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NottonalEepablicon
*TarskßT CITf CIRCULATION
Official Organ of the TJ. S- Government.
TUESDAY MOHS INQ ......Merck 10, 1883
MARCH
• T liTtU TAYLOR.
With reeking *i»d« and gloomy skies,
Tb« dark and stubborn winter die*
Far off. unseen, spring faintly criss,
Bidding her earliest child erlss: jiareh!
By stream's stUl held in icy •bare,
Oar South*™ bill «ido« melting bare,
O'er fields that motley color wear,
That summons fills the ehangeful
What though eonllicting seasons make
Thy days their field ; they woo or shako
Th* sleeping lids of life awake,
And hop* is stronger for tby sake:
r March !
Then from thy mountains, ribbed with snow,
One* more thy rousing bugl* blow,
And east and west, and to and fro,
Proclaim tby coming to the foe:
March!
Say to tb* picket, chilled and numb,
Say to the camp’s Impatient hum,
Say to the trumpet and the drum:
Lift up your hearts, I come, I come!
March!
Cry to the waiting hosts that stray
On sandy seasides far away,
By marshy isle and gleaming bay,
Where Southern March is Northern May :
March!
Announce thyself, with welcome noise,
Where glory’s victor-eagles poise
, Above the proud, heroic boys
Os lowa and Illinois:
March!
RELIEF MEASURE AS FINALLY
PASSED BY THE CONVENTION.
Paragraph 1. No court in this State shall
have jurisdiction to try or determine any
suit against any resideut of the State upon
any contract or agreement made or implied,
or upon any contract made in 'renewal of
any debt existing prior to the first day of
June, 1865. Nor shall any court or minis
terial officer of this State have authority to
enforce any judgment, execution, or degree,
rendered or issued upon any contract or
agreement made or implied, or upon any
contract in renewal of a debt existing prior
to the first day of June, 1865, except in the
following cases:
1. In suits against trustees where the
trust property is in the hands of the trustee,
or has been invested by him in other speci
sic effects now in his hands, and in suits by
the vendor of the real estate against the
vendee, when not more than one-third of
the purchase money has been paid, and the
vendee is in possession of the land or speci
fic effects for which ho has sold it, and he
refuses to deliver the land or said effects to
the vendor. In such cases the courts and
officers may entertain jurisdiction and en
force judgments against said trust property
or land or effects.
2. In suits for the benefit of minors by
trustees appointed before the Ist of June,
1865.
3. In suits against corporations in their
corporate capacity, but not so as to enforce
the debt against the stockholders or officers
thereof in their individual capacity.
4. In suits by charitable or literary insti
tutions for money loaned, property other
than slaves sold, or services rendered by
them.
C. In suits or debts due for mechanical or
manual labor, when the suit is by the me
chanic or laborer.
C. In cases where the debt is set up by
way of defence, and the debt set up exceeds
any debt due by defendant to plaintiff, of
which the courts are denied jurisdiction.
7. In all other cases in which the General
Assembly shall, by law, give said courts and
officers jurisdiction, provided that no officer
shall have, nor shall the General Assembly
give jurisdiction or authority to try or give
judgment on, or enforce any debt, the con
sideration of which was a slave or slaves, or
for the hire thereof.
Paragraph 2. All contracts made and
not executed during the late rebellion with
the intention and for the purpose of aiding
and encouraging said rebellion, or where it
was the purpose or intention of one of the
parties to such contract to aid or encourage
such rebellion, and that fact was known to
the other party, whether said contract was
made by any person or corporation, with
the State or Confederate States, or by a
corporation, with a natural person, or be
tween two or more natural persons, are
hereby declared to have been and to be
illegal, and all bonds, deeds, promissory
notes, bills, or other evidences of debt
made or executed by the parties to such
contract, or either of them in connection
with such illegal contract, or ns the con
sideration for, or in furtherance thereof, are
hereby declared null and void, and shall
be so held in all Courts in this State when
an attempt shall be made to enforce any
snch contract, or give validity to any such
obligation or evidence of debt.
