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oeorgia Enterprise.
WILLIAM L. BKKBE, Kdito*.
Coving ton. tfa
pm day mousing fkb. s, i se*».
THE DIFFERENCE.
When there in any diaturlmnce of tlio peace
in the South, since the subjugation of this suc
tion, the whole radical press- o* the North, re
ligious and political,. revertierntes with excla
mations of horror, iwsl Congress is urged to
apply some additions! torture to the niched
people who c.wnot he prevailed on to rejoice
In the privilege of being tormented by the god
ly Puritans whose malice and envy have do
•‘roved the prosperity of the American people
f»r the sake of ruining the South. Unfortun
ately for the Republican party, however, the
people of our section have been remarkably
Orderly and peaceful, so that scarcely any oc
casion has I teen given for them to raise a howl
upon, except when souse Radical emissary has
succeeded in inciting ignorant negroes to deeds
of violence, as in the case <4" the Ogeeohee
troubles in Georgia, and the more-terrible out
rages in Arkansas, where the loyal militia of
Pegroes use the arms furnished hy the United
(States Government, to intimidate tire commu
nity, dririrtg quiet citizen* front their homes,
and committing the most atrocious outrages on
defenseless women without any pretext of just
ideation. If any of these loyal vagabonds arc
Killed by some victim of their oppression im>
mediately the whole Southern people are de
nounced as rebel* and traitors, and all sqrts of
opprobrious names are heaped upon ns. Such
is the hatred of the party in power against the
devoted South that they consider themselves
justified in disregarding all laws, human and
divine, in persecuting and punishing the un
fortunate people, whose only crime consists in
tU« attempt to continno for themselves the
government as constituted by the patriots of
the revolution of 1776.
Rat whila the pious l’uritans are devoting
their inergies to the inauguration of a system
hfge more in accordance with their notions,
tHair own ncwspapers'tcstify to the existence
in their very midst of an amount of violence
and crime unprecedented in the annals of civ
ilisation. Time and space would fail us to
specify such minor instances of crime as high
way robbery and murder in the rural districts,
I,ut it is certainly a pity that the party of all
righteousness should permit the United States
mail to be stolon in Washington city, almost
within hearing of the orators of Congress, the
murder of a mother by her own daughter, in
the very he-artof Philadelphia, the Rogers case
in New York, where a man was mysteriously
murdered and robbed, in open daylight, almost
in*the presence of his family, yet without any
clue to the murderer : and in the vicinity of the
great Warney-stone itself, even in the city of
Boston, a man imperils his life by stepping in
the.street after dark. Yet this fearful state of
lawlessness at home attracts no attention from
the ultra pious yieople of that section. All
their sympathy and philanthropy is exported
to the-South and lavished on the imaginary
woes of the po <t negroes, while their own kin
dred and neighbors are h*M in a bonded slave
ry in comparison with which the condition
rrom Which our negroes were set free was far
more happy and desirable.
To an Impartial observer it seems but just
that‘the white slaves of the hondholding aris
tocracy at the North should share a portion of
the sympathy so lavishly wasted on Southern
negroes; and it would lie in better taste for the
Yafltee nation to sweep their own inoral door
steps'before they take charge of the virtue of
the rest of mankind. Why i it less impudent
in tftc.'o self-eonstituted guardians of the pub
lie morals, to assume to correct the morality
of the South, than it would be for us to organ
ize a society for the evangelization of New
England? The only absurdity about this
proposition nrises from the well known char
acteristic of the Yankee to meddle with the
business of others, while the Southron is equal
ly noted for confining his attention to his own
concerns. That is the difference.
CONGRESSIONAL.
Thy proceedings of Congress are exceedingly
barren of interest, nothing worth reporting
being done by them. Several plans for inflict
ing additional injuries on the South have been
proposed, but nothing as yet Ims been decided
on. _ {i
LEGISLATIVE.
Ors the 28th ult., a resolution was adopted
appointing a joint committee to investigate
charges of lawlessness in certain counties in
which outrages have been reported. Much
time has been consumed talking over the negro
members who were expelled last session, and
the probable effect on Congress if the Legisla
ture should rescind their action expelling them ;
and the propriety of declaring leva! negroes
white. The balance of the time has been de
voted to discussing a claim for rifles furnished
to Gov. Brown’s order in 1860, hy a Connect
icut Company. The committee to whom this
claim was referred reported favorably to its
payment, which report was not sustained.
GEORGIA^AGRICULTURAL CONVEN
TION.
