Newspaper Page Text
ess
€!jfJ$ont!)fni Jlftortor
From the Atlanta Sttn.
The Communists of France.
The Internationale, Cosmopolitan
The Labor Reform Party of the
United States.
The confusion which Commun
ism, the Inlernaiionale, ami the La
bor Reform movement have produc
ed in the minds of many people,
even some of the most intelligent in
the community, justifies an attempt
at explanation.
Communism is a term m French
politics having no reference to com
munity of goods, nor aggrarianism.
In France, a Commune is a terri
torial district, having certain politi
cal franchises. Its inhabitants have
under those fiancbises, certain pow
ers of local government. A Com
munist, therefore, in French politics,
is one who opposes the abolition ot
the ancient communes, of many of
which even the city of Paris is an
aggregation. Communism is under
stood to be opposition to the consol
idation of the Communes under one
central government. But for the al-
ledged excesses of the Communists,
during the late siege of Paris, Com
munism would have found many
sympathizers in the United States,
especially in the South ; and its aim
and object would not have been con
founded with the idea of community
of goads and aggraiianism. But
areat allowance is to ho made for
these alleged excesses. The reports
come from the avowed enemies of
liberty. The Commune was oppos
ed to Imperialism.
The Internationale, from the best
information now obtainable, is un
derstood to propose to level all so
cial and political distinctions among
men, and to unite all the nations of
the earth under one grand central
ized Empire. It originated among
the dissatisfied and malcontent of
Europe, and has come to be inanip
Ameriran Scandal in Paris. ’ to the poor, and the laborers, asser-( “DEKOCRITIC REPUBLIC A
-■ ted that they could “stand their We Lave reached a period in our po-■
Paris, February 28.—American work” on baked apples without meat, j lirical history when it becomes important
circles in Paris were excited toward whereas a potato diet n quired either to consider names, and sec that they te-
the end of February by the following meat or some other substantial nu-j ;l ")’ indicate the things which ihc\ are
bit ot scandal : “ trime.it. The French and Germans u?cd t0 re P rescn , f ’ 1,1 nothing is this
Lcs cM.-nsivelv, as do the ,n- I u ! ore lLaB th £ "T" r °
I ot parties. I he word Republican, for ;
'u s ance, as used in the common parlance
, of" the day, embodies the very opposite
ot food
j A very well known citizen of New ; use apples extensively, as do the i
Yoik, famous !wr the fortune he has I habitants of all European nations,
made by the sale of patent triedi- j I he laborers depend upon them as
cincs, was in Paris with his wife.— j an article ot food, and frequently
H. & J. WEED,
IMPORTERS AND
If H O L E S A L E 1) E A L E R S
1 N
They had been there for some time. | make a dinner of sliced apples and
He is extremely addicted to gamb- 'bread. 'I here is no fiuit cooked til
ing. H:s trip abroad is said to have ; as many difleicnt ways in our coun-
been undertaken chiefly to breaks try as apples ; nor is there any fruit
him from his vice, which is making! whose value, as an article of nutri.
serious inroads on his fortune. He
returned to his rooms in Paris one
morning about two o’clock. His
wife was not in their lodgings, but
he knew where she was to be found ;
so he went to the house of a Mrs B-,
and found that lady, his wife and
two men busily engaged in playitig
cards.
The New Yorker flew into a tow
ering rage, and upbraided his wife
in the most intemperate language.—
Early the next morning the outraged
wile obtained the certificates of two
or three French physicians who had
never seen her husband, vouching
that he was insane and should be
placed in a lunatic asylum. Armed
with these, she went to Mr. Wash-
burne, and through his intervention
made the police arrest her husband
and lodge him in a madhouse.—
Meanwhile Mr. Washburne grew
uneasy at the thought of the respon j
sibilitv lie had assumed, and the next I
day sent an American doctor to sec j
his incarcerated countryman. The j
doctor at once discovered that his
countryman was sane, and he was |
liberated.
