Newspaper Page Text
GEORGIA ENTERPRISE.
WILLIAM L. IJIIBH,
Ci >V fN< lT< >N» OA
FRIDAY MORNING HAKt 11 1 2. l'-'M
absent.
'ILc Editor being absent is our apology for
kaving uu editorial this week.
—*••«>♦
Synopsis of President Jehn-oL’s Vale
dictory.
To the People of the United State*:
“The robe of office, by constitutional limitc
tion, this day falls from my shoulders, to be
immediately assumed by my sueoessor. lor
him the forbearance and co-operution ol the
American people, in ell his efforts to adminis
ter the government within the pale of the lod
eral Constitution, are sincerely invoked.—
Without ambition to gratify, party ends to
subservo, or personal quart els to avenge at
th# sacrifice of the peace and welfare of the
country, my earnest desire is to see the Con
stitution, as defined and limited by the fathers
of the republic, again recognized and obeyed
as the supreme law of the land, and the whom
people— North, South, East and West—pros
perous and happy under its wise provisions.
In surrendering the high office to which I
was called four years ago, at a memorable and
tcrriblo crisis, it is my privilege, I trust, to
M y to the people of the United States a few
parting words, in vindication of an official
course go ceaselessly assailed and aspersed by
political leaders, to whose plans and w.shcs
my policy to restore the Union has been ob
noxious. In a period of difficulty and turmoil,
almost without precedent in the history of
any people, consequent upon the closing scenes
of a great rebellion and the assassination of
the then President, it was perhaps too much,
on my part, to expect of devoted partisans,
■who rode on the waves of oxcitement which at
that time swept all before them, that degree of
toleration and magnanimity which I sought to
recommend and enforce, arid which I believe
in good time would have advanced us infinitely
farther on the road to permanent peace and
prosperity than we have thus far attained.
Doubtless, had !, at the commencement of my
term' of MB**,- unhesitatingly lent its power
or perverted them to purposes and plans ‘out
thuTonstfintion,’ and become an instru
ment to schemes of confiscation and of general
and oppressive disqualifications, I would have
been hailed as all that was true, loyal and
discerning—as the reliable head of a party,
whatever I might have besn as the Executive
of the nation. Unwilling, however, to accede
t: to pro positions of extremists, and bound to
adhero, at every hazard, to my oath to defend
the Constitution, I need not, perhaps, be sur
prised at having met the fate of others whose
only reward for upholding constitutional right
and law have been the consciousness of having
attempted to do their duty, and the calm and
Unprejudiced judgment of history.
‘ Much as I vunerata the Constitution, it
must be admitted that this condition of affaire
has dovekipfid a defeat which, under the ag
gressive tendency of the Legislative depart
ments of the Government, may readily work
Vts overthrow. It may, howover, be remedied)
Without disturbing the harmony of the instru
iffent.
The power is generally exercised upon
constitutional grounds, and whenever it is so
applied and the bill returned with the Execu
tive reasons for withholding his signature, it
ought to be immediately certified to tho Su
preme Court of the United States for ita decis
ion. if its constitutionality shall be declared
by'tliat tribunal it should then become a law ;
but i,f the decision is otherwise, it should fail,
without poxyer in Congress to re-enact and
makeVt valid.
“Let us turn fora moment to the history of
the minority in Congress which has acted in
such utter disregard of the Constitution.
While publjc attention has been carefully and
constantly turned to the past and expiated
sins of the Sowth, the servants of the people
in high phioes, have boldly betrayed their
trasttibrbken their oaths of obedience to the
Constitution, and undermined the very four.-
dations of liberty, justice, and good govern
ment, Whan the rebellion was being sup
pressed by the volunteered services of patriot
soldiers amid the dnngers of the battle-field
these men crept, without question, into place
an3 power in the national councils. After all
danger bad passed, when no armed foe remain
ed/ when a punished and repentant people
bowel their heads to the flag aud renewed
their allegiance to the Government of the Uni
ted*States, then it was that pretended patriots
appeared before the nation, and began to prate
about the thousands of lives and millions of
treasure sacrificed in the suppression of the
rebellion. Thoy have since persistently sought
to inflame the prejudices engendered between
the sections, to retard the restoration of peace
and. harmony, and, by every means, to keep
open and exposed to the poisonous breath o*
par|y, passiou the terrible wouuds of a four
yeaO»\ war. They have prevented the
return ,of peace and the- restoration of the
Union, in every way rendered delusive the
purport's*, promises and pledges by which the
army was marshaled, treason rebuked, and
rebellion crushed, and made the liberties of
the people and the rights and powers of the
President objects of oonstant attack. They
hav6 wrested from the President his constitu
tional pow*r of supreme command of the army
and’navy. Tfficy have destroyed the strength
and efficiency of the Executive Department,
by Winking subordinate officers independent
of affable to defy their chief. They have
attempted to place the President under the
power of a bold, defiant and treacherous Cab
inet officer. They have robbed the Executive
of the prerogative of pardon, rendered nul
and void gets clemency granted to thousands
es persons under the provisions of the Con
stitdSon, and committed jross usurpation by
legiSative attempts to exercise this power in
fivefr of party adherents. They have conspired
t. change tln ’- v-Vui es our government by pre
ferring charge against tho President in the
form of articles of impeachment, and contem
plating, before In uring of trial, that he should
be placed in arrest, held in durance, and when
it became their pleasure to pronounce his sen
tence, driven fiom place and power in disgrace*
' They have in time of peace increased the na
tional debt by a reckless expenditure of ilie
public money and thus added to tho burdens
which already weigh upon the people. They
have permitted the nation to suffer the evils of
a deranged currency, to the enhancement in
price of all the necessaries oflife. They have
maintained a large standing army, for the
enforcement of their measures of oppression.