' And in all cases where the defendant, or
any one interested in the event of the suit,
will make a plea, supported by his affidavit,
that he has reason to believe that the objec
tion or evidence of indebtedness upon which
the suit is predicated, or some part thereof,
has been given or issued for the illegal
purpose aforesaid, llie burden of proof shall
be upon the plaintiff to satisfy the court or
jury that the bond, deed, note, bill, or other
evidences ot indebtedness, upon which said
soil is brought, is or are not, nor is any part
thereof founded upon, or in any way con
nected with any such illegal contract, and
has not been used in aid of the rebellion,
and the date of such bond, deed, note, bill,
or other evidence of indebtedness, shall not
be evidence that it has or has not, since it3
date, been opened, transferred, or used, in
aid of the rebellion.
Paragraph 3. It shall be in the power of
a majority of the General Assembly to assess
and collect upon all debts, judgments, or
causes of action when due, founded on any
contract made or implied before the Ist of
June, 1865, in the hands of any ono in his
own right, or trustee, agent or attorney of
another, on or after the Ist of January,lß6B,
a tax of not exceeding 25 per cent., to be
paid by the creditor on pain of forfeiture of
the debt, but chargeable by him as to one
half thereof against the debtor, and collect
able with the debt: Provided that'this tax
shall not be collected if the debt or cause of
action be abandoned or geltled without legal
ftrocess, or if in judgment he settled without
evy and sale: And provided, further, this
tax shall not be levied so long as the courts
of this State shall not have jurisdiction of
such debts or causes of action.
CHOICE SEEDS AND PLANTS.
BRKIIN, SMALL KKI.ITS,
BK01)1X0 PLANTS,
Prepaid by mail,
Priced DcAcriptive Cata
logue gratis to any plain
address.
U. M WATSON,
Old Colony Nurseries and
Seed Establishment,
Plymouth, Mass.
W holesale List to the Trade
and Clubs.
AGENTS WANTED.
MfßflH AMDCHMCK
(lAMVt» AXf> ttIAtWKU
■SKUS,
OBAPS Vnfßfl,
HTBAWBIttfIT I’f/AIfTS,
WBOtT OBXAMBXTAr-
TnBP.N AHI> Kiltie**,
THVK CAPE COD
CBAJCHKBET,
*o* I PLANO OB l-OWI.ANO,
P K UIT I TOO I H,
ADD
HKPOE PI.ANTB,
SMALL IVriOIKMOI,
Kxtr* choice collection of (iortimn Flower
Reeds. 26 #orts Garden or Flower Reeds, pre*
paid by mail, SI.OO, Tho most judicious assort
ment ever offered. fe23—ftw
Official.
Headquarters 3d Military D»t.. |
(Dtpt. Georgia, Florida ami f
Atlanta, Ga.. February 26, 1868. )
General Orders, No. 30. *
1. The Board of Officers of which Brevet
Colonel Maurice Maloney, Lieutenant Col
onel 16th U. 8. Infantry, is President, and
which assembled at Savannah, Georgia,, on
the Ist instant, pursuant to Speoial Orders
No. 22, current series, from these Head
quarters, for the purpose of investigating
certain charges of mal administration pre
ferred against the Mayor and other Muni
cipal officers of that city, has rendered the
following
orimott:
“ The Board, in conclusion, would state
that it has thoroughly investigated the
matters laid before it, contained in the ac
companying petition, and has discovered
nothing sustaining the charge of mal-fcas
ance in office prefeared against the Mayor
and municipal authorities of Savannah, and
does therefore recommend that the prayor
ot the petitioners, asking for the removal of
the same, be not granted.”
2. The proceedings and opinion of tho
Board are approved, and no further action
will be taken on the aforesaid charges.
By order of Major General Meade :
K. C. Drum,
Assistant Adjutant General.
Official:
mhl —lOt
Headq’s Third Military District, |
(Dep’t Georgia , Ala., and Florida,) >
Atlanta, Ga., Feb. 21, 1868. j
General Orders, No. 26.
1. Before a Military Commission, which
convened at Atlanta, Georgia, February
10, 1868, pursuant to Special Orders No.
27, Headquarters Third Military District,
dated Atlanta Georgia, February 3, 1868,
and of whioh Brevet Brigadier General
Rufus Saxton, Quartermaster U. S. Army,
is President, was arraigned and tried :
Berry T. Digby, Sheriff of Jasper county.
State of Georgia.
Charge I.—Wilful neglect of duty as
Sheriff of Jasper county, State of Georgia.
Specification —In this : That Berry T.
Digby, being Sheriff of Jasper county, in
the State of Georgia, and having been no
tified that one Maria Brown, who was
living on the promises of said Berry T.