Among the resolutions passed by this en
lightensd and enterprising assemblage wc note
the following as worthy of special consideration
of all concerned :
By Mr. Vissclie, of Houston—adopted :
Whereas, It is of prime importance to the
agricultural interests of our State, and to the
successful and permanent maintenance of our
independence ns planters that our system of
planting should have special Ycferenco to the
production of provisions ; and,
Whereas, The tendency of the present high
price of cotton is to the appropriation of an un
due proportion of our lands in this staple, to
the neglect of grain ; therefore,
Resolved, hy this Convention, That it is our
policy to produce an amount of grain and oth
er provisions sufficient for home consumption,
giving cotton in respect to this interest, a
secondary con-Herat’ n
THE FINANCE COMMITTEE.
The following report is published hy the
Committee to whom was referred the disagree
ment between Gov. Bullock and the .State
Treasurer, involving. ?35,000 drawn from the
Treasury by the Governor without the Treasu
rer's knowledge r
Whereas, It appears that the emwiminien
tions of the Governor and Secretary of the
Treasury to this committee- have been impru
dently and hastily published, and which pub
lications are calculated te prejudice publi*
opinion.
It is therefore resolved, by the Finance
Committee, that as they are patiently Mil
thoroughly investigating the mutter, sunil
inquiring into the report of the Secretary nf
the Treasury to the House of Representatives,
and nr* still progressing in the investigation,
without as yet arriving at any definite conclu
sion, it is respectfully requested that the pub
lic will (orbeur, for the time being, from the
formation of any opinion, and await the report
of the committee, which will he complete and
satisfactory, as the committee trust and believe.
W. 11. F. HALL,
Chairman.
A SEWING MACHINE GRATIS.
The publishers of The New Y’ork Day : Book
make the following extraordinary and liberal
offer; To any person who will send, during
the months of February nnd March, a club of
fiftv subscribers of The New York Pay Book.,
at $1 80 each, and remit 800 at one time, with
a list of names, will ho forwarded, hy express,
carefully boxed, a $56 Grover & Baker Family
Sewing Machine. No such opportunity to
circulate the best old fashioned Democratic
paper published, and secure the best Family
Sewing Machine in the market, has over been
offered. Who will get the first machine?—
Send for specimen copies, which are mailed
free. Address Van F.vrie, Horton A Cos., 162
Nassau street, New York.
Ntrnek Speechless.
The Senate called upon Pres ; tlont Johnson,
asking him upon what authority he issued his
proclamation of amnesty. Though a foolish
question, it was wisely answered ? We never
saw a completer answer. Such was the pun
gency of its facts, that, although perfectly
respectful in terms, it seemed like biting sar
casm. On reading it. eVery Radical Senator
must have shriveled upTlike a punctured Mad
der. The President cited the Constitution,
the decission of the Supreme Court, the exam
ple of Washington, the example of John
Adnms, and the example of Lincoln.
And now why do the Radical Senators, who
demanded of the President his a uthoiity, neg
lect to notice his answer ? Why are they si
lent when they were expected to be loud
mouthed? AVhv mote when it was their in
tention to he like roaring and blustering hur
ricanes? Is the President's brief response,
making hardly a quarter of a column in an
ordinary newspaper, a stopple in the mouth,
an adhesive plaster upon the lips of each and
every lately-raging Radical Senator? —[Lou.
Cour-Jour,.;- * >• _ v
Spiritual MnuilesXatioii* Extraordinary.;
Not many days since, says a Jeffersonville
(Ind.) correspondent of the Louisville Courier-
Journal, a gentleman of the medical fraternity
received an invitation to he present at some
spiritual manifestations in the house of one of
our respectable families. He went as a mat
ter of courtesy, but with positive incredulity.
Shortly after arriving, one of the young ladies
became under spiritual influence, and reques
ted that a young lady acquaintance lie sent for.
The young lady came according to request, nnd
she immediately also became under the influ
ence of the spirit* and both leaned with their
backs against the wall, and commenced a con
versation any thing hut refined.
The older sinter of the family next became
subject to the eccentricities of imaginary spirits
but claimed that her spiritual influence was a
good one, while her sister and companion were
influenced hy the devil. Things continued
thus for four hours, the younger sister anti her
companions continuing the most boisterous
and unlady-like conduct, swearing and cursing
like troopers. Finally, the mother of the girls
came in, and attempted to pacify her younger,
when she gnve her mother a blow on the fore
head, and set upon her with all the frenzy of a
maniac and the ferocity of a tiger, and had it
not been for the interference of the visitors,
the infuriated medium would have torn every
hair out of the mother’s head. After this both
of the younger gills fell upon the floor in a
swoon and remained apparently lifeless for
half an hour.
