Newspaper Page Text
Volume LIU.
MILLED SEVILLE, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1872.
Number 4.
THE
Southern
sr
k. HAEUISON, ORME A CO.
Terms, $2.00 Per Annum in Advance
Farmers, Please Notice.
W
E are in ret eipt of
SOU bushels Eeil Clover SEED.
jmj “ TIMOTHY.
30(1 “ Kentucky Else GRASS.
SOU “ Orchard GRASS
“UJ •* Red Top or Herds GRASS.
23 “ Alsike and Sapling' CLOVER.
These SEED have been selected and pur
chased by us in the West, directly from the
growers, and are fresh and pu:
\V• keen a complete stoc k of every class of
IMPLEMENTS, MACHINERY and SEED,
which we would be pleased to have you call
and examine.
ECHOLS Sf WILSON,
Jacksoa Street, Augusta, Ga.. and Broad
Street, Atlanta, Ga.
September 5, 35 If r
Notice.
rnHE undersigned respectfully informs the
X citizens ihat they are prepared to furnish
Timber, any amount and size, at their Lum
ber Yard in Milledgeville, at low’ rates. Call
on out Agent, Mr. C. B. Mundy, for terms and
rices. ' N. & A. CARMANNEY.
declS-tf
VINEGAR BITTERS
J. ITitiiB PfMrltWr. R H. Mcno^ii.D * ro.. nrcgfl.t.sn
«e».Xj t s ,S»a Francisco Cal., an 13? and 3 4 Commerce at,S.Y.
NATURE’S
Free from the Poisonous and
Health-destroying Drugs us
ed in other. Hair Prepara
tions.
No SUGAR OF LEAD-No
LITKARGE-No NITRATE
OF SILVER, and is entirely
Transparent and clear a- crysi««l, it will not
S3 1 i e fine t Ipbvic—perfectly SAFK, CLEAN
f ,id EFFIC1EN T—desideioii’.ns LONG
SOUG HT FOR AN L> FOUND AT LAST !
It re-loves p <<< prevents the Heir i'.oni be
coming Gvey, i.npiiies a f,oit, o|o.-sv apoea''-
ance : le.novesDa druff, is cool and refreshing
to .lie heed c’nerhs the Heir l orn falling off,
and rc-toie"> it to a gre.-t extent wheu p.ema-
turely lost, ri event - lleptb^Iiei cures pH hu
mors, cut.-neonsevn tliotis, a ,d u ui.ri.-r; ! Heat.
AS A DRESSING FOR THE 11 AIR tP IS'
TI1E BEST A ETfCLE LVTllE MARKET.
DR G. SMITH Paientpe. Gvoiou June; ion,
Mass., Pre ; wreil only by PROCTOR BROTH
ERS, Gloucester. .Ma r. The Genuine is put
up in a p:>;,;iel boule, made ex.jwviy "or it
with the name of he article blown in the jjl.ss.
A?k your Drug^ia fo,- Nature's tLii- iesio.a-
!:v«, 3nd take uo oilier.
For sale i.i Milledgeville by L. W. HUNT
A CO
In Sparta, by A. II. BIRDSONG & CO.
p Ju’v 2 ly u Feh‘26 ’7 I 5y.
MILLIONS Bear Testimony to their
Wonderful Curative EflectN.
They are not a vile Fancy Drink, made ot Poor
Rnin, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Refuse Li
quors doctored, spiced and sweetened to please tiie taste,
called “Tonics,” “Appetizers,” “Restorers,” Ac., that
load the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, but are a true
Medicine,made from the Native Roots and Herbs of Cali
fornia, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants.
They are tha GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER and
A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, a perfect Reno
vator and Invifforator of the System, carrying off ail
poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy con
dition. No person can take these Bitters according to
directions and remain long nnwell.prorided their bones
are' not destroyed by mineral poison or other means,
and the vital organs wasted beyond tha point of repair.
They are a Gentle Purgative as well as a
Tonic, possessing, also, the peculiar merit of acting as
a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inflammation
cf the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs.
FOR FEMALE COMPLAINTS, inyonng'or
eld, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood or at
the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters have no equal.
For Inflammatory and Chronic Rheninn.-
I ism and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bil
ious, Remittent and Intermittent iFcvers,
Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and
Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful.
