevile Ban ner continues its defence of Mr. Lawson,, the postmaster at that place. In answer to the charge We made of allowing part of the mail that wept from this place to Abbeville to be returned to this office, he says : “Tifis mail matter never came to Abbeville at all.” This would seem to settle the matter, but it don’t. The mail carrier on that route avers positively that at Dry Grove, the last office on the route before reaching Abbeville, he assisted Mrs. Cox, the wife of the postmas ter, (he not being at home,) with the mail; that he distinctly remembers having put back into the mail-bag the part of the mail 10 which we refer. He further states dis tinctly that on return to the same office he Bnw the bag opcnced by the same lady (the postmaster again being absent), and she found these papers still in the bag ap parently never having been disturbed since they were replaced by her, and to which she called his atention. This is a simple state ment of facts made by the mail-carrier, to which we have added nothog, and have omitted nothing. The editor closes by saying: “He (Mr. Lawson) desires us to say that be is determ ed to bring out the true facts ot the matter, as he relies upon them for his justification.” In which we wish him God-speed. We do not wish to accuse him falsely, and if we have done so in this case we shall readily and cheerfullly do him justice; but there is day-light to be let in somewhere about Abbeville, and we hope to see it soon. We informed ourself fully of the facts in the case before mentioning them at all, as is our habit in all such cases, and we will take es pecial pleasure in recording the aame of the guilty party. LET US HA VE A RAILROAD TO ELBER 'TON. A gentleman in Elberton, who has at considerable trouble informed himself of all the points—including expenses, cost of ma terial, &c.—says that if the citizens ot this county will raise seventy-five thousand dol lars for that purpose, he will guarantee a railroad from the Air-Line to Elberton.— Now, citizens of Elbert, let us see of what sort of material you are made. If fifteen men will pledge themselves to raise five thousand dollars each, the thing can be •done. We will receive the names of gen tlemen who desire to join this club of fif teen. Parties will hand tbeir names to the editor of this paper, and he will publish from week to week the progress made in the .good cause. We do not mean that these fifteen men shall subscribe five thousand each, but raise it among their neighbors and friends any where in the county. Let us have your names gentlemen. All necessary information given to those who desiro to join the club. Hold Hria !—lf somebody don’t stop that Abbeville Medium man he will soon have our whole town burnt up. Hear what he says in his issue of the 12th : Incendiarism . —\Ve learn that that the •town of Elberton, Ga., was fired on last Wedncshay night and that three stores with <OOOIOOIB wero destroyed. It appears that a negro man and white man, names unknown, broke into a store with the purpose of steal ing, secured what they wanted and applied lhe match to conceal the perpetrators of the theft. The guilty parties have been arrest ed and lodged in jail and we sincerely trust that the full measure of the law will be me ted out to them. The rights of private citi zens should not be trampled upon. The majesty of the law should be vindicated and upheld at all hazards. The Atlanta Constitution is a good paper. We publish a prospectus for 1873. We can commend it to those who wish to take au Atlanta Daily. We have no objection to publishing a reasonable advertisement oc casionally for our cotemporaries, but think •that some of our friends and brother journ nlists ask a little too much of us when they desire nearly or quite a column of our space. We have but little room to Bpare, indeed ■ourp aper is not large enough lor its circula tion and the amount of advertising patron age which we receive. So, hereafter, we ask a little condensation in the mat ter we are requested to publish. We fully endorse the latter part of the •above extract from the Washington Gazette. We think it a heavy tax on the rural press to be requested to publish a column ad. as a notice of a city exchange. We have re ceived a copy of the prospectus of the Con stitution, but have not published it, became our readers somehow know the difference between an advertisement