Digby, had been murdered upon his prem
ises as aforesaid; and having himself
viewed the dead body of the said Maria
Biown, within five piiuutes after the mur
der ; and having been then and there in
formed by John Brown, the husband
of Maria Brown aloresaid, and by others
who were present, that Homer Barnes, a
citizen of Jasper county. Georgia, had
feloniously and with malice aforethought
committed the murder upon tho persi n
ol the said Maria Brown; and the said Ho
mer Barnes being then and there present,
and on the premises of the said Berry T.
Digby, he, the said Berry T. Digby, Sheriff
as aforesaid, did wilfully and unlawfully fail
and neglect to arrest, or make any effort to
arrest, the said Homer Barnes, and well
knowing that the said Homer Barnes was
endeavoring to escape, and was likely to
make his escape before a warrant could be
issued for his arrest, did wilfully and unlaw
fully permit the said Homer Barnes to make
his escape, without pursuit or effort to arrest
him. This in the county of Jasper, State of
Georgia, on or about the 16th day of Janu
ary, 1868.
To which charge aud specification the
accused pleaded, ‘’Not Guilty.’’
Finding. —Of the charge and specification,
“Not Guilty.”
And the Court docs therefore acquit him.
11. The proceedings and findings in the
case of Berry T. Digby, Sheriff of Jasper
county, Georgia, are approved. Mr. Digby,
having been acquitted by the Commission,
will be released from arrest.
111. The Military Commission, of which
Brevet Brigadier General Rufus Saxon,
Quartermaster U. S. Army, is President, is
hereby dissolved.
By order of Major General Meade :
11. C. Drum,
raarl-10t Assistant Adjutant General.
Headq'rs, Third Military District, J
(Dept. Georgia, Florida and Alabama. ,) o
Atlanta, Ga., February 22, 1868. j
General Orders, No. 27.
1. The Constitutional Convention of the
State of Georgia, now in session in the city
of Atlanta, adopted, on the 19th day of
February, 1868, the following preamble
and resolutions:
Whereas, The Convention has deter-,
mined that there shall be no imprisonment
for debt in the State ; and, whereas, credi
tors are oppressing debtors by the use ot
what is known as “Bail Proccess” and
writ of Ga. Sa., Therefore,
Resolved, That in the opinion of this
Convention, said proceedings arc contrary
to the wish of the people of this State.
Resolved, That the General Commanding
this District, is hereby requested to protect,
by order, the people of this State front the
evil above set forth, and that such order
remain in force, until such time as the
people have expressed their will iu regard
to the Constitution.
2. Therefore, by virtue ot the plenary
powers vested by the Reconstruction Acts
of Congress in the Commanding General
of the Third Militaiy District, and for the
purpose of giving effect to tho wishos of the
people of Georgia as expressed by their
delegates in the Convention,
It is ordered. That imprisonment for
debt is prohibited in the State of Georgia,
and hereafter no bail process in civil eases
or writ of ca. sa. shall be issued out of any
of tho courts of this State.
3. Every person now in prison in this
State under any snch process or writ, will
be immediately discharged from prison.
4. This order to remain in force until
the people of Georgia shall express their
will in the manner provided by the Acts of
Congress in regard to the Constitution to
be submitted to them by the said Constitu
tional Convention, or until farther orders
from these Headquarters.
By order of General Meads. :
R. C. Drum,
feb2s-10t Assistant Adjutant General
Meriden Cutlery Company.
MANUFACTURERS OF SUPERIOR
1 A B L E CUTLERY,
OF PEARL, IVORY, HORN, BONE EBO
NY, AND COCOA HANDLES. .
Also, Exclusive Mauufacturers of tho
“GOODYEAR” Patent
HARD RUBBER HANDLE.
WHICH IS TUB
Most Durable Handle Ever Known.
It is less expensive than Ivory.
It always retains its polish when in use.
It is warranted not to become loose in tho
handle.
It is not affected by hot water.
sale by all the principal (loalers in
Cutlery throughout the United States, and by
the
MERIDEN CUTLERY CO.,
««18-ly Now York.
SCREVEN HOUSE,
gAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
THIS FIRST CLASS HOTEL
Having been renovated and newly furnished, is
now opon for the reception of the travelling
public.
GEO. MoOINLY, Proprietor.
mill® —ts
FORTIETH CONGRESS.