They have engaged in class legislation, and
built, up and encouraged monopolies, that, the
few might he enriched at the expense of the
many. They hkve failed to act upon impor
tant treaties, thereby endangering our present
peaceful relations with foreign powers.
“This catalogue of crimes, long as it is, is
not yet complete. The Constitution vests the
Judicial power of the United States “in one
Supreme Court,” whose jurisdiction “shall
extend to all classes arising under this Consti
tution” and “the laws of tho United States.”
Encouraged by this protirW of a refuge from
tyranny, a citizen of the United States who, hy
tho order of a military commander, given un
der the sanction of a cruel and deliberate
edict of Congress, had been denied tho consti
tutional rights of liberty of conscience, free
dom of tho press and of speech, persona!
freedom from military arrest, of being held to
answer for crime only upon presentment and
indictment, of trial hy jury, of the writ of
habeas corpus, and the protection of civil and
constitutional government—a citizen, thus
deeply wronged, appeals to the Supreme Court
for the protection guaranteed to him only by
the organic Inw of the land. At once a fierce
and excited majority hy the ruthless hand of
legislative power stripped the ermine from the
judges, transferred the sword orjustieo to the
General, and remanded the oppressed citizen
to a degradation and bondage worse than
death.
It will also be recorded as one of the marvels
of the times that a parly claiming for itself a
monopoly of consistency and patriotism, and
boasting too, of its unlimited sway, endeavored
by a costly and deliberate trial, to impeach one
who defended the Constitution and the Union
nut only throughout the War of the rebellion,
but during his whole term of office as Chief
Magistiate; but at the same time could find
no wnrrant or means at their command to bring
to trial even the chief of the rebellion. In
deed, the remarkable failures in his case were
sooften repeated, that for propriety’s sake, if
for no other reason, it became at last necessary
to extend to him an unconditional pardon.—
What more plainly than this illustrates the
extromity of party management and inconsist
ency on the one hand, aud of faction, vindic
tiveness, and intolerance on the other? Patri
otism will hardly be encouraged when, in such
a record, it sees that its constant reward may
be the most virulent party abuse and obloquy,
if not attempted disgrace. Instead of seeking
“to make treason odious," it would in truth
seem to have been their purpose rather to make
the defence of the Constitution and the Union
a crime, and to punish fidelity to an oath of
office, if counter to party dictation, by all the
means at their command.
Calmly reviowing iriy administration of the
government, I feel that, with a sense of accoun
tability to God, having conscientiously endeav
ored to discharge my whole duty, I huve noth
ing to regret. Events have proved tho correct
ness of the policy set forth in Tny first and sub-i
sequent messages ; the woes which have follow
ed tho rejection of forbearance, magnanim
ity, and constitutional rule are known and
deplored by the nation.
It is a matter of pride and gratification in
retiring from the most exalted position in the
gift of a free people, to feel and to know that
in a long, arduous and eventful public life, my
action has never been influenced by desire for
gain, and that I can in all sincerity inquire,
“Whom have I defrauded ? whom have 1 OfU
pressed ? or of whose hand have I received any
bribe to blind my eyes therewith?’' No re
sponsibility for wars that have boen waged or
blood that lias been shed rests upon .me. My
thoughts have been those of peace and my
effort has ever been to allay contentions among
ray countrymen.
Forgetting the past, let us return to the first
principles of the government, and, unfurling
the banner of my country, inscribe upon it, in
ineffaceable characters, “The Constitution
and the Union, one and inseparable.”
Andrew Johnson.
Washington,'l). C., March 4. 1869.
An Important Secret for Young Men.