Our informant left, as he said, in disgust,
but was again urged to visit the family and
see that thero is some reality in spiritualism.
Ho returned with great reluctance, however,
this time to have a more pleasant, and still
more remarkable manifestation of spirit*.—
The party wore gnthcred around a small table
in the center of the room, a slate was put
under the table and watched ; the pencil was
seen to stand up nnd write a name on the
slate with no human aid visible. Questions
were asked by the guests, about which they
felt no human being could possibly possess any
knowledge, answers to which were all written
on the slate, and in such a satisfactory manner
•• In make the most skeptical incline toward
belief or at least to accord to the phenomena
some incomprehensible -mystery. Since this
occurrence, the daughters have both joined the
Christian church, and give no more seances ;
but what is very strange, the youngest daugh
ter who suffers such convulsions and boisterous
attacks of evil spirits, can not remain in the
church during singing, as the music immedia
tely throws her into most violent paroxysms.
Both oftheynung ladies live with their parents
and their characters are said to be irreproach
able.
In Wilmington, North Carolina, it costs a
white man fifty dollars accidentally to step
upon a negro lady's dress, and he is arrested
; by an African policeman, and tried before a
carpet-hag official.
[Communicated.]
Cotton vs. Grain.
Mr. Editor : —lt soetns to he a fixed deter
mination among planters South this year to
raise cotton to tho exclusion of all things be
sides, except o«i such lands as will not mature
this great staple of the South. Some are ac
tually preparing for cotton their marshy lands,
which are worthless except for Herds grass,
hoping by tho use of Peruvian Guano, that
powerful agent in the production of cotton, to
even gather from such lands a fair yield of
cotton. Certainly we have eotloH on the brain.
Is this policy a correct one or not ? is a ques
tion a large majority of our planters are de
termined to settle hy a hazardous experiment.
The old adage runs some how in this wise,
‘"'Experience keeps a dear school, and flats
learn at no other." Look out, brother plan
ters, at the next gathering time you may l*
forced to answer the question above slated in
the negative to the time of 10 cento per pound
for cotton, and $1,50 for corn, ami 25 cents for
bacon, in shorf everything HW high and cot
ton cheap. Remember the law of demand
and supply will not yield to onr indications
ot circumstances, much less our necessities.
There aro several reasons why wc should not
adopt the present policy of raising so much
cotton and so smnll an amount of grain. The
law above alluded to, like those of the Modes
Persians, is »m altera hie. IV hew tho whole
available area of tamd South is devoted to this
crop with the addition of such » vast amount
of manures as has linen purchased for this
crop, the yield will far exceed that of any year
previous to the war, whils the demand has
not increased proportionately. Coneeqdenlfy
the demand is less, therefore cotton must he
cheap. - This would make hut little difference
however to our planters if corn, wheat nnd
pork would follow suit; hut the law of supply
and demand governs in these as well as in cot
ton. The Southern planters raising scarcely
any of these necessaries, certainly will lessen
the supply and increase the demand, and un
der such circumstances if a partial failure in
the grain crtTp. through the Middle and North
western States should happen what an awful
condition would the South be in. The &tteii
speculators would take tho advantage of our
necessities and with the control of a mighty
despot would hurl “King Cotton” from bis
throne, give us a mere pittance, nothing like
an adequate return for tho outlay of expenses
in producing the crop, for our cotton. Such
a condition of things next fall and wiqtyr
would render us helpless and again at the mer
ev of our enemies, the Radical Congress.—
They dare not trouble us now, while we Imre
plenty to spare; then let Southern planters
remember that to bo independent of Radical
misrule we must raise our own supplies nnd
all the cotton over nnd above possible. Our
Herculean efforts the past season having been
crowned with success, we raised nearly enough
supplies for the present year and a heavy crop
of cotton which has tiem sold at remunera
tive prices. Our action has drawn forth the
commendation of Europe, raised us in the es
timation of the world, caused our enemies of
the North to consider their latter end and our
future prosperity, and given us anew position'
in our own estimation, that of a self .sustain
ing people. Another reason why we should
plant less cotton is that hy so doing we can
devote a portion of onr time to the Improve
ment of our farms, our stock, and last but not
least, our mental culture. Every old pine
field will soon he’ reclaimed ; and instead- of
lands worr. out as under the present policy, or
gone to the Atlantic ocean nnd Gulf of Mexi
co, fences rotten down, houses dilapidated and
tumbling, stock worn out and murdered hy
overwork, onr children reared in ignorance of
every thing except cotton culture, our 'towns
and cities depopulated, our merchant* bank
rupt, our physicians dead broke, our ministers
of the gospel forced to labor with their own
hands, that they may not be chargeable to tis,
a foolish and ruined people, indeed everything
“gone up the spout" except the lawyers, and
they quarreling and fighting over the debris.