TERMS OF BKNATOKB.
Benjamin F Wade, of Ohio, President..
John W Forney, of Pennsylvania, Secretary.
OHIO Term Ex
Bcnj F Wade 1869
John Sherman.... 1873
INDIANA
Thos A Hendricks.. 1869
Oliver P Morton.. 1873
ILLINOIS
Richard Yate5...,.1871
Lyman Trumbull. .1873
MICHIGAN
Zach Chandler.... 1869
Jacob M Howard. .1871
WISCONSIN
Jas R Doolittle 1869
Timothy O Howe. .1873
>“ MINNESOTA
Alex Ramsey 1869
David S Norton.... 1871
IOWA
i Jas W Grimes 1871
t Jas Harlan 1873
MISSOURI
i J B Henderson.... 1869
. Chas D Drake 1873
KANSAS
I Edmund G Ross. ..1871
I Sam’lo Pomeroy. .1873
' NEBRASKA
) ThosWTipton.... 1869
l John M Thayer.... 1871
NEVADA
) WmM Stewart.... 1869
1 JasWNye 1873
CALIFORNIA
) John Conness 1869
1 Cornelius C01e....1873
OREGON
l Geo H Williams...lß7l
1 Henry W Corbett.. 1873
}
1
Mint! Term Ex.
Lot M Morrill 1809
Wm P Fessenden. .1871
SCW HAMPSHIRE
Aaron H Cragin. ...1871
Jas W Patterson . .1878
VERMONT
Geo F Edmunds.. .1869
Jostln 8 Morrill.. .1878
MASSACHUSETTS
Chas Sumner 1869
Henry Wilson 1871
ROODS ISLAND
Wm Sprague 1869
Henry B Anthony .1871
CONNECTICUT
James Dixon 1869
Orris S Ferry IB7S
NEW YORK
Edwin D Morgan..lß69
Roscoo Conkling. .1873
NEW JERSEY
F TFrelinghuysenlß69
Alex G Ca1t011.... 1871
PENNSYLVANIA
Chas R Buckalew .. 1869
Simon Cameron.. .1873
DELAWARE
Jas S Bayard 1869
Willard Saulsbury .1871
MARYLAND
Reverdy Johnson.. . 1869
Philip F Thomas... 1873
WEST VIRGINIA
PG Van Winkle... 1869
WaitmanT Willey. 1871
KENTUCKY
James Guthrie 1871
Garret Davis 1873
TENNESSEE
David T Patterson .1869
Joseph S Fowler..lß7l
RECAPITULATION
Republicans 42 | Oppositions (In Italics) 12
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
Schuyler Colfax, ot Indiana, Speaker.
Edward McPherson, of Pennsylvania, Clerk.
TENNESSEE
1 Roderick R Butler
2 Horace Maynard
3 Wm B Stokes
4 Jas Mullins
5 John Trimble
6 Sam’l M Arnell
7 Issac R Hawkins
8 David A Nunn
OHIO
1 Benj Eggleston
2 Sam’l F Cary
3 Kobt C Schcnck
4 Wm Lawrence
5 117/1 Mungen
6 Reader W Clarke
7 Sam’l Shallabargcr
80S Hamilton
9 Ralph P Bueklaud
10 Jas M Ashley
11 John T Wilson
112 Philip Van Trump
13 Geo W Morgan
14 Martin Welker
(15 Tobias A Plants
16 John A Bingham
17 Ephraim R Eckley
18 Rufus P Spaulding
19 Jas A Garfield
INDIANA
1 Wm E Nblack
2 Michael C Kecr
3 Morton C Hunter
4 Wm S Holman
5 Geo W Julian
6 John Coburn
7 H D Washburn
8 Godlove S Orth
9 Schuyler Colfax
10 Wm Williams
11 John P C Shanks
ILLINOIS
At Large , Jno A Logan
1 Norman B Judd
2 John F Farnsworth
3 Elihu B Washburn
4 Abner C Harding
5 Eben C Ingersoll
6 Burton C Cook
7 H P II Bromwell
8 Shelby M Cullom
Lewis W Ross
10 Albert G Burr
11 Sam'l S Marshall
12 Jehu Baker
13 Green B Raum
MICHIGAN
1 Fernando C Beamau
2 Chas Upson
3 Austin Blair
4 Thos W Ferry
5 R E Trowbridge
6 John F Driggs