Such Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood,
which is generally produced by derangement of the Di
gestive Orgnns.
DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION. Ileadaclie,
l’ain in the Shoulders.Coughs, Tightness of the Chest
Dizziness, Sour .Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste
in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks. Palpitation of the Heart,
InCarsmation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions of the
Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the
oflsprings of Dyspepsia.
They invigorate the Stomash and stimulate the torpid
Liver and Bowels, which render them of unequalled effi
cacy ia cleansing the blood of all impurities, and impart
ing new life and vi^or to the whole system.
FOR SKIN DISEASES, Eruptions. Tetter, Sa’
Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Ci.--
buncles, Ring-Worms, Scald Head, Sore Eyes, Erysipelas,
Itch,Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Humers and Did.
eases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature, are literally
dug up and carried out of the system in a short time by
the use of these Bitters. One bottle in such eases will
convince the most Incredulous of their curative effects.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever yon find its im
purities bursting through the skin in Pimples, Erup
tions or Sorss; eleanss It when you find it obstructed an I
sluggish in the veins; cleanse it when it is foul, and
your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pu’ \
and the health of the erstem will follow.
Pin, Tape, and other Worms, lurking in It"
system of. so many thousands, are effectually destroy...
and removed. Says a distinguished physiologist, tilt e
is scarcely an individual upon the face of the earth
whose body is exempt from tfc- presence of worms. It
is not upon the healthy elements of the body th .t
worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and slin.y
deposits that breed these living monsters of disease, ho
System of Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelmintics,
will free the system from worms like these Bitters.
J. WALKER, Proprietor. R. H. MCDONALD & CO.,
D-’cgista and Gen. Agents. San Francisco, California,
~ and 32 and 34 Commerce Street. New York.
teTSOLD BY ALL DRLUGI5T3 AND DEALERS.
f R li R
MOM'S RnIADY RELIEF
CUfiEs ifiS WOP.ST S-i.HS
in from one to twentx minutes Net
! One hour.
j aher reatiinq; 1 Ills adveiU-q in m i ee i any 01 e
SUFFER WITH PAIN.
Radway s lltav: Relief is a fare far every
PILL
It vr, s flie pno is
THE Ot LV PA |\ ttE.llEDY
libit instantly ; oiae most excruciating
pains, pi Ip vs lull «n ion and ernes Gor.ges-
tions. wne-lu- oi - lie Luib'S, stomach, Bow-
eis. or o.Lie.' ^Ipodsor ov^mis by one appli
cation.
Inborn one <o twenty initiates, no mailer
bow violent or excri'da-.in? the pain the
Rheumatic. Bed-idden, Infirm, (Jtippled,
Nervous, Neuralgic, or prostrated with* dis
ease may suffer.
The application of the Ready Relief to the
part or pai ts where the pain or difficulty exists
will aff 'id case and comfort.
Twenty drops in half a tumbler of wn!«r
I will in a few momenls cure Cramps, fcypesms
Sour St-un.'ch Henitburn. Sick il.adache
Diarrhoea Dysenteiy. Colic, Wind in the
Bowels, and a Internal Pains.
Travelers should sltTays cany a botile of
' Radway s Eeudy Relief wBh them. A Aw
j drops in wider will prevent sickness or pains
from change of water If is beiater then
French Brandy or Bitleis as a stimulenf
I FEVKK A(tl) A«UE,
| Fever and Ague cured or fifty cents; There
is not a remedial agent in this world tnat was
| cure Fevei and Agee, and all other Malarice
Bilious, Scarlet, Typhoid, Yellow, and other
Feveis (aided by Radway’s Pills} so Quick as
Rad way’s Rea ly Relief. * Fifty cents a but He-
HEALTH ! BEAUTY!!
olr ng and pu; e rich blood—increase of flesh
aid vv rqSi—clear skin and beautiful
CHDj.'exion seemed to all.