Instead of all this, give me hog and hominy,
flourishing towns and railroads ; good church
es and large congregations, paying ones ; an
educated populace, well improved farms, mod
el ones, in a word, every one doing well, the
lawyers included.
More anon a
PLANTER.
Newton county, Ga., Feb. Ist, 180’J.
The State of Tennessee, under loil misrule,
is one of the most dangerous and disorderly
States in tho country, and the city of Memphis
in that State, is one of the very worst cities.
There is not a day hut the local papers are
called u|K>n to chronicle from 6 to a dozen out
rage perpetrated by negroes, or other loil pets,
and because of these things Radical papers
insist that reports of them shall not he prin
ted, as it gives the city a bad reputation !
Really.
Tkcre has been a good deal of talk in Con
gress, for a long time past, about tho rights of
American citizens abroad. Now the riyhts of
American citizens abroad are all very well in
their way, and ought to be protected. At the
same time why cannot Congress pay a little
attention to the rights of American citizens at
home? Charity begins at home, and the
rights of citizens ought to begin at the same
place. After such a beginning it would be
time enough and gminently proper for Con
gress to go across the water to look after the
rights of American citizens abroad.—N. Y.
Democrat.
Not long since the loyal government of the
United States took upon itself the authority
to pass a bankrupt law, for the benefit of such
persons as are so deeply in debt as to bo una
ble to get out. It having operated to consid
erable advantage in the case of many persons,
whv would it not be well for the government
itself to take advantage of it? There can
he no denying the fact that the government
is bankrupt. Its liabilities are greater than
its legitimate abilities, and it will need to do
something as we suggest, or come straight to
repudiation.—Brick.
I fhas. A. Fenbady on Commercial Manures.
Ills Mkti*o»of Ai’Plk’atius and Bmeets.
Editors SmrrneßN Cultivator: —As I am
constantly receiving letters from nil parts of
the cotton-growing States, asking iny view* of
Guano—what kinds 1 prefer -how I use it, and
what quantities?—l will make the ( ultivnft-r
the medium of my answers ro it'll. Same twen
tv-five years ago 1 begin* to experiment with
Guano. First, 1 tried IVmvfnn. Tins gave
good satisfaction, out wars, I then thought,
lathe- expensive. I have since tried all of the
j other varieties of note. Smite were god
! others worih'ess. I had come to the conclusion
that the Peruvian however costlv, w.iS the
cheapest in the end, n« a hard-working indue
| trious man could.manipulate it with any other
! snh-tance he thought proper. 1 have found
! salt, plaster, flour of bones, swntnp muck, &e.,
valuable to manipulate with Peruvian Guano,
hut tl.c labor of manipulation is great, and in
process of manipulation, much of the ammonia
escapes. From this fact 1 have been led to
inquire whether there was not an excess of
ammonia in Peruvian Guano, and whether it
! would not he more advantageous to pay for the
Phosphates, than to pay so much extra for the
volatile ammonia. Whilst full of this idea, I
struck the Soluble Pacific Guano, and so well
pleased w ith it, that last year I manured one
half of my. etton w ith it and the genuine Peru
vian. The same quantity of each was used
per acre. Tho bind was of the' same quality,
the planting and culture was in all respects
the same, nnd when the crop was gathered, it
was impossible to tell which was the .best. —
Now the Soluble Pacific Guano cost me .820
less per ton, and as a consequence. 1 have this
year used the Soluble Pacific Guano alone. It
cost me. at the Agent’s Depot in Columbus,
$75 per ton.
It may be well here to state the character of
my land. Ido not live on exactly what would
he called pine barrens, but it is next to it.—
The older portion of my land will not, with
ordinary culture, bring three hundred pounds
of seed cotton to the acre. A field often acres
which I wished to experiment on with the
Dickson Cotton, hybridizing it with my Upland
Long Staple, I plow ed and suh soiled in March
leaving the surface perfectly level ; the 20th of
April, I laid it off in lands about twenty-five
feet wide, nnd sowed Soluble Pacific Guano
broadcast, at the rate of two hundred pounds
to the aero. This I turned under, with a turn
shovel plow, then opened furrows three feet
apart with a long point scooter, following in the
same furrow I put two hundred pounds more
of the Guano to the acre. Then I threw the
furrows together into the centre, with a turn
shovel. which left but n slight ridge, nnd on
this ridge planted the seed. The Dickson vari
ety hears much thicker planting than other
kinds. The growth and fruiting of the crop
was superb—nothing equal to it had ever been
S«<en ih this section of the country, and if the
(worms had not swept all th« top nod end lx,lts
it woBIJ have made two good bales to the aero.