i lea to iliat trl icli the lexicigraplurs
have assigned it. There was a Repub
lican paity in the days of our latheis
who tunned the government under the
Federal Constitution. Mr. Jefterson was
its leader, and its leading, animating
. • ii-i principle was the supp >rt ol that govern-
mont, IS as great and so Intle appro-; ^ f baB crc , tcll> M , hc , lc ° Msa ,. y
elated. Halit-Line Journal. j means theieto, a strict construction of
History of * Steam * G ,c between State and Fed-
: Iron, Steel, Tin Plate and Hardware, Rub
ber Belting and Carriage Material
1JS M 115 IJffauq/itjVL 5ft.
LEGAL ADYERriS! itENTs
Laurens sheriff
it lions..
ILL b<- sold belli.e tin c,, n
ft ▼ in Dub in, at public outer
luesd.-y in A pi i i next, wirhiu ii».
of sale, one lot of Corn about ■vf'l'
(it-O) bnsbei; levied on a s t :
Janies M. Lamb, to satisfy on..
Laurens Superior C-n t. vi,
Janies M Lamb. Pr .pert /
said ti fa. ' 1 ’•
Dublin, Ga-, March efth 1-Tt.
GEO.CURKKLI s
inarch 12 tds.
oet 10 1H71. r * n 6nv
SAVANNAH, 6 A.
About two 'huudied and eight I eraI ® Utbo ",^ B, this day we have a!-
years ago II. U. H.eto of Alexati- principl H es aud lh F eor f,i are directly the
tlria, made a lo\ wnicli was moved | opposite of those of Jefferson. Modern
by steam. j Republicanism means Federal sttprema-
A. D., 4-50, Arthemius, ail atclii-j cy, the abrogation of constitutional liui-
tecl, experimented with steam, dr- j itations, the omnipotence ot Ccugtess,
monstraling its power. This is the ; a,| d consolidation. The leaders of the
first notice of the power of steam | P ar, y boldly proclaim that the govern-
The bearing of the Southern peo
ple, as a whole, under all that they
have been forced, at the point of the
bayonet, and in other ways hardly
less tyrannous, to undergo, has been
such as to command the respect and
admiration ol all candid and unpre
judiced men. Theirs has been no
common lot, their sufferings no com
ulalell by dreamy social phi!**. j >•><>» sufferings, nor U.what they have j steamboat ami .none ..
phera in almost every country on ll.e j los'Uo be measured by^anj. common ! V(| y a „ e iu i( „„ lhe Fort |, a ,„|
standard. Amid it all they have
been brave, stout-hearted, courage
ous ; not sullen nor despairing,
though greatly tempted to despair;
but looking forward, through present
darkness and over present calami
ties, to the dawn of a better day.—
Their patience, their strength, their
good cheer have not been in vain.—
The day is breaking, and this is due
in great measure to their temperate-
opss, wisdom, forbearance under
trying circumstances. It cjnnolbut
be believed and hoped that the ex
ercise of these will continue to the
end. The recent past to the South
ern people is a dreary waste. The
opening future is full of promise to
them as an integral part ol the Amer
ican people. And the time is not
far distant when, relieved of the
present embarrassment that impede
their progress and bear them down,
they will illustrate, for the encour
agement of other nations and other
times, how true it is
Tlia'; men mxy rise on stepping-stones
Of their deal selves to higher things.
— Washington Patriot,
A South Wind Longing.—Here
is something timely and delicious
from Warner’s “Back Log Studies,”
in the forthcoming April number of
Scribner’s.
Perhaps the influence of the four
great winds on character is only a
fancied one; but it is evident on
temperament, which is not altogeth
er a matter of temperature, although
the good old deacon used to say, in
his hutnb'e simple way that his third
Eastern Continent. Ir. this country
it finds greatest sympathy among
such ultraisls as Mrs. Victoria Wood-
hull, and such garrulous eccentrics
as George Francis Train.