Uii
emu
«*♦
mv. win !i uic most cniic A Rthnillrd
\v t if> perfectly umi-satl ihle in j|,e
figure brioie them. An; they would
"<>f civilii. arul avowed their belief
Th3 Yoong Sculptor. that he had been implic tie.l in some
In one of the poorest, narrowest | terrible trim.-, tor which the victim
Streets of a beautiful foreign tit'. a.i served a j a model. It was in
lived a woman and her little so ,i vam that the ting sculptor prr>-
wh itn we will call Henri. The bo* I tested, explained; they weie iimx.ir-
had no ttf-oll- elion cf his fatliei, who n t 1 *e, and dec I a red lie should be sent
had crueby deseited bodi his wife -° prison, and there await me issue
•■rid child. Their only means ol the charge preferred against him.
insistence was what could be ob They further desired him nt once to
DR. RAD W A Y’S
tamed by the woman’s lubor such
household work as could be obtained
in the dwellings of the rich. Some
times she had to vva f k long distances
to and from her occupation, but no
murmur ever escaped her lips, save
one ol regiet that her little, fair hair
ed boy bad to he lefi alone in her ab
sence, anti that she could not earn
money enough to send him to school.
Nature, however. aH unaided, was
teaching him w thout the help of
books or mas’ers, and everywhere
in Florence, (.be .by of flowers,)
there was more than sufficient t » ex
cite the admiration, and satisfy ihe
4.ravings, of this child of genius,
whose inquiring eyes would always
rest on whatever was beautiful, and
such was to be met with in every
nook and corner oi' the grand, old
plac\ The ‘‘purple and transparent
shadow*” which flooded the whole
city at eventide, and lit up the gor
geous pa'aces and churches fair,
made fo» him so many glowing pic
tures, on which his poetical imagina
tion d web long after the first impres-
siou had passed away.
During his mother’s absence, the
grea.pr port ol his time was spent in
what we should callgrubbing in 'be
street gui.cis, m..d.ing odd-looking
things oi any soft material lie could
On nun i miiULLi.l llLouii
H i' 5 iB&dfcitbe most aslonisliiny cures so Quick
so rapid are the chr.iiQcs Hie body un
dergoes, uouer ihe influence of
tins truly woudei lul Medicine,
that
Every day an Increase in Flesh
and Weight is Seen and Felt.
VUE G IS li.?! 1 moon i'il',11
Every diop of Hie Sarsrppiilian Resoivei t
communicites through the lliood, Sweat,
Uiinc, ao 1 oilier fluids and ipifes of the svs-
? ba P e ^ needtd consistency,
ul-1, N'yp.ohs. Consumpiion, Glandular dis |J USl 33 one see3 children making
ease, U1 eis m the_ throat, Mouth, Tumors, ' feand-llO ises at the SCa-side. These
Notles m the Glanus and other Dail-s of tha .- . ,, J
system, Sore Eyes, Slrumorous discharges *' !Lle J uve Hlies generally set up, and
from theEa»s, and the wor t forms of .skin then demolish their buildings. Henri
diseases, Eruptions, Fever Sores, Scald Head,
Ring Worm, 6'alt Rheum. Erysipelas. Acne
Black Spots. D'oi ms m the Flesh. Tumors.,
Cancers in the \V omo. and all weakening and
pa nful discharges, ivght Sweats, Loss of
Speim and ail wastes of the liie princip.e
aie within the cmative range cf this wonder
of Modern Chemistry- anr
Dill
name the counsel !nr Ins deP nee.
“He shall ap[>ear, gentleman, on
Ihe day of trial; I cannot give his
name before.” u
Atnazed beyond measure at the
calmness and se f-possession dis
played by Henri, they felt compell
ed to acquiesce. Either his yoith,
his beauty, or his earnestness—per
haps all three combined—made the
judges so far mitigate their severity,
as to allow h'tn the use of his tools,
and the admission of visitors durin<>
I is imprisonment.
It is needless to dwell on ihe dis
appointment to the youth at this ter
rible blow to his long-cherished de
sires—hardly less on his own ac
count than on tliatoi his good moth
er, whom he had hoped to place be
yond ihe need of ah further earthly
wants. t will beoer please the
reade. :o 'ec'-n dial he did not yield
him oil . j> o despair. His
ne. votl io plan, his Si; id
ano uer : . me equal, if not supers
ioc, .o die one he had already a-
chie.ed.
It will readily be imagined that
the advent of such a Inal as that
now pending cau ed no small stir in
tne cay. The kiihe.to obscure life
oi the young sculptor, and the stand
he had made about bis counsel, very
will was
to execute,
eltv, atrogance and ingratitude.