As bad ns it has tim' and out. it l a« made a bale
to the acre. To a half acre.near mv .dwelling
that I had cow-penned la-t winter. I implied
two hundred pounds of the Soluble Pacific
Guano in the drill, and, notwithstanding ex
cessive wet weather in August, and the worms
which ttxik all tlie late crop, T have picked
over two thousand pounds of seed cotton fp in
the hn’f acre. There are those in mv neigh
borhood, wh > plant land as good ns mine, but
without Guano, that will scarcely realize a
hale from ten acres this year.
And now a word't-i the purchaser. If you
would get the Soluble Pacific Guano genuine,
purchase it only of the authorized agents of
the Company, t have tried the Peruvian and
Pacific on ray garden, with no good results.
Peruvian Guano seems to he emphatically the
food fur the cotton fruit—other fertilizers may
make more weed ; hut in the purchase of Pe
ruvian Guano, we are paying for a vidatile
ammonia, much of which is bound to escape,
without benefit to crops. Will it net be to the
planter’s interest to take that Guano which is
richer in phosphates, and yet an abundance of
ammonia for all practical purposes? The Sol
uble Pacific Guano I have found from sound
practical tests, to be equal to the Peruvian
and much cheaper. I hold that no man can
afford to plant citton without Guano.
(’HAS. A. PEABODY.
Lee Cos., Ala., near Columbu-', Ga., Nov. 14. 'GB.
Banks and Grant. —Gen. Banks says that
the story that he was ordered to supercede
Grant at Vicksburg is true in every particular.
Gen. Halleck signed the orders by direction,
probably of Stanton. Banks kept it secret,
and never even told his wife, and the story
was started in Grant’s headquarters, when it
was made public a few days ago. Grant sent
two general officers to Banks, and he delivered
to them the orders he had received while at
Port Hudson. The orders are now in Grant's
possession, and will be given to the public soon.
An ordinary wedding costs ton thousand
dollars in Chicago, according to the papers of
that city. It is rather singular that so many
expend money for the short season of domestic
felicity that results from that ceremony in
Chicago.
A Chinese merchant in California was ap
plied to for credit for a cargo of rice, in behalf
of another merchant whose name is good for
thousands of dollars. lie assented, and pro
posed as terms one half cash and the other half
when he delivered the rice.
Can it be possible that over Five Million
Bottles of the Plantation Bitters have been
sold during the past year? it is almost in
credible, nevertheless it is absolutely true, nnd
is the most convincing proof of their wonder
ful medicinal and health-restoring qualities.
Every family should be supplied with these
Bitters, at whatever cost or trouble it may be
to obtain them. Be careful that you get the
genuine, and that you are not imposed upon
j by a spurious article.
Magnolia Water. —Superior to the best
imported German Cologne, and sold at half I
the price.
Special Notices.
Oi> TU-TT'S sarsaparilla ANDQirfcCNS
DELIGIIT. The great Wood Purifier.
Dr. TUTT’S EXPECTORANT. A certain cure
Cor Coiu:Us, Colds, Arc.
OK. TUTT’S IMPROVED HAIR DYE. The
best Dye in use.
Dr TUTT’S vegetable liver pills.
For Liver Complaint, Dispepsia, Ac.
These valuable Preparations are f" 1 ’®" 1 /’
Covington, t.v PACK. WOOD A ROGERS
In Corners, by DK. J. A. STEWART
In Jonesboro, by GEORGE MANSFIELD
In Thomson by DR. \VM. PITTS.
SA R S A PARILLIAH.
Pnreirn Ilravn.
Nkwi.y Dt-obv kukd Virtues—Hidden r>n <SOO
Year*-this Pgsov.uy "? the Truk Vir
tues ok THE Roots ‘'rouoht to Light
am> Made Manifest in
Dr. Radway's Snrsaparillian Resolvent,
By n nc iv process recently .Hacnvercl hy Di.
Railway, for ub tuning the active properties
from vegetable substances.
SAKS V V A K I L L I A N .
P.IRRIRA Bu.IVA.
Associated with other newly discovered Roots,
enters into tl.s composition "f i* \l IV A1 so
RENOVATING lHj.-OI.VENT; secure* a rem
edi ,1 agent, that cores alt forms of Chronic,
Scrofilons. Skin, Gian, nlnr, Ki iie\, Bi dder
and Uterine I >i.soiises, by eomn u io.iliug its
cui'iifv- r i ' |sir.iiivc ni:d fruitful efficacy, thro’
the Bloi il, Sweat and V iuc.