If the Internationale originated
among worthy and good-meaning
people, it lias lost all claim to favor
or support in this country by the
exaggerated utterances and ultra-
isms of its advocates among the
most prominent of whom are many
woman suffragists, free-lovers, free
thinkers and scoffers of religion and
morality in general.
iSince its introduction into this
country it has made the impression
that the Communists of Paris were,
and are, members of it. It may be
that some of them were members of
the Internationale, as stray sheep
often wander from their fold. But
the principles of the two associations
arc totally different. The Interna
tionale seems disposed to strengthen
itself by encouraging malcontents of
every kind and degree, in every na
tion, to unite with it. They claim
to be cosmopolitan, and invite rep
resentation from labor and trades-
unions everywhere.
The Labor Reform Party, as we
understand it, is not in any way
identified with the Communists ot
France, nor the Cosmopolitan Inter
nationale. It is of indigenous ori
gin, and is essentially, in all its fea
tures, American.
Its formation dates about three
years back, aud it has held three
National Conventions. The first,
we remember, met somewhere in
the North; the second in St. Louis/ , ,„
in 1871, and the third at Columbus,j “temperature was very different f thin, trembling
Ohio,' on the 22d February l as t,' from that of the other two. 1 he { along the desk
north wind is lull ol courage, aud " “
on record.
In 1543, June 17th, Blasco D.
Garoy experimented with a steam
boat at Barcelona, Spain. It was
abandoned as impracticable.
In 1G50 the first steam-railway
was constructed at Newcastle on
T, J ne ’
The first idea of a steam engine
in England was from the Marquis
of Worcesters History of Inventions,
in 1663.
In 1 7lO,Neyeomen made the first
steam engine in England.
In 1718 patents were granted to
Savery, in England, for the first ap
plication of the steam engine.
In 1774 James Walt made the
first perfect steam engine in Eng
land.
Iu 177G Jonathan Hulls set forth
the idea of steam navigation.
In 1778 Thomas Paine first p r o-
poseJ this application in America.
In 17S1 Marquis Joufbey con
structed a steam engine in Saonc.
In 1785 two Americans publish
ed a work on the steam engine.
In 1770 William Tyminglon con-
a
i it
Clyde canal.
incut is no longer what it was when it
came from the hands of its framers, that
we are a nation, and not a confederation,
that the whole political structure fas
been changed, iu fact, that the govern
ment is no longer republican, as once
understood. It is therefore evident that
the very name of their party is a lie aud
a cheat.
Uuder this state of facts, it is not sur
prising that certain members of that par
ty, not exactly recognizing in them
selves adherents to this new and oiigina!
idea of Republicanism, have suggested
the idea of au open declaration to the
world as to what sort of Republicanism
forms the subject ol their political faith.
They do not like that kind that looks to
consolidation, an elective monarchy, oi
perhaps imperial government. They
therefore, to avoid all misapprehension,
prupose to call themselves *•Democratic
Republicans,'' or Republicans who be
lieve in the government founded by the
fathers—a confederacy ol independent
States, the creator aud the created su
prems in their respective jurisdictions,
as specifically laid down in the constitu
tion or compact of union. It is evident
that this is the only thing that can be
legitimately called by the name of Re
publican. Applied to anything else, the
present revolutionary faction,for instance
— who have usurped it—it is only a
cheat and a snare. In nosense can such
a party be justly styled Republican.—
W. A. HOPSON & CO.,
Have received this day a choice variety of
the Latest styles of
LADIES', MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S SUITS.
ALSO
SWISS OVERSKIRTS, DRESSING SKIRTS,
CORSET COVERS, PIQUE WRAPPERS,
ALSO
A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF
Ladies’ TIiidepp-arments.
IV- A- HOPSON & CO, 4i Second St., ; 20 Triangular
Block. Macon, Gn.
Ile’c. 71 Feb. 14, Id rf
j*. A.
Hollingsworth Block.