Th# thing for every young inaH to strive for,
if he bo ambitious of pscuniary success in this
world is a speciality in his business. No matter
what trade or profession he may choose, let
him adopt some particular branch or depart
ment of it in which to render himself necossa
ry to those who employ his services, and thus
receive his own price for that which ho doss
particularly well. Without this special supe
riority,b* comes into competition with the great
mediocracy, and must expect a mediocre com
pensation only in return. The pleasant emi
nence of excellence, however, is uot to bo gain
ed by wishing merely. It requires good hard
work, and plenty of it. The world does not
pay people for being idlo, nor for that which
is idly dons. There is labor to be done after
they are learned, and ths beginner should nev
er flinch from it, for it is only by his own exer
tions that he can attain the speciality that is to
bring him future honors, and better yet, future
gold.
Release or Tns Last Confederate Prison
er. — A nolle prosequi in the case of John (J.
| Brain, the Chesapeake privateer, was ordered
| in the United States Circuit Court at Brook
j lyn, on Monday, under dirsetion from At tor
■ ney General Evarts. Brain was then disoharg
ed, and left the Court in a hack, saying that he
i would g > to Savannah, where his relatives re
' side.
I’t* atdent Grant’s Cnbinct.
The following is a list of the Cabinet nomi
nations, which were Unanimously confirmed by
the United States Senate. As they are, with
the exception of Washburne and Stewart, un-
I known to most of our readers, we append the
I following sketch of oo h of them, which wo
find in one of our exchanges':
Secretary of State—E. B. Washburne, of Ill
inois.
Secretary of tho Treasury—A. T. Stewart,
of New York.
Secretary of the Interior— 3. D. Cox, of Ohio.
Secretary of the Navy—Adolphe E. Boric,
of Philadelphia.
Secretary of War—Gen. John M. Schofield,
of Ohio.
Postmaster General—John A. Crssswcll, of
Maryland. *
Attorney General—Judge E. R. Hoar, of
Massachusetts.
SECRETARY OF STATE.
The nomination of E. B. Washburne; (o this
position is looked upon as simply a compliment
to the gentleman, ns it is understood hs is to
resign it shortly for some more congenial po
sition. He is atpresentainemberofthe House
of Representatives from Illinois, and th* oldest
member of that body. He is an old townsman
of General Grant, and was his chief adviser
during the campaign. -u >.-
SECRF.TART OF THE TREASURY!
Mr. Stowart is well known in this country
for his great financial success, and should lie
manage the money affairs of the country as
well as he has his own, his services will be
valuable, There is no reason to doubt his ac
ceptance of the appointment, as it was one that
he really sought.
secretary of titr navy.
Adolph* E. Boris, the gentleman who has
received the appointment to the navy depart
ment, appears to be very little known, but it
has been ascertained that he is a native of
Philadelphia, he having been born in that city
in 1809. He graduated at the University of
Pennsylvania, in 1833, and completed his edu
cation in Paris. On his return to this country
he became a partner La th# firm of McKean,
Borie A Cos., importer* ofchina,in Philadelphia.
Mr. Borie was formerly an old line Whig, and
connected himself with the Republican party
in 1856. He is tlm Vice-President of the Phil
adelphia Union Lusgue, but is not much of a
politician, and has a horror of wire pullers.
During the war he formed the acquaintance of
Gen. Grant, and they have since been warm
personal friends. It is understood he did not
seek this nor any other position, and his
friends assert that he will not accept the ap
pointment.
secretary of the interior.
The appointee to this office, J. D. Cox, is an
ex-Radical Governor of Ohio, and so far as ap
pearance* go, is generally accepted as a very
good man for the position. *
POSTMASTER GENERA!*
This position has been given to John A. J.
Cresswell, of Maryland, who has been rather
prominent in politics there. When the State
was coerced into loyalty during th* war he
got into Congress, and is remarkable only for
an eulogy h* delivered upon Mr. Lincoln, and
which contained anything but merit.
SECRETARY of war.
The appointment of General Sehofioldto this
place is but temporary, as the General will go
back to bis duty in the army, leaving soine.
new appointee to fill the position.
attorney general.
Judge E. Rockwood Iloar, of Mivssoehusetts,
has been given the position of Attorney Gen
eral. He is at present one of the Judges of the
Supremo Court of that State, and is said to
have been a very successful lawyer. He is a
grandson of Roger Sherman, and his claims
are based on the fact that his father once con
tested the right of the State of South Carolina
to imprison colored seamen, and ho was there
fore driven out of Cnarleston.
FEELING ABOUT TI!E CABINET.
Every person you meet desires ‘an inter-;
change of views on the nominations, and the
ultra Radicals do not hesitate to express them
selves as being levy much dissatisfied op the
whole.
OTHER NOMINATIONS.
Besides the Cabinet, President Grant nomi
nated to the Senate Columbus Delano, of Ohio,
to be Commissioner of Internal Revenue. AY .