. Thp ordinate Sarsapa ila docoeti ns, nnd
Sy ; n s aro mere washes, Cninparfd w ill the
Smsapai iflitnl of the It-solvent. It is a well
known lie t ttout. Pa'SHtaii la as ordinalily pie
paid either as offi.-i' ally or as a proprietary
remeiiv, never possets. and the eotifi ience of meu
ical men, and all the reputation it enjoyed was
bellied by tv 11 informed GhejliisG, Physicians,
and medical writers to lie duo to other remedial
agents associated with it.
The true curative w tnes <f- irsaparilla for
301) years bis britf |,jddc i in the CrVs.aTne prin
ciple of the Reo r . undei Dr. Railway’s New
Process, SARSAPARILLIAN is seeur- and nnd
brought, to tight, a"(l associated wi*h other in
gredients, it fulfil's the most extravagant expec
tations un i views ol men- (hie t twee ot Dr.
Radwav’s Sarsap .l-Uian coniai s more of the
curative principle than ten pounds of the ex
trae s from the crude roots, as prepared officially
or in tiie popular advertised Sarsaparilla*.
Pakeira Brava.— Another of the usgredi-nts
of the Radway’s Resolvent, lie and in high esninm
t ion bv 1 he most eminent medical men ot Europe,
South America nnd United States, as the best
remedial agent, for the diseases of the Kidneys,
Bladder, I set us, an Ins a lit ho itripfie for dis
solving (iiilculi. as n curative for Jaundice,
Rheumatism, len-orr dpi, . tc, -ii ce 1088 has
never been p: op v'y pivjnii io. I mlev Dr. Rad
way's press. I 1 "- i rsaiH "line piiinrnde of this
valuable Rom is secured, mid as- ‘citled with
-arsapa illian and ol he iocre lien's in the Re
sole, nt, ni k s it a per be* cure in rv.rv f rrr. ol
disease of the Kid e\s, Blmll r, ant) lolniry
Organs Ib-npsy, Ur.iv I, Im-niitineiiee or Stop
page of -liter, i ti.ifei es. or U i inar\ I ban Incas,
and every k rid of weakening, irrila.iug, or pur
ulent damhiirecs, not proper to men I ini in a'-
ndvei lis on. nt. Is rapidly cored hv :hi- ren e !y.
So quick does tho Resolv. nt enter into the cir
culation, that it ii ay be detected in the Urine in
ten miputes af er it has been taken. In ma y
ea-es it lias secured a free discliargi- "f w ater—
in eas. s wl'er - t'nt haters were form, riy used.—
Is not 11 is a b i ssing ?
BUG HU, Turpentine, -hi ir-ers. Ci->, Gio ai a,
i nbebs, and other and rec' Diuretics, nr- in many
eases hurl fii ! . In Diabetes. Urinary Dirrloeis
l ata- rli of the Bladder, I)ro, sy,.ai and in weakness
or ill-era! 101 lof the Kindey*. are m sale I" use
a- a coiitii lieu ieonoiv, and rll- old t-ev. r (>■•
given unless unucr tiie supi-rvi-ion of a Physi
e nil, as tiie strain these' dir ct renn dies mv
pi odue on the Ki ito- vs may, in the course of a
few hour-, require Opiates, to change or modify
their action: ihis Tsi'-f i- self evid "t to air
medi ' and " an, a ejiir ensa'b g Re edy like tiie
S Rs.iPaß! LLI N RESOLVENT, is the tr«.
remedy to use in these eases—\ on a; a diuretic.
Pnreirn llrnva,
as pr-pured toy ]>r. R nfw iy. aid "tic of the in
g-edieitsof the Rca-'L'HI, is as superior t n "1
forms of Biieiiii, etc,, as rich cream is to water-
f et. nil P'lff ring fr in iiniiatiiinl drains from
the sy-i< in —eausi'* < i her by sclf-iibuse. de
pr.ived i'll’ it of body —bad blond, inquire asso
ciate n, iv.'nkn*** of ill" C"ni'a 1 organs, or --kin
Diseases, Sci ofiilii, unsure 1 S.-vond try Disease,
Syphiloid Ulcers, Chronic DFt-ase—nr fr.-m
< onsnmi'lion ot ihr, l.imgs, as « tll a* decent r
.alinn of the Kidneys—or Cluoiii" Diseaseof the
t iver, Si'lee", "to , co/oiat-nco st mn-p tiie us,, of
the SAB-AFAKII.I I\.\ KFSOI.VF.NT. It
commences its work of pur fietili.in at once ; it
repairs the wn«te nl' the body, wit.lt new a"d
healthy material. It rest, res fim-lionary bar
monv to oveiy organ in the si stem, and seen res
the natural secretions of the mop r constitu
ents of eacli. I'erso s have been oiued, and
liave chialren now ivine- tliii‘, .veie and etuxd itt
(•apa itate.l, •> \ seif abuse, etc.. !branch the use
of this remedy. Ask for I >r, Ifadway’s S.irsa
rAim.n.iN, • r Benovatixo CksOi.vkm.