MEGRATH,
MA.COIST, Gr-A..
CAN SUPPLY YOU ALL WITH
111 1802 be repeated his experi- j All their principles and acts look to fhe
iiM'lil. I ovcithrow of Republican institutions and
III 1782 Ramsey propelled a boat * r| berent right oi the people to self
by steam.
In 1783 John Filch, of Piiiladel
phia, navigated a boat by steam on
lhe Delaware.
In 1793 Robert Fulton first turned
his attention to steam.
In 1793 Oliver Evans, of Phila
delphia, constructed a locomotive to
travel on a turnpike road.
In the mouth of June, 1S19, the
American steamer Savannah crossed
the Atlantic from Charleston to Liv
erpool.
For His Son’s Sake.—‘Some
years ago, in war time,’ said Mr.
Moody, in one of the Noon Prayer
Meetings ol the Boston Y. M. C. A.,
‘a well known judge, who had much
interested himself for the welfare of
the suffering soldiers, resolved that
while a certain case was pending,
he would turn away all applicants lor
charity, that he might devote himself
wholly to the duties of his proles
sion.
‘One day a soldier came into his
office, poorly clad, his face hearing
the deep lines of suffering. The
judge pretending not to notice him,
continued his work. The soldier
fumbled in his pockets for a long
time, and then, in an uncertain, dis
appointed voice, as though he saw
that he was unwelcome, ‘I did have
a letter for you.’
‘The judge, acting against the
prompting of a warm, generous
CORN,
BACON,
EARD,
FLOUR,
WEAL.
RICE,
SUGAR
COFFEE,
SYRUP,
MOLASSES,
TOBACCO,
WHISKY',
N.
Jun*
FALL
-o:o-
OUR STOCK OF
1871.
wife was a very good woman, but ^heart, made no reply. Presently a
where David Davis of Illinois, was
nominated for President, and Joel
Parker of New Jersey, for Vice
President.
It originated chiefly in the oppo
sition of the producing classes to the
present financial policy of the Fed
eral Government, and the prodigal
waste of the public lands by gill to
corporations. At the late Conven
tion at Columbus, every proposition
looking to legislation concerning the
social status of individuals or races
was voted down, and such mad
cap agitators as George Francis
Train and Mrs. Victoria Woodhull
were not countenanced. Woman
suffrage, too, was ignored.
Time alone can ptove the propri
ety or impropriety of the Labor Re
form movement, and indicate wheth
er or not Davis and Parker will be
supported by any considerable nutn
ber of voters, and thus vindicate
the wisdom and sagacity of the ma
nipulators of their parly.
This, however, is apparent to ev
er} thinker and observer. The la
bor reformers are Democrats h}' the
very nature of things, whether they
act with the great Democratic Party
or not. Their late Platform indi
cates much political acumen in its
drafting. The candidacy of Judge
Davis and Governor Parker, (if they
run the race to the end,) is not to be
ignored in the calculation of the re
sult ol the approaching Presidential
contest.
That our readers may understand
the distinction between the Com
munists, the Internationale and the
Labor Reform Party, is the aim of
this article, and nothing more.
How many acts ol folly have you
committed this week ?
is
puts the stamina of endurance into a
man, and it probably would into a
woman too if there were a series of
resolutions passed to that effect.-
The west wind is hopeful; it has
promise and adventure in it, and is,
except to Atlantic voyagers America
bound, the best wind that ever blew.