and reading mat ter. We appreciate the Constitution as much as any paper coming to our office, par ticularly its Supreme Court reports, but we have been compelled to omit the lengthy no tice sent us for want of space. Wood’s Household Magazine for March is full to repletion of useful, entertaining and profitable reading. Hon, Schuyler ‘Colfax has an excellent temperance speech in this number, and all who write for this excellent work are authors of known merit. Price one dollar per year. For fifty cents extra, Hope and Joy, two beautifully tinted crayon portraits, worth four dollars, will be mailed free. For specimen, enclose two stamps and address S. S. Wood, Newburgh, N. Y. RAILROAD FROM CHICAGO TO SAVAN NAH. A large meeting of delegates from Indi ana and Kentucky met at Indianapolis, In diana, on the sth inst., to consider the practicability of building an air-line rail way from Chicago, Illinois, to Savannah, Georgia. The meeting was pronounced a great success. The greatest interest in the construction of the road was manifested by all present, including tbe President of the Indianapolis, Delphi and Chicago Railroad, (a letter from whom to our townsman, D. A. Mathews, we are permitted to publish.) The plan, according to several prominent railroad men present, seemed to be emi nently practical, and all that seems necessa ry to make tbe road a success is for the people along the proposed line of the road to manifest sufficient interest in the matter. Provision has been made for surveys from the Ohio river South, and from the ener getic spirit manifested we can but believe that this railroad is to be regarded as a certainty for the immediate future. Elbert county will be embraced in the line if her people desire it, and make known that de sire by taking hold of the matter before the line is located elsewhere. The benefits to be derived from the road, if run through our county, are incalculable. The greatest wants of the people at the present time— cheap grain and provisions and a quick transit for freight—will be better accom plished by this route than by any other that has been or can be proposed. Bacon and corn could be laid down at our doors cheaper than can now be done at Atlanta or Augusta. At the meeting before alluded to, Mr. Foley, of Greensburg, Indiana said : “At the suggestion of President Haymond, l undertook to obtain information as to the feasibility of extending the line further South to the Atlantic on the same tangent.. This line after leaving Lexington, passess through Knoxville, and down the valley of the Savannah river through Augusta and to Savannah. This whole country is rich in a great variety of resources of the soil and mine. From Lexington to Knoxville it will pass through extensive coal and iron fields. The route is entirely practicable and a large amount of work has been done between Lexington and Richmond, and from Knoxville north forty-six miles are graded and thirty miles in operation.— From Knoxville south sixteen miles are in operation, and considerable work done on the line from Marysville to the Tennessee river. From the point where the line will strike the Tennessee river it will continue up the course of that river to its head wa ters at Rabun Gap. Rabun Gap through the Blue Ridge is a remarkable one. It presents a complete break through that chaiu of mountains. From Rabun Gap thirty miles of rather heavy work will bring you to the Savannah river and the cotton fields of the South. The distances by this route are: From Indianapolis to Lexington, 156 m. “ Lexington to Knoxville, 183 “ “ Knoxville to cotton Fields 148 “ “ Cotton Fields to Augusta, 115 “ u Augusta to Savannah, 120 “ Total, 727 “ The mountains of North Carolina contig to this line abound in a great variety of valu ble minerals. The Legislature of Georgia has chartered a company to build a line from Augusta to Rabun Gap and the State guar tees their bonds to the amount of SIS,OCX) per mile. The New Illustrated Annual of Phrenol ogy and Physiogomy for 1873, contains por traits and sketches of more than fifty dis tinguished subjects; including Seward, Livingstone, Fred. Douglas, Arnold; with Indians, Negroes, May lays, Arabs, Caucasians; Views of the Human Brain ; Language of the Lips; Character in Expression; Physiognomy; with por traits and sketches of all the Presidents of the U. S - , from Washington to Grant. A