Three things to delight in
beauty, fU kaess and Irredimi.
Three tilings to wish for health,
friends and a cheerful spirit.
Three things to like coidiaiitv.
good humor, an<l mirthfuiness.
Tince things to avoid idleness,
, loqu-icily and flippant jesting.
iij.re things to cultivate good
books, good frirrsds, and good hu-
in Or.
Thtee tilings to contend for—
honor,country and irieiuls.
Th ree things to govern—temper,
tongue and conduct.
Three things to think about life,
death and eterniiy.
A loving In art and a pleasant
countenance are commodities which
a man should never Pail to take home
with him. They will best season
his food and so lien his pillow, li
were r* ireat thing for a man that his
wife ano children could truly say ot
him, ‘He never brought a Down ol
unhappiness across his threshold.”
This wnole liie is but one great
school. From the cradle to die grave
we are scholats. The voices ol
those we love, arid the wisdom of
past ages, and our experience, are
our teaehers.
Affliction give* us discipline.—
The spirits ot the departed saints
whisper to us, “come up higher.”
Cultivating Virtues by System.
For the benclit of some who wish
to kuow how they may attain sym
metry of eiinracier and whiteness of
sou! we jive the method pur ued by
Erankhn, of which he remarks in
hi* 7Sib year: “it may be well my
pos.eiiy ohould be informed, that
to iu!< hale artifice, with die bless
ing oi God, their ancestor owed the
coat could speak, v • an
'v<>uId teil of tin' n,.b!ch.
uadenieath !
s it
mgs
hd nothing o/ the sort. Every one
ami excitement of tho public.—
Many, unable to restrain their im
patience, visited him in prison—
some, doubtless, impelled by curi
osity, others moved by some higher
nf those little lumps was moulded I nioiive. Among these were two
into some form copied either from j distinguished-looking individuals—
nature or arl, for in thi.t u
ciiy every street i
considerably enhanced the anxiety i con-'iant felicity of his ide down to
For Safe by JOHN M. CLARK, Dmo-Rt.
MilL"i-sville Ga
A LUXURY OF THE PITRIOD.
The Great Southern Tonic,
—AND—
Universally Popular Stanachic and
Appetizer.
BETTER TONIC THAN QUININE.
Popularity is a pretty .good guarantee of
merit in tliin scrutinizing 1 an intelligent ape,
and tried by this critenond SUMTER BIT
TERS sT.nds first among the invigorating and
regulating medicines of the present day.
OLD PREJUDICES ARE DYING OUT.
Everybody says SUMTER BITTERS
Cures Dyspepsia,
Prevents Chills and Fever,
Creates Appetite,
Restores the Nerves,
Cures Debil ty,
Purifies the Blood,
Restores Tone to the Stomach,
Pieasant to the Taste,
Exhilarating to the Body,
And is the most
POPULAR BITTERS
For sale by L. W. HUNT & CO.,
Milledgeville, Ga.
For sale by A. H. BIRDSONG &
CO., Sparta, Ga.
;an2!l—r p
DARBY’S
• n.ir i
All 1 i U
FLUID
fIUiiS invaluable i'aioiiiy iUeiitciuc, loi
-‘-purify jug, cleausin
odors in all kinds oi's,ckno-s; jov burns
sores, woulus.
lor
Erysipelas,
rheumatism, and all shut dmeases; for
catarrh, sore mouth, s ue thro.it, diptheria;
for colic, diarrhoea, cholera; as awash
soften and beautify the skin; to remove
nk spots, miluew, iruic slums, taken in
ternally as well as applied externally;.so
■■■■raBymMBMOTV-HBITar- ^ v-JLl.Mr.-aBgik.-JK:
highly lecommcoded by?ll who I ve used
it—is for sale by ail Druggist« am- <’oun-
ry -Merchants, and may be ordered
recfly of the
DARBY PROPHYLACTIC CO.
161 William Street, N. Y.
p Dcc‘24’70 ly. rMay2 nJuneB Jy
A1ILLEDGEVILL.F: nOTEL
BAR AND
Lager Beer Saloon.
hare git it. What7 The best of
Whiskier, Brandies. Gin, Rum. Wines,
Latp'r Beer, Cigars, and everything found in
afiist-class bar. My tenns are cash, but for
Hi cents you can get a good drink- I am a
mixer Give me a trial.
janlG-3m G. W. HOLDER.