The east wind is peevishness; it is
mental rheumatism and grumbling,
and curls one up in the chimney cor
ner like a cat. And if the chimney
ever smokes, it smokes when the
wind sits in that quarter. The South
wind is full of longing and unrest, of
effeminate suggestions, of luxurious
ease, and perhaps we might say of
modern poetry—at any rate, modern
poetry needs a change of air. I am
not sure but the South is the most
powerful of the winds, because of its
sweet peevishness. Nothing so stirs
the blood in spring, when it comes
up out of ihe tropical latitude;-it
makes men “longen to gon on pil-
grimages.’*
Arn.ES for Human Food.—With
us, Lhe value of apples, as an article
of food, is far underrated. Besides
containing a large amount of sugar,
mucilage, and other nutritive mat
ter, apples contain vegetable acids,
aromatic qualities, etc., which act
powerfully in the capacity of re
frigerants, tonics, and antiseptics,
and when freely used at fhe season
of mellow ripeness they prevent de
bilily, indigestion, and aveit, with
out doubt, many of the “ills which
flesh is heir to. 5 ’ The operators of
Cornwall, England, consider ripe
apples nearly as nourishing as bread,
and far more so than potatoes. In
the year 1801—which was a year of
much scarcity—apples, instead of
being converted jnto cider, were sold
hand pushed a note
The judge raised
his face slightly, and was about to
say, I have no time for such matters
as these.’ when he discovered the
writing to he that ol his own son, a
soldier in the army. He look up
the note. It read in substance:
•Dear Father—'fhe bearer is a sol
dier, discharged from the hospital.
He is going home to die. Assist
him iu any way you can, for Char
lie's sake.
All the lender emotions of his soul
were laid open. He said to a friend
afterward : ‘I look the soldier to my
heart, for Charlie’s sake ; I let him
sleep in Charlie’s bed ; I clothed
him, and supplied him with every
comfort for the sake of my own dear
boy.’
‘My friends, God will never turn
the need}’ away without a blessing,
for His dear Soil’s sake—for Jesus’
a ke. ’— Congrescationalist.
A Great Loss.—A few days af
ter Dickens’s death an Englishman,
deeply gtieved at the event, made a
sot t of pilgrimage to Gads Hill—to
the home of the great novelist. He
went into the famous Sir John
Fal.-taft inn near at hand, and, in the
effusiveness of his honest emotions, 1 ^ ore 'S u market for Brunswick and Alba
Foreign
government.
We hope this suggestion of a m\v
name will be carried ouL If we under
stand us aims, it will he a good tit e ft r
the new party of-r-fomieis who will tOon
hold their convention at Cincinnati —
With Democratic Ilepub icans and .Mon
archical Republicans in the field, the
public will not be deceived Eveiy
man will bo able to judge for himself
wheie his principles and sympathies
should lead him. There will be no false
flags, and for the first time it many
years the people will know what they
are fighting for.—Sarannah Repaid can.
The Eccentricities of Henry Clews.
It appeals that llenry Clews, the ac
complished holder of Georgia bonds,
made aperients mistake in attacking the
veracity of the editor of the Atlanta
Constitution That paper, in its issue of
the 20:h, printed specimens of Henry’s
private correspondence—specimens in
teresting and unique, to be sure, but al
together too voluminous for republica
tion. Happily, in order that the core of
these letters may not go unrelished, the
Constitution makes the following epito
me of the facts which Clews’ correspond
ence cleaily establishes: I you if
1. Mr. Clews wauted an official slute- i
ment for use abroad from Mr. Tweedy, j
as Speaker of the Georgia House of Rep R Marcl
resentatives, denying I)r. Angier’s state
ments, when Mr. McWhorter was the
Speaker.
2. He boasts that he had, by some
means which be docs not state, obtained
the control of the entire press of New
Yo.k and vicinity against the publica
tion of any aitides to the damage of his
Georgia bond schemes or reflecting on
himself.
3 He had induced a number of the
editors of Democratic papers in Georgia
to cease their attacks on Bullock’s finan
cial plots. How this was obtained is
not explained.
4 lie owns to every species of com
mercial juggling in order to get the
bonds of the State on the stock board in
New York. He employed bogus bid
ders, among other tricks.