capital hand-book of 75 pages, 12mo. Price 25 cents, S. It. Wells, Publisher, 389 Broad way, N. Y. Demorest’s Monthly for March is an un exceptionable nnmber. To the ladies we specially recommend this as one of the most chaste and detightful magazines published. Look at our club rates, and subscribe, or if you desire the magazine alone, send $3 to W. Jennings Demorest, 838 Broadway, New York. La Mode Elegant, a fashion magazine, published in Versailles, France, and repub lished by S. T. Taylor, 816 Broadway New York, has been received. This magazine is published monthly, with fashion plates of unsurpassed beauty, and contains, besides a complete cut pattern in each number, much desirable information to ladies. Terms, 36 a year. Revuk De La Mode, from the same publisher. A copy of this excellent French magazine for March. The excellence of these publications have to be seen to be ap preciated. 33 a year. ‘Drifting Along’ is crowded out this week by a press of other matter. Gen. Grant will make a tour through the South in March. We have been handed the following for publication : Office of Indianapolis, Delphi and Chicago Railroad Company, Monticello, Ind , Feb. Bth, 1873. D. A. Mathews, Esq., Elberton, Ga. Dear Sir in Your letter was received a day or two before the time fixed for our rail road convention at Indianapolis. I thought It best to delay answering it until the results of that meeting were made known. I en close to you a report of the procccdim-s.—- From them you will learn that initial steps have been taken to set the enterprise in mo tion. I shall proceed in person, accompan ied with a competent civil engineer to make a reconnoissance of tbe proposed point for crossing the Ohio river in a few weeks.— Two rival points for crossing are under con sideration—one at the city of Madison, the other at Vevay. Our survey will embrace both sides ot the river and will be sufficient ly thorough to determine the practicability of these crossings, expense of bridging that stream, the difficulties to be encountered among the Eagle Hills on the South Side, &c. Our survey will probably be extended to Lexington, Ky., and if circumstauces are favorable, we may extend it through the Cumberland mountains. I am president of an air line to be con structed from Chicago to Indianapolis. This line will pass centrally through a region of our State of Illinois, bounded on either side by the present indirect lines leading from one of these cities to the other. It will be 20 or 25 miles shorter than any com pleted road leading from Indianapolis to Chicago, and the only one suitable to form a link in the grand chain of connection be tween Chicago and Savannah. Our board of directors will meet as soon as the above mentioned survey has been completed, and the point of crossing the Ohio river deter mined. At this meeting (which is an ad journed meeting') we will amend an article of association so as to extend our line from Indianapolis to the Ohio river. This line from Indianapolis to the river will be a straight continuation of the line now em braced by our charter. It will be in a S. E. direction, the further continuation of which, without material deflection, will go to Lexington, Ky., Knoxville, Tenn., the head waters of the Savannah river, Augus ta, Ga., and thence to the city of Savan nah. It occurs to me if this scheme is carried into effect, it will form the best line of road on the continent. The question has been sprung and is engaging serious attention. Let us all awaken to the importance of this grand connection, and unite in harmonious action. Tho and honestly mauaged will soon become a fact. It has so many elements of strength in its favor that it will command attention and move forward by its own inherent force. It is a road now urgently demanded by general commercial considerations. It would unite the South and West by the stiongest of commercial ties. It would form the best passible channel of connection between our Southern shores and the West and South America, directing the comm£ce of these countries through our great trunk line. The city of Lexington was represented at our convention, and we are fully assured that the cause will meet a favorable recepttm in that State. I have no doubt but Indianapo lis and Chicago will in due time give the scheme full encouragement. We confident ly expect to build a good portion of oui end of