WISCONSIN
1 Halbert C Paine
2 Benj F Hopkins
3 Amasa Cobb
4 Chas A Eldridge
5 Philetus Sawyer
6 C C Washburne
MINNESOTA
1 Wm Windom
2 Ignatius Donnelly
IOWA
1 James F Wilson
2 Hiram Price
3 Wm B Allison
4 Wm Loughbridgc
5 Grenville M Dodge
G Isabel W Hubbard
MISSOURI
1 Wm A Pile
2 Carman A Newcomb
3 Jas B McCormick
4 John J Gravelly
5 Jos W MeClurge
- 0 Robt T Van Horn
7 Benj F Loan
8 John F Benjamin
9 Geo W Anderson
I KANSAS
1 Sidney Clarke
NEBRASKA
1 JohnTaffo
NEVADA
1 Delos R Ashley
CALIFORNIA
1 Sam'l Axtell
2 Wm Higby
3 Jas A Johnson
OREGON
1 Rufus Mallory
DELEGATES
ARIZONA
1 Coles Bashlord
DAKOTA
Walter A Burleigh
IDAHO
E D Holdbrock
MONTANA^
Jas M Cavanaugh
NEW MEXICO
C P Clever (doubtful)
UTAH
Wm II Hooper
WASHINGTON
Alvin Flanders
WYONING
Jas S Casement
MAINE
1 John Lynch
2 Sidney Perham
3 Jas G Blaine
4 John A Peters
5 Frederick A Pike
NEW HAMPSIUW
1 Jacob H Ela
2 Aaron F Stevens
8 Jacob Benton
VERMONT
1 Fred E Woodbridgc
2 Luke P Poland
3 W C Smith
MASSACHUSETTS
1 Tbos D Eliot
2 Oakes Ames
3 Ginery Twitclicll
4 Sam’l Hooper
5 Bcnj F Butler
6 Nat P Banks
7 Geo S Boutwell
8 John D Baldwin
9 Wm B Washburne
I Henry L Dawes
RHODE ISLAND
1 Tbos A Jcnckes
2 Nathan F Dixon
CONNECTICUT
1 Itich'd D Hubbard
2 Jidius Hotchkiss
3HH Starkweather
4 Wm H Bamum
NEW YORK
1 Stephen Taber
2 Demos Ba nes
3 C/m E Robinson
4 John Fox
5 John Morrissey
6 Thos E Stewart
7 John >V Chanter
8 Jas Brooks
9 Fernando Wood
10 Wm H Robertson
II C II Van Wyck
12 John H KeteUam
13 Tbos Cornell
14 John V L Pruyn
15 John A Grisswold
16 Orange Ferris
17 Calvin T Uulbard
18 Jas M Marvin
19 Wm C Fields
20 Addison U Ratlin
21 Alex II Bailey
22 John C Churchill
23 Dennis McCarthy
24 TUco M Pomeroy
25 Wm II Kelsey
26 Wm S Lincoln
27 Hamilton Ward
28 Lewis Selye
29 Burt Van Horn
30 JM Humphreys
31 II Van Aernaui
NEW JERSEY
1 Wm Moore
2 Chas Haight
3 Chas Sitgreavcs
4 John Ilill
5 Geo A Halsey
PENNSYLVANIA
1 Stem'l J Randall
2 Chas O’Neill
3 Lenard Myers
4 Wm D Kelley
5 Caleb N Taylor
6 Bcnj M Boyer
7 John M Bromall
8 J Lawrence Getz
9 Thaddeus Stevens
10 Henry L Cake
11 DM Van Auken
12 Geo W Woodward
13 Ulysses Mercer
14 George F Miller
15 AdarnJGrossbrenncr
16 Wm II Koontz
17 Dan’l J Morrill
18 Stephen S Wilson
19 Glcuni W Schofield
20 Darwin A Finney
21 John Covode
22 Jas K Moorehead
23 Thos Williams
24 Geo V Lawrence
DELAWARE
1 John A Nicholson
MARTLAND
1 Hiram McCulloue/h
2 Stephcnsou Archer
3 Chas EPhelps
4 Francis Thomas
5 Frederick Stone
WEST VIRGINIA
1 Chester D Hubbard
2 Bcnj M Kitchen
3 Dan’l Pblsley
KENTUCKY
1 Lawrences Trimble
2 John Young Brown
3 JS S Gollady
4 J Proctor C Knott
5 Asa P Grover
6 Thos L Jones
7 Jas BBcck
8 Geo M Adams
9 John D Young
REG APIT UL AT ION
Republicans 144 | Opposition [ln Italics ) 49
PROSPECTUS
OF
“THE BANNEROFTHE SOOTH.”