5. lie owns to having tried to deceive
young Angier in regatd to Bullock’s or
der to him not to give Angier any infer- j
illation. He quibbled on words to dupe
Angier, statin'.’ that he withheld the j
(act of Bullock's order, and used Ian- i
guage that would reflect favorably on
Bullock. ; |
6. He paid State Road accounts which
he pleads to Governor Bullock according |
to his understanding of the law, were
clearly ehnrgablc to the revenue of the j
State T reasury. This knowledge of the -
law and his participation in his violation |
with Bulloik is very damaging to him. j
The farther fact that be sought to push
the claims which he had
and Domestic Dry Goods
NOTIONS, BTC
ETC
I S NOW fail and complete. We have the largest and most variedjstoekwe have e 1
ed to thetrade. Dress Goods Depart meat Particularly Attractive, aud Prjces L
Our Motto is,
‘‘Short Froths and Quick Sal>$."
And wa feel confident of giving satisfaction to all who may favor us with iheir’patronage.
We respectfully invite the public to call and examine our stock
’W’. I3aiiks & Sons,
43 Second Street. Triangular Block, MACON, GA.
r March 21, 1871 11 ty.
C L © T H I M
We invite the Public along the NEW LINE ol RAILROAD through
BALDWIN and HANCOCK Counties, to call and examine our new
SPRING STOCK OF
Reatlymade Clothing,
AND
Gents' Furnishing Goods.
We keep the best of every thing in our line, ar.d wilNte sure to please
vou -a ii 1 give us a trial.
WINSHIP & CALLAWAY, Macon, Ga
II 1 V
Dickson Compound
CO/Vyp,
Prepared by the Dickson Fertilizer Company,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA,
For Cotton and Corn. Smail grain and Grasses.
ALSO,
PURE FINE BONE DUST.
BONE MEAL, fbr CATTLE and POULTRY.
SUPERPHOSPHATES of the best grude.
Slate Trcary, i„ s e a ,l of?,'em i SULPHATE AMMONIA. SULl'HUItlC ACID,“ ami other Ferlili
in his regular account, but confirms the
case against him.
7. He tried to get Bullock to make a
statement for use in Europe, not be u-ed
on this side of the water, that was a de
ception, and that Bullock nor anybody
else knew, viz: that no more State aid
would be used, This was to “bull” the
Elements ot prime quality.
JAMES T. GAUDLVEB, President.
L. L. LAMAR, Agent., Sparta, Ga.
R. N. LAMAR, Agent., Mjlledgeviule, Ga.
Dee. lbthfr 1871. ptr 3m.
izing
he could not avoid taking the coun
try waiter into his confidence.
‘A great loss this of Mr. Dickens,’
said the pilgrim.
A great loss to us, sir,’ replied tAe
waiter, shaking his head, ‘he had all
his ale sent in from this house!’
This, we are assured, is a story
literally true. One is reminded by
force of contrast of the F rench wai
ter in the gardens of the Palais Roy-
ale, who when a customer on a cer
tain memorable afternoon remarked
to him that it was a fine day\ sadly-
replied, ‘Ah, yes, monsieur, it is a
fineday,but—but Mirabeauis dead!’
ny Railroud bonds
8. He fought Angier for months in
the battle between Bullock and Angier.
yet informs acting Governor Conley i hat
he has never pietended to form an opin
ion of the merits of the controversy.
0. He declines to make any exphna-
tion of his possession of the currency i
bonds iu the present condition of public j
opinion. He docs this under pretence j
of regard for Georgia’s good fame. This |
delay is a powerful suspicion against the i
good faith of Clews.
10. The whole correspondence bears j
irresistible testimony to the fact of Clew’s !
direct complicity with Bullock in the
frauds on the State’s finances,—Savan
nah Airies.
OLIVER, DOUGLASS & CO.,
Wholesale Manufacturers of Tinwa e,
DEALERS IN
Stoves,. Sheet Imii, Block Tin, Tin Plate, etc.,
4‘2 THIRD STREET, MACON, G-A.