Augusta) Va.
The only Hotel in the City where Gas is used
throughout
JOHft A. GOLDS!EIN
W«r. H. Tisoa. Wm. W. G u dan
TISON & GORDON,
(established, lto4 )
COTTON FACTORS
AND
Commission Merchants,
112 BAY STREET
SAVANNAH, GA.
B agging and iron ties advan
CED oil Crops.
Liberal Cash Advances made on Consign
raent of Cotton. Careful attention to all busi
ness. and prompt, returns Guaranteed,
oct. 9 r * n 4m.
M. Dye, J. T. Botbwell, J . M. Dye,Jr.
DYE, BOTHWELL & CO.,
COTTOX FACTORS
—AND—
COMMISSION MERCHANTS-
NO. 14j REYNOLDS ST.,
AUGUSTA, - - - GEORGIA.
L IBERAL advances made on cotton an 5
other produce when required. Oidt
for Bagging, Ties and family supplies pi ompt
ly filled. Ail business entrusted to us will have
our prompt personal attention.
Commission for selling Cotton, percent U
S«p. 23 69 Cm
a few days use j
will prove to any pen:ou Using it lor either of
l.ese fo.m-i of disease i-s potent power to
cure them.
i Not only does Ihe Sarsapar'dlian Resolvent a l on o.
excels all known remedial agents in the cure i n .
of Cliionie. Scrofulous, Constitutional, and
Skin disea-.es; but it is ihe on’y ptsilive cur®
for K.iiuoy and Bladder Comp.rints, Uriua y
Bad Womb di.-eases, Giuvel, Diafides. Dropsy
Stoppage of Wa cr. Incontinence of Urine
tnghl’s Disease, Aiouminiuia, and in ail ca
ses where there are brick du t deposits, or th •
water is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances
like the white ot an egg. or threads like whi'e
silk, or there is a morbid, dark i-i'l-'cn* an
pearancc. -nd wh.'e bo n «-dust- dcjio.-ils. aiid
wheu iheieisa prickin'?, burning sensation
when passing water, and p.dn in the Small of
liie Back and along the Loins.
DR. RAD WAY’S
PERFECT PUKblATIVIi PILLS.
perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet
gum, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse, and
strengthen. Railway’s Pills, for the cure o
all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowel-
Kidneys, Bladder, .Nervous Diseases, Head
ache, Constipation, Costiveness, tndigestionf
Dyspepsia, Billiousness, Bi’ious Fever, In
flammation of the Bowels, Pile", and all De
rangements of the Internal Viscera. War
ranted to effect a positive cure. Purely Veg
etable. containing no mercury, minerals, or
deleterious drugs.
Observes the following sympt rns resulting
from Disorders of the Digesvive Organs;
A few doses of Rad way’s Pills will free the
system from all the above named disorders.
Price, 25 cents per Box. Sold by Druggists.
Read “False and True.” Send one letter-
stamp to Red way & Co., No 87 Maiden Lane
New York. Information woith thousands wii
be sent you.
r July 4 1871. 26 ly
m that Lemuiiui I who chanced at that lime, to he so
ft museum. P,o- jjourning in Florence. Oi.e was con-
■iions, husoes, Hnials, all are sped- ! siderobly past middle age ; the oilier
mens o real architectural beauty, of
a peculiar and distinctive type. For
nc 1 lie young boy coutiiiaed
to fashion objects of this son, until, j
o\ a kind of fre.-b inspiration, he
d at representing the h ,n I
form. The oniv difflcultv s •*= q
to he how to obtain the mndei.- iiom
wh ch to work.
At length a ha"■'»*-
red to him. H
be could easily r
ipnythoug
d no money,
:ni tile biiiei
iccur-
(-ai ! to be bis nephew) was a young
mm, of remarkably handsome
countenance an I noble figure. No
restriction seemed to be . ut either
on the frequency or length of di> ir
vi-in-; while, to poor Henri, the
l*Hie thus spent was -is goiil and sun
nine in iins o he; w is,
r. Go ttiy
t «. very -• ,
the /Jdi year, in which this is writ
ten. What reverses may attend the
A Dog which dees not Fcrget an In-
jury.