the line during the present season ;) and we are in communication with capitalists that we think are able to carry the enterprise through, so aa to connect and become con tinuous with the lines alluded to in yocr levtcr. I will re-state what lfiavc stated before, that the initial steps have been taken, and though the enterprise is of v tr y recent con ception, none in this country las ever at tracted so much attention in so slort atirnc. Let us keep the “ball rolling.” It would be premature at present for tie to attempt to answer all your a satisfactory manner; but I can assurqyou of this, that the people who have inaugra- ted this enterprise are honest and and ler mined, and have no association or collec tion with “Speculators or Swindlers.” The enterprise is a feasible one an<s.he time has come for a full consideration dit. We desire the sympathy and coopers on of your people iu conjunction with ou ef forts. We desire the early consideratio <f the question by the people along the eqw line from Chicago to the sea. I will be much pleased to hear from yc at any time, and also obliged to you for an information leaning upon the question. Very Respectfully, Yours, &c., W. S. Haymond. From the Atlanta Constitution.] 1 CORRUPTION IN THE BOND MATTER .| Col. Lamar, writing to the Savannah Advertiser, mentioned a rumor that apa per has been offered five thousand dollarl to advocate the settlement. He doubted iUh truth. Our own Washington correspondent tele-1 graphed us some days since that the! friends of Clews said that the Georgia Leg-1 islature was fixed. The boast proved to be false. Still later, another Atlanta paper has a Washington dispatch that halt a million of dollars has been distributed in Georgia to influence legislation in favor of the bond settlement. That paper asks if we will not investigate the matter. We will do so with immense satisfac tion. If true it should be known, and the par ties that would thus attempt to bribe sup port of a public measure be held up to pub lic scorn. The public good requires that all attempt at public corruption be punished without mercy. If not true, it should be falsified in jus tice to the men and journals that have advocated tbe bond settlement from con scientious grounds of public policy. Let the men that come to Georgia to debauch her Legislature and press be pillo ried in public execration. But if the charge oi corruption be an invention and a trick to dragoon public sentiment and forestall inquiry into grave public matters, let the shame fall upon the inventors. It is too much the habit to complicate public questions with personal crimination. Let a pure and fearless press put it down. Let reckless denunciations and wholesale misrepresentations be not allowed to take tbe place of fact and argu ment. A number of the best journals and most trusted of our citizens have taken ground for the bond settlement. Who of them are charged with purchase ? Let us have ex plicit charges, so that responsibility can be fixed, and not vague insinuations that are a reflection on the whole press and people. We will, indeed, probe to the bottom of this tale of attempted bribery. And to begin, let us state that it came to us from a source that we could not use, that the Savannah Morning News was the paper that had been offered a bribe of 85,000 to advocate the bond settlement. The rumor came to us from other sources not con fidential, and we now call the News to the stand to say whether the rumor is true or false. We further call upon out Atlauta neigh bor to furnish us the name of its Washing ton informer, and we will trace that matter home. Our own Washington correspondent is already under instructions to investigate and report. By all means let us probe. The Term “Carpet-Bagger.” —Many of the best Southern men in the Southern States, says the New Orleans Picayune, are Northern men—men born in New England —Massachusetts. Many Northern men have come to the South, before and since the war, to do business and find homes.