Stove Emporium,
ro J patterns of Cooking Stoves. Stewart’s Great Benefactor,improved
... k’Bfhne.Jo, and othern patterns, all guaranteed. Box and office Stoves. Grates
*i> n f o to ?£/. Go'!®ware, Sad Irons, Fire Dogs, and an assortment of Shovels and Tones
ocket and Table Cuttlery, Hardware. Full line of House Furnishing Goods, Wood and
JLZur L00kn ‘ g Glas808 ’ Passed and plain Tin Ware tp the trade. All orders promptly
atienueu to. r Nov, 21 1871. tf.
Laurens Sheriff S; l ( ,
ILL be sold before the (Jourt-h,,..
“T in the ton of Dublin, on tl
Tuesday in April next, within the
of sale, one tract ot land on the e as t '
Oconee River, coutuniug on. i '
three (103) acres more or ies-
lands of Geo Kuo. and others. u ,
Cross R. ads, known as the I;./,,’
Lewis C. Beat-ham now liv. s j
the property ot Lewis Beadi.mi
ti fa. from Laurens Superior ( . '
Wilkes, administrator, and .1 .!
nrinistratrix, vs. Lewis !5e,t
pointed out by John River.-
ney.
Dublin, Ga. March I. l-7i
A. o
n. p
plaintiff
maro-tds Printer
GEORGE CfR’.i tr
r ’sfee$-2.:o ^
M ont
Wil
;st; -
ill be sold before th • |
door in Mt. Vernon within lb
sale, on the first Tuesday in May n« >
laud No. (2W)) two hundred a:.
10th district of said county,
erty of Janies Yeomans to satis!', •
Court fi fa's issued from the ,. j,
it., in said county, in favor of . p
vi. said James Yeomans. Proper!
out by defendant. Terms cash, u
aud returned to me by a Co- -t
MARTIN COLEY, si , '.,, J(
manj-tds.
My Terms are Cash, or such Paper as can be used to raise Cash anil
I will Sell >jou as U w as anybody.
A. MEGRATH, Macon, Ga.
22. ly
vB Court of Ordinary.
William Dixon having filed 1 >
for letters of Guardianship of W
and, Gray, orphans of J , „ ,
deceased.
These are to cite and adu-,. .
of kin and person concerned to i,
at the regular term of this Coo;•
to show cause if any they can v - .
shall not be granted.
Given under my hand and . ft! a! .
this February i 7tli, 1-73.
J. B. WOLFE, Or
Feb. 27, ’72.
J. X«i
i BOUl.lA i_.ai.reii? coo.
:>,• ■
fi!
!•- applies
f Ja.
G
Hardy Gray having
letters of adn.iuisU'atioi
Gray, late of said county dr.
These are to cite and adu oi
gular, the next vf kin andi-i ...
deceased, to he and appear at the r -. -
of this court in April next, to -i . 3 ,,
any they can, why said application shall
be granted.
Given under my hand and official
this February 20t"h. 1-7 J.
J. B WOLFE, Offer
Feb. 27, ’72.
ever exhibit
ow.
£j|EOKGlA LACKED (JOI'MV,
Whereas Edward Perry, administrator ;
Thomas Lock, represents to the Court i: .
petition duly filed and entered on record ik;
he has fully administered Thomas Lock's .
tate. This is therefore to cite all persors c
cerned, kindred and ci editors, to show car.,
any they can why said admiuistiator -
not be discharged f.om i.is administ
and receive letters of dismission on the!
Monday in July 1872. J B WOLFE.
Dec 10 6m. Onfe
ADMINISTRA TOR’S SALE.
W ILL be sold before the Conrt-h;:
door in Dublin, Laurens County
first Tuesday in Apt iI next, within F.
hours of sale, three lots of land in said c i;:
known as the late residence of Sarah Ik-
dec’d. The property of the estate of
Burch, and sold for distribution by v:; •
an order of the Conrt of Or. inary of sa . .
ty. Terms of sale—Cash.
This February 9th, 1-72.