Rev. A. J. RIAN, Editor.
— o —
UNDERSIGNED PROPOSE PUBLISH
ING, in tho city of Augusta, Ga., a journal
to be called
“THE BANNER OF THE SOUTH,”
To bo devoted to
Eelujion, Literature and Art.
It will be published weekly, and will bo under
the control of
REV. A. i RYAN,
Author of “ The Conquered Banner,’ otc , etc
TERMS: “
Per Annum, in advanco $3 00
Six Months, in advanco 1 50
Singh) Copies 10
first number will bo issued on or
about MARCH Ist, 1808.
communications for publication must
be addressed to tho Editor. Subscription and
business letters to the publishers.
1., T. BLOME A CO., Publishers,
fobls—tml Augusta, Ga.
Fish and Oysters,
Cl A ME,
T POULTRY,
VEGETABLES
FAMILY GROCERIES
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION,
Always on hand and for sale low.
CALL AND SEE ME.
WM. HALE (Colored),
Ellis street,
aul—tf Between Washington me
SPECIAL HOTICEB.
STARTLING, BUT TRUE!
DR. J. MAGGIEL’S SALVE.
Thi* unrivalled Salve, which hoe received the
endorsement of men of all sects and almost all
nations, still bolds Us unparalleled sway over all
other akin medicines of the day.
FRIGHTFUL BURNS AND FEARFUL
SCALDS, are soothed and healed by the search
ing power of DR. J. MAGGIEL’S SALVE.
BAD CUTS, SALT RHEUM, SORE LEGS,
PUSTULES, CHAPPED HANDS, MOSQUITO
BITES, PAINS IN THE LOINS, PAINS
IN THE CHEST, aro almost instantly relieved.
From hundreds of letters the following brief
extracts are made —hoar what is said.
“Your salvo to me is better than all Lini
ments.”
“Send mo at once threo boxes of Dr. Maggiel’s
Salve, as the Druggist here is out.”
“Can you send me seven lbs. of Maggiel’s
Salvo without the boxes ? I will pay well for
it."
“I am a brakeman on the Maeon (Ga.) Rail
road. I tried your Salve after I bad been badly
hurt in the back. It took out the soreness at
once.”
“Enclosed find $2. I had small pox and your
salvo rid mo of all eruptions and left no trace or
mark."
“I scalded my hand, Doctor, and by the ad
vice of a friend, tried your Salve. It is bully.
Enclosed find 50 cents for two boxes to keep
around the house.”
MAGGIEL’S SALVE is tho cheapest Salvo,
it is the best Salve.
IT CONTAINS MORE EXTRACTIVE
MEDICINE THAN ANY OTHER SALVE
OP THE DA Y.
MAGGIEL’S PILLS should be used with the
Salvo for serious Skin Diseases.
25 CENTS A POT OR BOX.
All orders for the United Statos must be ad
dressed to J. Ilaydock, No. 11 Pino street,
New York.
Patients can write freely about their com
plaints, and a reply will be returned by the fol
lowing mail. Write for “ Maggiel’s Treatment
of Disease.”
COUNTERFEITS! COUNTERFEITS!
All readers of this paper are warned not to pur
chase MAGGIEL’S PILLS orSALyE, unloss tho
name of J. Haydock, Proprietor, in addition to
the name of D. J. Maggiel is on the engraved
slip surrounding each box or not.
00t23-eodlyd&w
4@“LIFE IN A PILL BOX
EXTRAORDINARY EFFECTS FROM
MAGGIEL’S ANTI-BILIOUS PILLS.
ONE PILL IN A DOSE.
ONE PILL IN A DOSE.
ONE PILL IN A DOSE.
What one hundred letters a day say from
patients all over tho habitable Glebe :
' “ Dr. Maggiel, your pill has rid me of all
biliousness.”
“ No moro noxious doses for me in five or ten
pills taken at a time. One of your pills cured
mo.”
“ Thauks, Doctor. My headache has left me.