— And those who came with such views, re spectable and well behaved, will seldom fail to be appreciated aud to receive the welcome and the position to which they are entitled. The people of the South are desirous of hav ing as many settlers as possible of this des cription. Men of this character are not carpet-baggers, however small their lug gage or empty their purses. They arc a desirable element. The term carpet-bag ger is applicable to the needy demagogue whose stock in trade consists of the number of colored voters he can persuade that the Southern white men are their relentless en emies and oppressors, and whose political status and personal fortunes depend upon his success in banding them upon the basis of injurious falsehoods, to use for his own official honor, profit and plunder, under the semblauce of legal forms and backed by the bayonets of the United States. These birds of passage we have no use for. The Marlboro’ Times. —Wo have re ee'wed a copy of the above paper, published at Bennwtsvillc, S. 0., and edited by our old friend Jno. T. Darlington, who will doubtless be i-emembered by many of the citizens of Elberton as one of the employ ees of the old “Star of the South” office be fore the war. The limes is a good paper, is well managed, and from the many adver tisements it contains, we judge it to be a paying institution. We hope to receive reg ular weekly visits from our friend in the fu ture, and wish the paper the greatest pros perity. Horrible. —Thiers, President of the French Republic, fifty years ago was sprin ter’s devil. Who ever thought to have found a printer’s devil in Thiers (tears.) The perpetrator of the above has left the country. Demorest’s Young America for March keeps up the reputation already made by this very desirable publication. The chil dren take especial pleasure in conning its pages. Club with The Gazette for one year for $2.50, or send $1 to the publisher, 838 Broadway New, York, —— Hon. John W. H. Underwood has been Appointed to the benoh of the Superior HJourt of the Romo Circuit. ■ Judge Trippe has been appointed to the |ipreme Court bench in place of Judge .|ontgomery, whose term had expired. 4 ♦♦♦ | The name of the town of Bellevue, four in miles north of Gainesuille, on the Air i|ie Railroad, has been changed to Belton. Atlanta.—The editor of the Savannah Republican, who has been for some time so journing in Atlanta, writes to his paper from that city as follows : Atlanta decidedly is not a pleasant place in point of climate, in winter, and as in ad dition to the “catch-colds,” the water is bad, and the whisky said to be worse—the streets unpaved, and muddy to a fearful degree, and the weather as variable as some femi nine tempers —coal scarce, rents high, and a generally unfinished air about it, its attrac tions to the wayfarer are not overpowering. Add to these the threatened impending fall of the State House, the prevalence ot ery sipelas, and removal of the Capital, engen dering angry suspicions in the Atlantcse mind, that the stranger within her gates has come to plot that removal or increase the “crack” visible in her walls, and compas sionate your correspondent. One remarka ble thing strikes the stranger on reading the three morning papers here—and that is, each one of them has the largest, circulation beyond doubt or denial—although one of them blows its horn far louder than the oth ers, and seems inspired by an unwholesome jealousy ol inoffensive Savannah, wherein it gravely declares there are now four hundred houses to let. It is surprising how much one learns of Suvaunah in these aspiring young presses. Beautiful Women. —The hair is the clowning glory ot woman. There are few moderate defects which cannot be remedied by the proper disposition of the tresses. — But when the hair begins to fall out, or turn gray, in young people, or with those in the prime of life, there is cause for real regret. When this is the case, Rail’s Vegetable Si citlian Hair Renewer will be found to be n first class remedy, far superior, as a sound medical medium, to anything else before the public. It actually restores gray hair to its original color, and in the great majority of cases, causes it to grow again when it is becoming thin. It is not like many popu lar preparations, a mere wash, but a scien tific discovery, endorsed and used by physi cians of character. Address R. P. Hall & Cos., Nashua, N. H. Forney's Weekly Press, Feb. 1, 1868. Avaunt, Indigestion! —The Charter Oak Stove is the most interesting and important feature in the family economy; for it fills the house with warmth, the table with good cheer, and prevents that dreary aspe,ct and indigestible meals that brings sourness of temper, discomfort f<.nd dis satisfaction . — $75,000 In cash for sl.