WILLIAM BURCH.
feb!3-tds Adm’r Saiah Bnnl
VINEGAR BITTERS
J. Wjri.KrR Pr«nr:«»r
Urn. As'ta, Saa Trinei.
. M’-rto'.Ai.r t ra. Pruroa*
, !Ti.l 3_> ml S 4 Conner:;
MILLION'S Bear Testimony to iW
Wonder fa I Curative Eflect*.
They are not a vile Fancy Drink, made ot Fat
Rom, Wliiakey, Proof Spirit* aud Ktfimb'
q n ore doctored, spice.! and sweetened to plerse - -
called “Tonics,'’“Appetizers,” “Restorers," fc,
lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, br.: sr: :■
Mediciuc.tnftde from the satire Roots and Eerji -- -
forma, free from n!t Alcoholic StiinsM 1 -
They are the GREAT BEOOD Pl'BIFIER-
A LIFE GIVING PRINCIPLE, aperfecti*
vator and Inrigorator of the System, carrying
poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a tes.’. ' -
dition. Xo person can take these Bitters sccordis -
directions and remain long unwell.provided theo- a-
are; not destroyed by mineral poison or other
and the vital organs wafted beyond the point re,^
They nre a Gentle Pnrgatire as
Tonic, possessing, also, the peculiar merit of -
a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Indaidr!
of the Liver, and all the Visceral Organs.
FOR FEMALE COUPLAIXTS,
old, married or single, at the dawn of wotnaniiooo -
the turn of life, these Tonic B.iters hare no eqtta..
For Inflammatory and Chronic Rh’ 5 " 1 ]
t iara mid Gon t, Dyspepain or Indigestion-
ioaa. Remittent nud .Fe«"
Diseases of the Blocd. Liver, Kidneys at-
Bladder, these Bitters have been most sue*sc-
Snch Diseases are caused by Vitiated Bl
which is generally produced by derangemen, or c
sestlTe Orgnus. . .
DYSPEPSIA OR INDIGESTION.
Pain in the ShonldersX’oughs. Iightnesa
Bittiness, flour fimetations of the Stomach, —
in the Month. Bilious Attacks. Palpitation of me “ _
Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the reg»m '
Aidneys. and a hundred other painful sytrr
oflspriugs of Dyspepsia.
e Stomach and stitunzue th
e»t*
il* '
f*
They invigorate the
LiTer and Bowels, which render them ofnae?
eacy ia cleansing the blood of ail impurities.
iag new life and vigor to the whole system. ,
FOR SKIN DISEASED, Aroptfon*
Rbcam. Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, _ ^
huncles, Kinjr-Worms, Scald Head, Sore
Itch.Scarfs, Discolorations of the Skin, Hu:u ^ ^
eases of the Skin, of whatever name or nature.- ^
das ap and carried oct of the system in a
the use of these Bitters. One bottle in sr. -
convince the most incredulous of their curs-
Cleanse the Yitiated Blood whenever yoi
purities bursting through the skin in I -
tious or Sores; cleanse it when you find i* c N
sluggish in the veins: cleanse it when • . ..
your feeling will tell you when. Keep th-
and the health of the svstem will follow. ,
Fin, Tape, anil other Worm
system of so many thousands, are effe ' - i
and removed. Says a distinguished pbr-*'-',”
is scarcely an individual upon the *^ c
whose body is exempt from the presence
is not upon the healthy elements of tte
worms exist, but upon the diseased
depositi that breed these living mons.<- r '
System of Medicine, no ▼ermiftur*’**!. “ u t v^ Bi-
will frse the system from worms ii* c V-.tpi
J. WALKER, Proprietor. R. H. Me DO-
D^irgists and Gen. Agents, 5an Franc 1 *-^* ^
^ and 32 and 34 Commerce Street.
RESOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
For Sale by JOHN 31. CLARK- Di -
of'
* of***
bodf'
PULASKI HOU§-
Savannah, Ga
H. WILTBERGER, l’> P r:e °
W.