Send another box to keep in the house.”
“ After suffering tortures from Bilious Colic,
two of your pills cured me, and I have no return
of the malady.”
“ Our doctors treated me for Chronic Consti
pation, as they called it, and at last said I was
incurable. Your Maggiel’s Pills cured me.”
“ I had no appetito : Maggiel’s Pills gave
me a hearty one.”
“ Your Pills are marvellous.”
“ I send for another box, and keep them in
the house.” ,
“Dr. Maggiel has cured my headache that
was chronic.”
“ I gave half of one of your pills to my babe
lor cholera morbus. The dear little thing got
well in a day.”
“My nauseau of a morning is now cured.”
“ Your box of Maggiel’s Salve curod me of
noises in the head. I rubbed some of your Salvo
behind my ears and tho noise left.”
“ Send mo two boxes : I want one for a poor
family.”
“ I enclose a dollar; your price is twenty-five
cents, but tho medicine to mo is worth a dollar.”
“ Sond me five boxes of your Pills.”
“ Let me have three boxes of your Salvo by
return mail.”
For all Diseases of tho KIDNEY’S, RETEN
TION OF URINE, etc., Maggiel’s Pills are a
perfect euro. Ono dose will satisfy any one.
FOR FEMALE DISEASES, NERVOUS
PROSTRATION, WEAKNESS, GENERAL
LASSITUDE, WANT OF APPETITE, Mag
giol’s Pills will be found an effectual remedy.
MAGGIEL’S PILLS AND SALVE are almost
universal in their effects, and a euro can be
almost always guaranteed.
EACH EOX CONTAINS TWELVE PILLS
ONE PILL ISA DOSE.
Sold by all respectable Dealers in Medicine
throughout tho United States and Canadas, at
25 oents per box.
COUNTERFEITS 1 COUNTERFEITS!
All readers of this paper aro warned no to
purebaso MAGGIEL’S PILLS or SALVE unless
tho name of J. Ilaydook, Proprietor, in addition
to the name of Dr. J. Maggiol, is on tho engraved
slip surrounding each box or pot.
J. H. ZEILIN ft CO.,
Maoon, Ga.
oot-231yftw Agents for State of Georgia,
Furniture and Piano Hauling.
A NEW AND LIGHT
SPRING DRAY,
lam prepared to hanl Furniture, Pianos, and
anything else, without scratching or bruising,
as is too often the ease.
Orders loft at iny store, on Ellis street,hetwoon
Washington and Monument, will bo promptly
attended to, at reasonaDle rates.
Particular care given to moving Furnituro and
Pianos.
WM. HALE (Colored),
Dealer in Family Grooeries*
anl-tl
Ri R. R«
mmmmn
90
OUT OT
100
OP DEATHS, that annually
occur, are caused by Prevent
able Diseases, and the greater
portion of those complaints
would, if Radway s Ready Re
lief or Pills, (as the «ase may
require,) were administered
when pain or uneasiness or
slight sickness is experienced,
be exterminated from the sys
tem in a few hours. PAIN, no
matter from what cause, is
almost instantly cured by the
Ready Relief. In cases of Cho
lera, Diarrhoea, Cramps, Spasms
Bilious Cholic, in fact all Pains,
Aches and Infirmities either in
the Stomach, Bowels, Bladder,
Kidneys, or the Joints, Muscles,
Legs, Arms, Rheumatism, Neu
ralgia, Fever and Ague, Head
ache, Toothache, &c., will in a
FEW MINUTES yield to the
Boothing influence of the Ready
Relief.
Sudden Colds, Coughs, Influenza, Dip
theria, Hoarseness, Sore Throat, Chills, Fever
and Ague, Mercurial Pains, Scarlet Fever,
&c., Ac., take from four to six of Radway’s
Pills, and also take a teaspoonful of the
Ready Relief in a glass of warm water, sweet
ened with sugar or honey j bathe the throat,
head and chest with Ready Relief, (if Ague
or Intermittent Fever, bathe the spine also,)
In the morning you will he cured.
How the Ready Relief Acts!