J ’rice: §1 per linttic, orb hoi ties for £5.
RUSSELL & HOTTER,
C (> T T 0 N
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
,-ug ista, Georgia,
Corner llevnnlds and Mclntosh Street*
Will u'ive th-ir attention to the
.Sale anti Storage oft oMon.
consigned to tiiem, ml tc Shipments to Northern
mid European Markets,
Liberal Advances >lnde on Consignments.
11 F, Bus-ell. Gm 10 Boor, W. PoTTEr.
New Adiciti;cmeiiiP.
let SOAP%^>V
Iloney, Glyceiine, Kldci Flower, lioquet
and Palm.
In Quality, Style nnd I’erfume warranted equal
to (lie English and fudv 50 percent cheaper,
which accounts for the groat, falling off in the
demand fir the foreign soaps, and the unprece
dented success of tho AMERICAN COM FAN Y
TOILET SOAPS, now so il evert where in the
United State*. McKEONK. VAN HAAGEN .St
CO., So’e M uif’rs, I’bFad-jplii i, and New York.
nT ANTED--ACENTS-- I n sell the
AMEBIC-AN KNITTCNG MACHINE.—
Pi ice The simpl-st, cheapest and best
Knitting Machine ev. r invented. Will knit 20,-
000 r?titches per mir.me. Fib. ral iiKiucem.-nts
to Agents. Address AMERICAN KNITTING
MA( IIINK CO., Boston, Mass., or St. Louis, Mo
The Patent Magic Comb.
Wi’l color gray hair a permanent black or brown.
Sold everywhere. Sent bv mail for §1,25.
Address W M. PATTON, Treasurer
M Comb Company, Springfield, Mass.
™»rSO BUT N081.E.-Self.heiwfcT 9
I J Men, Wilt having, lied, desire ah*„ ' "“'ll J
booii. Sent in sealed letter Cuvel'/""‘'Ll
charge. If bonefitted return tliT,^. fill
Address P I ILxNTHRQq, Box P. Phftj^B
Grand liiriui, M ll u s,-77 itTT^—-1B
Licpiacutt k Bakkwku :
The peop'e seen to be crazy ab„ ul . . 1
Jack t Axes. Pease »end me twein, .i 'lii
m»re. Yours tiuly, \V | '[•«
C VUTloN.—Unpriueip’ed dealeis nr9 _j. i
Axes painted red, as the Red Jacket a.xs •!? [ I
good qualities of this Axe eon-isrs in ii. J" f«l
tier Cutting qualities not in the R p ai “ [1
Tiie "Red Jacket ’ is tor s .le toy all r, L
liards-nr-* dealer* an It he manufacturer* * ■
LIITINOoTT & BaKKWELL, PI
NATIONAL AGRICULTURIST fl
—AND—
Pennsylvania Farm Journal
1) Voted to
Agricud, lll e, Ho: t’cullure, and Rural Eeoi#,,,. J
Published at PITTSBURGH, PA. J
J. M. & G. I). KUEs'ri R, K,| iMl
Assisted by a t Vr, sos Practical Contributor 1
Terms— $1 00 per annum ; TenOpi « s;jj' |
Advertising f>s els. per line for each iu»e'r'j„„'
THE CHEAPEST AND THE
COLLECTIONS of >•
Piano Mu 8i 9 | f
A Complete Library of the. Choicest
Compositions. ««ited. U> AlUCa*,
if Pl'aYcrs, is comprised in the followingp
of elegant, volumes, »ni one ot which wonU
co-t in the usu.il form of Sheet aJumc, icitia«
tb" prie •.