There is a laige NewloumllanJ
deg in t is city, about ten years old
which is, doubtless, one of the most
knowing specimens of ihe canine
family living. Wh n if was about
ix moiiiti- ot age, ;i couple of young
men, in otder to have a ihtle fun,
lied a i*ii kei'le to us iaih and sent
rummig ilirough liie streets. It
was spoil torihe boys, but tbe act
was never lorgourn by the dog.
Till this day it simws signs of ilis-
pteasure at the sight of either of
those young men. O.ie of them re
moved horn iiie place, and, several
years alter die iin-k-de nEM,-, he
was visiiing tire pUce and ^.vl-'d at
the residence ot die r'og's owner.
Tin* (I g, hr. ring die vo'ce ot the
Voung tiino ..»* ..»(» esort>
cd to 3 niiin.r'r o{ itov ices »o
admissi;ion. Upon bt ing a biiu-ed,
it sprang ior ihe nuo.-t ot tin* vidior,
with jaw* extended. The family
interfered, ol course, and the dog
was removed from the houce. From
that day (when the kettle was tied
to its tail, to this, nmiber of those
young men can enter the gate lead-
ng to the house il ihe dog i • a; home.
On one occasion a beggar called at
the back door for something to eat,
and was plentifully supplied by the
good lady of tire bouse. Wnfle pass-
remainder is in the hand of Provi
dence : but if they arrive, the reflec
tion on past happiness ought to help
his bearing them witJi more resigna
tion. To temperance he ascribes his
long continued health, and what is
still left to h irn of a good constitu-
ion. To Indus nj and frugal ittj, the ; thereafter,
early easiness ot 1. circumstances ed lor the
and acquisition of Ins fortune, with
all that knowledge iha : *~n«bir d him
to be a useful citizen, m i obtain* .1
for him some dearer ot repui..lu>ii
uorifu d
mg out through the yard, the beg
gar threw away some of the food,
the dog saw it, and taking the un
thankful solicitor of alms l>v the leg
oi Ins pants loons, walked him hur
riedly out th.ough the gale. No beg
gar is permitted by that dog to en
ter the gate since. A negro once
kicked this dog, and it has had such
a disliking for all persons of color
since, that not one, with its permis
sion, is allowed on the premises. A
lew years since the owner of the
dog was taken sick and died. The
dog was most deeply affected by
the event, and refused to be com
forted for many days and weeks
When die bell was toll-
funei •! the doo seemed to
o\
ni in
of In- cue
tmii-iiinciit
had iv.iiiivt
i.u Urn he si
(l.ii
; ptia-r
'bp ns-
m tiu-i
amouu the learm
justice tii confidence
and b. haumail-e e
!•. i rHi 1 upon ?11ii
oi
T< i si
td h
undcisiat
fro ri d> >
thi fieJl
f *i h iu
H\ t'
<>ar fui imjn.ii, and
..I
K
lo» In t.
WiL.. - M
ill
lllfl i II'
■ I 1:1 *
•f . 11
W. Duncan. J. II Johnston. M. Miclein
DUNCAN & JOHNSTON,
Cotton Factox*s
THE CR EAT’ BLOOD PURIFIER
Possessing powerful invigorating
PROPERTIES&APLEASANT DRINK.
Theso B;tt«rs are positively invaluable in
ALLSKIM D| SEAS ESS- ERUPTIO N S
They purify the system, and will cure
DYSPEPSIA & CENERAL OEBI Lt-TY.
Bemittent and Intermittent Fevers,
NERVOUS DI SEASES .LIVER COMPLAINT
and are a preventive of Chills and Fever.
All yield to their powerful efficacy.
XHECQOD FQRTHE-MENTAL ORGANIZATION.
Are an anuuoM to cnange of Water and Diet~ j
to the meted frame, and eorrect all i
IRREGULARITY OFTHE BOWELS.
Will save day* of *uffering to the sick, and
The grand Panacea for all the ills of life.
giving him hi- next meal, and to lose
ihat was as nothing compared to th.
joy he felt at having some chance
Ara d who would answer his purp jsc, | dfg,
and who ecu M i >e enticed by so
small a guerdon to the artist’s hurn-
bl5 oludi.•. In spi;e of his mother’s
remonstrances, Henri worked awa\
i arly and late, every day fiecoming
more passionately attached to his be
loved art.