- We call the attention of our readers to the advertisement in another column of the Nebraska State Orphan Asylum. Here is a chance to v. in a fortune in a Public Legal Drawing, and aid a noble charity. JjUto Jptetisemcnts. JOHN H. JONES & CO., From this day, will sell their stock of WINTER DRESS GOODS CLOTHING, OASSIMERES, HATS, RIBANDS, NOTIONS, &C., AT COST FOR CASH. A Noble Charity. OMAHA LOTTERY! To erect the NEBRASKA STATE ORPHAN ASYLUM, To be drawn ic Public, March 31, 1873. Tickets sent by Express C. 0. D , if desired. 1 Cash Prize... 575,000 1 Cash Prizc....s2. p >,ooo 1 Cash Prize.... 15,000 1 Cash Prize... 10,000 1 Cash Prize... 5,000 1 Cash Paizc... 4,000 For balance of Prizes send for Circular. This Legal enterprise is endorsed by his ex cellency Gov. W. H.James, and the best business men of the State The limited nnmber of Tickets on hand will be furnished those who apply first. Agents Wanted. For full particulars address J. M. PATTEE, Manager, Omaha, Neb. GUANOS. PHCEIsTIX Gt-TT-A-ITO WILCOX, GIBBS A CO.’S MANIPULATED GUANO. These celebrated guanos imported and prepared by Wilcox, Gibbs A Cos., Savannah, Ga.,and Charleston, S. C., are for sale for cash, or on credit on accommodating terms, payable in cot ton, by BLAIR, SMITH A CO., Augusta, Ga. Special attention is called to the use of the Phoenix Guano composted with Cotton Seed Send or apply as above for circulars, giving tes timonials from planters—prices, Terms, Ac. EVERY LADY SHOULD HAVE IT. Peterson’s Magazine! Prospectus for 1873. The Cheapest and Best Peterson’s Magazine has the best original stories of any of tbe lady’s books, the best Col ored Fashion Plates, the be3t Receipts, the best Steel Engravings, Ac. Every family ought to take it. It gives more for the money than any other in the world. It will contain, next year, in its twelve numbers, One thousand payes! Fourteen splendid Steel Plates! Twelve Colored Berlin Patterns! Twelve mammoth Colored Fashions! Nine hundred Wood-cuts! Twenty-four payes of Music! It will also give Five Original Copyright Nov elettes, by Mrs Ann S. Stephens, Frank Lee Ben edict, and others of the best authors of Ameri ca. Also, nearly a hundred shorter stories, all ori ginal. Its superb MAMMOTH COLORED FASHION PLATEg are ahead of all others. These plates are en graved on steel, twice the usual size. TERMS, always in Advance, $2.00 A YEAR GREAT REDUCTION TO CLUBS. 2 copies for $3.50 and 3 for $4.50, with a copy of the superb mezzotint (20 x 16) “Christ Weeping over Jerusalem ” to the person gettinc up the club. 8 4 copies for $6.50, 6 for $9, and 10 for sl4 with an extra copy of the magazine for the year 1873, as a premium, to the person get ting up the club. 8 copies for sl2 and 12 for sl7, with both an extra copy of the magazine and the premium mezzotint to the person getting up the club Address, post-paid, CHARLES J. PETERSON, 306 Chestnut st., Philadelphia. sent gratis if desired, sstOs2o IT w * nt,>d 1 Allolmms ofwAlkll.lt| v p | ,areltho>w.x,youu*orold, mako man mono*, work (or us in thelv spare n>oin<4}M, or ullUjeWme, t 1,,„ Olw. rartfcwltn ttm. JMnm 0. Sttown * Oo,7Parttis! *£!£!.' 1 A MODEL NEWSPAPER. The Savannah Daily News The Savannah Daily Morning Newt is acknow ledged by the press and people to be the beet daily paper south of Louisville and east of New Orleans. Carrying with it the prestige and re liability ot age, it has all the vigor and vitality of youth, and its enterprise as a gatherer of the latest and freshest news has astonished Us con temporaries and met the warm approbation of the public. During the year 1873, no expense of time, la bor, and money will be spent to keep the Morn ing Newt ahead of all competitors in Georgia journalismand to deserve tho Haltering encomi ums heaped upon it from all quarters There has as yet, been no serious attempt made to rival the special telegrams which the Newt inaugurated some years ago, and the consequence is that the reader in search of the latest intelligence al ways looks to the Morning Newt. The telegraph ic arrangements of the paper are such that the omissions made by the geueral press reports as promptly and reliably supplied by its special correspondents. The Morning Newt has lately been enlarged to a thirty-six column paper, and this broad cope of type embraces, daily, everything of inteiest that transpires in the domain of Literature, t rt, Science, Politics, Religion, and