THE WREATH OF GEMS, just ~„b!f,U I
containing over 100 of the phoieest and
papular Song-, Balia s, and Duets of the i. I
wilh Piano accompaniment. THE H<A V! E Gilt- I
CLE, 2 vols, eont ining Marches, Waltzo*. Pstku
Schott iselies, Redo was, Quadrilles, Contra Oatiin
Piano Forte Gems, nnd Fnur-lland Pictvi-s. ;
THB PIANIST’S ALBUM. 1 01. /. conlmi*
thm of tne same elitse of Music ns that "fih,
‘ Home Circle ” SILVER CHORD. 1 Vn!,i Lj
Songs, Du Is, Trios, Qiiartelts, wills I’i.in.i-AiA
SHOWER OF PEARLS. 1 v»l. Choice Vied '
Duels, with Piano Ac-’". GE'IS op GERM\K
SONGS. 1 mb OEMS OE -COTTMI Mjvq
1 vol. OEMS OF SACRED NON(4 1 v„|- |
OPE BAT it? PEAKIA 1 v.d Vnc.il hen ad*, g
the Standard Operas, with Piano ASed."-TMI
OI’EE \ BOUFKE. a eo le- tion id Y’ocal an4.|*: j
s' riiii'entiil Gems from Offenbach's Opera «( •
“Grand Duebe-se.” “Belle Helene,” '‘liaihs |
Bleiie,” assl others,
Prices. Fa Ii vot , Boards, $2 50. ('lull, j
*|3 00. Gloth, full giit, Jti,fh), s, nt by nuil, |
l ost pai I. to am add■ es.*.
OLIVER DUS' 'N &CO, PuLfiwiieri, |
277 M asl'inglon Street, liosles. '
C. ft. DITSO , & 00., 711 Broadway, New Vtirk j
AGENTS WANTED FOR T-IE
Gray Jackets,
And how <lley lived. Fought and Died for DilMr'' H
with I tic dents ami -k-tches of Lit* in I
iho Corii. dersey. ,u
Tie Spiciest ana Ciieasest far 800 l Msfc i
Send for fivcn nr mi l a e our te iris, wait • l
fu ! de.-eriplion of iho work, A-'d-es J IVF.Y I
BROS. It I (>.. Pliil*-el, hi|'a„ Atlanlv WL* I
nr S,. boars. Mo. 4 I
UANTED AT SNTS,
|'*i' moiilti, everywhere, mate a.l f"i»El*.' I
to i irodii -e the GENUINE IMPR VKD ' "M- I
Mti.V.-KNSK FAMILY J-KWING M U HIM'.
Tiiis inaeliint- will slrteli, h.m fell, me-, qit - It,
eord, i i,*it. bran I and urn In »> r iler in a lAinf
ror man er. I rn-e "»ly $1 H. Fnl y warranted 1
for fiv,- years. We w il, p.iy sliiOO any ,ms
chine Hint will few a stmt.g r, mote h sutfui,
"• more clastic a, .am that It ni .k s th»
“■ last ie I nek tilcli.” Ivcy -c oi.it j-litili f»< [
be ciii. ami s ill the eioll. e:,n n-t t-e pulied --part, I
" itlioii; tea* i"g it. Me put A < nts min s?''t"„l
?;(Ri |x'.' ni'iwth and expen-e*; or a e.,in>"issl"n I
bom which twice that nnn.n'it ean r.e m d)'— I
Address t-KOOM II «t ( (>., Pilixbin gh, !'»,■ Iki*-' |
ion, l : "ss. or St. Louts, M«.
C.VU.TION —Do nut he imp'sed npon hv '••fher , |
pai ties jntbni ig"ff worth less east, iron ".nehin*«,"
und .r fii" s ime n itn.' pr'otherwise,. Ours is iks
only genu ihe an I re ally practical cheap mfttdijsf
tiianu acliired.
J l-J- —•—i i— 0-j—a i • V-t’ •
“Geo, P. Powkii, & so., offer to advertiser
the most ""i.iplete method of reaching the pub
in-, through she newspapers, of any agency i»,|
the country —[Springfield (<> ) Transcript. ’ f
IF YOU W ANT TO ADVERTISE • ]
IF YOU WANT TO ADVERTISE ..’1
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FOR "
FOR
OUR NEW CIRCULAR,
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CONTAINING LISTS I
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Os all the Best Advertising Mediums.
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thk Names are given
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AND
AND j ,i
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GEO. I\ ROWELL A CO.,
GEO. P. ROWELL & CO.,
ADVERTISING AGENTS,
ADVERTISING AGENTS,
NEW YORK
NEW YOKt,
•‘Theh"U»e of Oko P. Kowili A Cos., i»
only one in the business that h»s itself used »•'
vertising to any gieat exteut to advance ‘ l *
interests. They spend huge sums, »nJ fin® "J
personal experience what adveitising P*J*
best.”— [N. V. Mai 1 ,