Years sped on without any public
recognition of bis talent, bufbisres-
olute, persevering nature would not
allow him to be discouraged. Itislrue
lie was poor,but then he was rich in
hope, and sustained by the conscious
ness of that inward power which is
the accompaniment of real genius.
He never dreamed ofenvyingoihers,
but thought only of making himself
perfect in what he determined should
oe the master-piece of all his hither
to attempted studies—one which
was now growing to ample propor
tions beneath his busy fingers.
At length, his task,or rather labor
of love, being complete, he told his
mother that he should ask permis
sion to show'it at an exhibition of
sculpture in his native city. He
applied for permission, and bis re
quest was granted, on condition that
Scenr-d • r
was a g ,m ,.
Sill i; 11'- I
her, bud ever
m e.u
• li 1-5
viid ice
Should
•r -ou’s
TRY. ONE v .BOTTLE
AND
General Commission
Merchants,
92 Bay Sired,
SAVANNAH, GA,
We are prepared to make the Usual
advance on Cotton, oct. 9 r&a 4m.
Tie Marl
BrTTERS/^^UAi^
of * " Tl A ~
&EHMABI f In Young
Sini
^equalled
1
TRV,
PHYSICIANS THESE,
PBESCEIBE IT H
THE3
Married\P^ITKE.
Bitten
ini
often been
of saving life.
E BOTTLE,
PULASKI HOUSE
Savannah, Ga.
W. H. WILTBERGER, Proprietor
the statue should be sent forthwith
to the hall ot inspection.
“That, gentlemen, is impossible,”
replied Henri* “I am very poor,
and the apartment in which I live is
so small that my work could only be
removed by taking off the roof.”
The men looked at each other
in amazement; but there was so
much simplicity and honesty in the
youth, that afier conferring together
lor a few moments they proposed to
accompany him home, to see the
marvelous production, to which
Henri at present declined to give
any name. They followed him up
the narrow stair-case to the little
garret, and looked around in vain
for the wonder they had come to be
hold. Henri saw their surprise, and
wiibouL a word, threw back a baize
curtain from the floor, and revealed
to them the lay-figure, life-size, of a
murdered man. The gentlemen
started back in amazement. So
lovely, in death, were the lineaments
of that exquisite face, so faultless in
form, so wondrously expressive of
purity and innocence, that they
could not believe it the work of an
untutored youth, entirely devoid of
art-education and tbe laws of anato-
;i I lif
e V;| il -Il J ;
• Ml 11 I [| 1
one v. ;-t» »> .d,
!>!-* fit s eu.
my>1 cry, c rl miiv.” *
go.-sijis. “how this ch.-inge
have come about before In
late is decided !”
At length, the ni- import nil d iv
arrived. The judges, (who had
never ser ri the prisoner since the
day of arrest) being assembled in
the great hall of the Assemble, de
sired the prisoner rr iglit be brought in.
The prone figure was placed on tht
platform, concealed as before with
the cloth of green baize ; whilst at
its side, hut considerably rai SPfl-
was another, also covered. The
question was at once put as to what
counsel he had employed.
“Gentlemen,” he said, “I am my
own counsel. You questioned my
ability to give you a representation
of ‘Death ;’ here is one of ‘Life.’—
My subject is, ‘The Murder of Abel
by his Brother Cain,’ ”
Both coverings were withdrawn.
Profound stillness succeeded this de
claration, followed by a burst of ad
miration, such as had never before
been heard in Florence in the nine-
*D
. .uer
t;..
ilii! tr
dhug
i. t a-
leuce.
Indus ry
at ion,
Chastity
i -
Ho m
teenlh century. Foremost of his ad
mirers were his former accusers.—
The news was instantly carried to
the king, who commanded the stat
ues to be bought, and placed in the
Pitli Palace.
“It is not possible, gentlemen, for
me to obey ike command of my
sovereign,” said Henri; “ the
sculptures are no longer mine, hav
ing been purchased by the Emperor
of Russia. The money I have had
for them has paid for my mother’s
present abode, and placed rue for
ever beyond the reach of want.”
The nephew of the Russian am
bassador, Kissalieff, had setved as a
model for the arm of “Cain;” and
those to whom his features were fa
miliar, at once recogniz.-d the hand
some face.