General IntcTf gence; giving to the reader more and better di gested matter than any other paper in the State. It is, perhaps, needless to speak of the politics of the Morning Newt. For years and years—inde< and since its establishment —it has been a represent ative Southern paper, and from that time to tbe present, in all conjunctures, it has consistently and persistently maintained Democratic States Rights principles, and labored with an ardor and devotion that know no abatement, to promote and preserve the interests and honorof the South The special features of the Morning Newt will oc retained and improved upon during the ensu ing year, and several new atractions will be ad ded. The Georgia News Items, with their quaint and pleasant humor, and the epitome of Florida Affairs, will be continued during the year. The Local Department will be, as it has been forth* past year, the most complete end reliable to be found in any Savannah paper, and the commer cial columns will be full and accurate. The price of tbe Daily is $lO per annum; $5 for 6 months; $2.50 for 3 mos.; $1 for 1 month* THE TRI-WEEKLY NEW9. This edition of the Morning Newt is especially recommended to those who have not the facili it’es for a daily mail. Everything that has been said in the foregoing in regard to the daily edi tion may be said of the Tri- Weekly. It is made up with great care, and contains the latest dis patches and market reports. The price of this edition is $0 per annum, $3 for 6 months, end $1.50 for 3 months. THE WEEKLY NEWS. The Weekly Morning News particularly recom mends itself to the farmer and planter, and to those who live otf the lines of railroad. It is one of the best family papers in the country, and its cheapness brings it in the reach of all. Thir ty six solid columns of reading matter,And is mailed so as to reacli subscribers with the utmost promptness. It is a carefully and laboriously ed ited compendium of the news of the week, and contains, in addion, an infinite variety of other choice reading matter. Editorials on all topics, sketches of men, manners, and ashions, talcs, poetry .biography, pungent paragraphs,and con densed telegrams enter intuits make-up. Itcon tuins the latest dispatches an.l market reports up to the hour of going to press, and is in all re spects an indispensable adjunct to every home. Price—Oneye-ar, $2; 6 months, $1; 3 months, 50 cents. Subscriptions for either edition of the Morning News may he sent by express at the risk and ex pense of the proprietor. Address J. H. Savannah, Ga. Thin Machine with present Improvement* it guaranteed to uiool •very want of the household, for either plain or fancy work. It knits all sixes of blocking* and Socks, with heel and toe complete, end is a never-ending source of amusement to ladles M**ure, aa well as protit aud easy support to those that require it Agents wanted every where by the Bickfobb Knittino Machine Cowpant. Dana Kick roan. 1 resident mid General Business Supt.. 68S) BroacS way, New York. After having given the above Knitting Ma chine a fair and impartial trial, the undersigned has no hesitation in piououncmg it a success and recommending it to all who desirs to do all kinds of knitti g rapidly and with a smooth and even surface unattainable by tbe ordinary band work. It turns the heal and narrows the toe of a stocking beautifully. He believes a pair tf ordinary stockings can be knit on the machine in an hour. The stitch is the same as that made by hand, and instead of being in terior, tbe work will be found to stand much more usage, The machine can be seen in ope ration at any time at my house. J. T. McCARTY, Agent. Wood’s Mold Man W Is an original, Arst-cln*, Dollar Monthly. It la U O fresh ami sprightly, and will Interest the entin 5 and middSw hu, O bands and wives, parents and childrn iV ... H gests the Importance of un& 5 ? || hearts and purposes In life before ti.™ A.n B be a union of hands. It teltovaHUnit ■&.* T adorTlt'^M*^' 0 to Purlf/anand o k!st*aSmiK?ov?i* Y U Yet In advocating u 1 aSSSSaiSttS M I D Magazine Is Its price. The i,ip, ' f U ™ .?, f ,h * ft ft who receives a of ,’hree A.; 1 '"‘ < c . rtl, °9 ft a fwaewsififiaJSß#? e z f ' mßKUirsr senna?? 2>b j E 8. WOOD A CO., Newburgh N Y Addr “ Hone and Joy-Hoje and Joy f ,he s 2 J to the Interest ??itcoMnS.—ir 8 i s&?rfasanES 8 t j lr .Jffltfe*‘,Ss § I e ? & 1 Woods Mi iapzina