In a few minutes the patient will feel 8
slight tingling irritation, and the akin be
comes reddened; if there is much distress in
the stomach, the Relief will assist nature in
removing the offending cause, —a general
warmth is felt throughout the entire body,
and its diffusive stimulating properties
rapidly courses through every vein and tissue
of the system, arousing the slothful and
partially paralyzed glands and organs to re
newed and healthy action, perspiration fol
lows, and the surface of the body feels in
creased heat. The sickness at stomach, colds,
chills, head-ache, oppressed breathing, the
soreness of the throat, and all pains, either
internally or externally, rapidly subside, and
the patient falls into a tranquil sleep, awakes
refreshed, invigorated, cured. IS *1
It will be found that in using the Relief
externally, either on the spine or across tho
kidneys, or over the stomach and bowels, that
for several days after a pleasing warmth will
be felt, showing the length of time it con
tinues its influence over the diseased parts.
CT* Price of R. R. R. RELIEF, 60 cents
per bottle. Sold by Druggists and Country
Merchants, Grocers, Ac.
RADWAY & CO.,
87 Maiden Lane, New York.
TYPHOID FEVER.
This disease is not only cured bj
Dr. Eadway’s Relief and Pills, but pre
vented. If exposed to it, put one tea
spoonful of Relief in a tumbler ol
water. Drink this before going out in
the morning, and several times during
the day. Take one of Radway’e Pills
one hour before dinner, and one on
going to bed.
If seized with Pever, take 4 to 6 oJ
tho Pills every six hours, until copious
discharges from the bowels take place;
also drink the Relief diluted with
water, and bathe the entire surface ol
the body with Relief. Soon a power
ful perspiration will take place, and
you will feel a pleasant heat through
out the system. Keep on taking Rebel
repeatedly, every four hours, also the
Pills. A cure will be sure to follow.
The relief is strengthening, stimulating,
soothing, aud quieting; it is sure tc
break up the Fever and to neutralize
the poison.. Let this treatment be fol
lowed, and thousands will be saved.
The same treatment in Fever and Ague,
Yellow Fever, Ship Fever, Bilious
Fever, will effect a cure in 24 hours
When the patient feels the Relief irrita
ting or heating the skin, a cure is posi
tive. In all cases where pain is felt
the Relief should he used.
Relief 50 cts.; Pills 25 cts. Soli
by all Druggists.
See Dr. Radway’s Almanac for 1863
mh4—lv.
NO “OPENINGS.”
OPEN ALL THE TIME!
Latest Styles I
THE NEW
Millinery Headquarters,
Next to the Planters’ Hotel,
rTAVE NO SPECIAL “OPENING DAY
ll Is tho LATEST STYLES and NOVEL
TIES aro always on hand, ready for inspection.
In all cases,
Satisfaction is Guaranteed !
RECEIVED, EVERY FRIDAY,
DIRECT FROM
NEW YORK,
ALL KINDS O*'
Goods in our Line.
WE SELL LADIES’ AND MISSES’
FELT and STRAW HATS
OF EVERY STYLE,
AT FROM
Fifty Cents to Three Dollars
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR
FURS. Send for Price Lists.
WM. R. DAVIS ft CO.,
Next door above the famous Planters’Hotel,
12oot~ev Thurs Augusta, Ga.
Georgia Pmjtisg k\
Book & Job
PRIMING OFFIC
190 Broad 153 Ellis Streets,
J2ta.
Is Now Supplied witb tbe Latest and Improve*
PRESSES, TYPE, BORDERS, ORNAMENTS, ER
And is ready to execute any description of
Book and Job Frini
IN A FIRST-CLASS MANNER AND ON REASONABLE TERRS
BILL HEADS, CIRCULARS, BRIEFS, CHECK
POSTERS, LABELS, PAMPHLETS,
BILLS LADING, HAND BILLS, PROGRAMMES!
WEDDING CARDS VISITING CARDS,
BALL TICKETS, INVUATIO
CARDS OF ALL STYLES AND SIZES
bills lading, DRAY receipts, drafts,
auction bills, steamboat bills,
AND, IN FACT,
EVERY DESCRIPTION OF PRINTING!
o
THE BOOKBINDEBI
Os this Establishment
IS A SPEJCIAIjT - *
And we have recontly made large additions of
NEW TOOLS AND MATERIALS’
o ,
IRE IliiL REPUBLIC!
A Morning Paper,
PUBLISHED AT FIVE DOLLARS A l*
Contains tho Latest News by Telegraph and Mai
FROM ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY'
Officii— l9o Broad and 163 Ellis St., Aug uS *'*’