The narrator of this circumstance
has seen the statues at St. Peters
burg, in a building erected expressly
for their reception. The Sculptor’s
name was Dupre, since become one
of world-wide celebrity.
To be Remembered—Three things
to love—courage, gentleness and
afFec’.ion. Three things to admire—
intellectual power, dignity and grace
ful nesa. Three things to hate—cru-
11 ll V i' > lilt i • • 3 U
me viflues—F pomm- , S
Oiile., Ri'-'-ulu : n> i. F:u_ i -,
Sincerity, Justice, M- uei
Cleanliness, Ti anq.utu v.
Humility. To e.ich ot
these he allotted a page in a little
book so ruled with red and black
ink that he could easily record his
daily delinquencies. He gave one
week’s particular attention to each
virtue, and as they were thirteen in
number, he was able to go through
bis book four limes a year. “I was
surprised,” be says, “to find myself
so much fuller of faults than I b.ul
imagined ; but I had the saiis r aciion
ol seeing them diminish. After a
while I went through one course on
ly in a year; and afterwards only
one in several years ; till at length
I omitted them entirely; but I al
ways carried my little book with
me.” Those who wish to become
more intimately acquainted with the
methods by which Franklin attained
his position will consult Parlon’
“Life of Franklin.” Schroeder, in
his “Life and Times of Washing
ton,” dwells on the assiduity with
which the youthful patriot cullita
ted the virtues and strove to form
himself into the pattern of all excel
lence.
We always conceive of John Mil-
ton as a glorious poet, with his sing
ing robes around him, but a study of
his life shows that his splendid at
tainments and mastery of all the
knowledge of his age were the result
of the most exact and conscientious
employment ol time. He was as
careful that no spot or smirch should
sully his moral nature. He lived
ever.
“As in the great Taskmaster’s eye,”
And when the mellow seductions
of Italy and Paris were woven
around him he perpetually remem
bered that “though he might avade
the observation of men, he could not
elude tbe inspection of God.”—New
York Tribune.
Sneer not at old clothes. They
are ofteu made holy by long sacri
fices, by careful foldings away, that
they may last until the dear ones
are provided for. if many an o!d
•t '.V ■ n i
« ... r n r r i i :
I • Il r U ...II liie ?
a;- tihrouohont
dOA
o f t . i lie
•8 th-* G e-it
d 1 1 is forr\ leel
i thirty feet i«s of
2 r . irile. T v' o
- m;*\ |> >s- each
J limn. I 11 «s a par-
s \\ h- > e it-n«>il>, wiih
P *i
convenient -i;nreuses, bultres-es and
garrison houses at evety quat ter of
a mile, and it runs, not bv cmiincr
• town hi'ls and raising valleys, but
over ihe uneven crests of the" moun
tains and down through their gorges
a distance of a thousand miles.—
Admiral Rodgers and I calculated
that it would cost more now to build
the Gieat Wall of China through its
extent ot one thousand miles than
it has cost to build the filty-five
thousand miles of railroads in the
United Slates.
Bring the Factories to the Field.—
Where is the sense in supposing
that the machinery which turns cot
ton into cloth should be located one
thousand or two thousand miles
away from the place where the raw
material is grown ? W'hat commer
cial or other neccessity is there that
a bale of cotton should be taxed
with the cost of transportation, of
cartage, of warehousing, before it
can be turned into cloth ? Why
should all this w’aste be contributed
to enrich communities far from the
locality where the crop is planted?
People do not want raw cotton ; as a
general thing, they want cotton cloth.
Why should not the Sou'll accomo
date them ? Is there anything to
prevent the South from making
cloth ? On the contrary, there are
abundant proofs to show that cloth
can be made belter and more cheap
ly in the South than anywhere else
in the world. Why, iheti, should
we hesitate to take advantage of our
natural facilities? There is no rea
son why the price of the finished ar
ticle should be increased to the con-,
sumer by a multitude of transfers-—
first, from the Dlantation to the fac
tor; next, to the local speculator;
then to the eastern buyer ; fiinally,
through a dozen other changes of
ownership, all involving more or
less of profit and augmentation of
price in the hands of the manufactu
rer.— Far mu § Artisan,