T. Sherman to be General, Philip Tl.‘Sheridan
to be Lieutenant General, J. M. Schofield to
be Major General, and C. C. Augur to be Brig
adier General, all of whom were confirmed after
a brief session.
A Fact Full oPtHeaning. **
Here i* tbs finest hit we have, seen off the
present popular distinction between religion
and morality:
In a religious excitement in Boston, a per
son met a Christian neighbor who took hue hy
the hand, and said :
“I have become a Christian.”
‘You are a Christian then, all at once,’ said
the other, ‘you profess to act strictly on chris»
tian principles. lam glad of it. I congratu
late you. Suppose wo now have a settlemfeflt
of our little accounts between us, pay tne
what you owest.’
“No,” eiiid ths born child, turning on his
heel, “religion is religion and, business is
business.”
So the paper# tell us. And what is here
so very wonderfully about it. I* not the world
full, of such ohristianity ?
A Cheap Machine for Testing Kerosene.
A correspondent calls our attention to the foli
lowing timely article in that excellent peperr,
the Boston Journal of Chemistry: “Take a
common quart bowl and fill it one-third full of
boiling water, now add cold water, a little at a
time, until a thermometer placed in it
indicates a temperature of 110 degrees F. A
tablespoon of the oil to be tested may be turned
into tbo water,and stirred about with the ther
mometer. It will float on top, £and it
touched with a lighted candle or a bit of paper.
If it igDites fire, the oil is dangerous and the
teller can be prosecuted under tbo United
States law."
Washington, March 6. j
The Chair laid before tho Senate the follow- |
ing message from the President:
1 Jo the Scnute of the United States :
r |
Since the nomination and confirmation ot
Alexander T. Stewnrt to tho office of secretary ,
I of the Treasury, I find tlmt by the eighth see- !
! ion of the act of Congress upp ved September .
j ‘J, 1789, it is provided as follows, to wit: “No
j person appointed to nny offioo instituted by
! this act, shall directly or indirectly be concerned
j or interested in carrying on tho business ot
! trado or commerce; or be owner in whole or
part of any sea vessel ; or purchase hy himself
or another in trust for him, any public lands
or other public property ; or bo concerned in
the purchase or disposal of any public securi
ties of any State, or of the United States ; or
take or apply to his own use any emolument
or gain for negotiating or transacting any bu
siness in the said Department, other than what
shall be allowed by law. And if any person
1 shall offend against any of tho prohibitions of
this act, he shall be deemed guilty of a high
misdemeanor, and forfeit to the United States
the penalty of three thousand dollars, and shall
upon conviction be removed from office, and
forever thereafter incapable of holding any office
under the United States.” In view of these
provisions, and the fact that Mr. Stewart has
been unanimously confirmed by the Senate, I
would ask that he be exempted, by joint reso
lution of the two Houses of Congress, from the
operations of the same.
U. S. Grant.
The following are tho Chairmen of the Com
mittees as announced bv the Chair :
Foreign, Sumner ; Finance, Sherman; Ap*
propriations, Fessenden ; Committee on Chan
dler Manufacturers, Morton ; Agriculture,
Cameron : Military, Wilson ; Naval, Grimes ;
Judiciary, Trumbull ; Postal, Ramsey ; Landß,
Pomeroy ; Privato Lands, Williams ; Pension*,
Edmunds; Revolutionary Claims, Yates;
Claims, Howe ; District of Columbia, Hamblin;
Patents, Willey; Territories, Nve; Pacific
Railroads, Howard ; Mines, Stewart; Educa
tion, Drake ; Revision of Laws, Conkling.
Washington, March 9.
The following message was received in the
Senate :
“ I have the honor to request that Ibo per
mitted to withdraw from the Senate the mes
sage requesting the passage of a joint resolution
to relieve the Secretary of the Treasury from
the disabilities imposed by section 8 of an act
of Congress approved September 2, 1798.
U, S. Grant.
Mr. Sumner moved to lay the message on the
table.
Mr. Sprague moved that the request be
granted. Adopted.
Stewart has positively declined the appoint
ment of Secretary of the Treasury. The doc
ument indicated last night was duly executed,
but doubts and opposition are still existing and
expressed. Stewart withdrew and Graat has
accepted his resignation.
Hoar has accepted the Attorney Generalship,
which shuts out Boutwell from tho Cabinet.
Washington, March 10.
In the Supreme court Mr. Evarls introduced
his successor, Judge ILmr, who qualified as
Attorney General.
Gen. Hatch, Colonel of the 6th Cavalry, will
succeed Howard in the Freedmen’s Bureau.
The new Secretaries are at work in ali the
Departments except the Treasury.
There was a very full caucus of Republican
Senators to day.
Anthony was unanimously nominated for
President pro tcm.
The Senate determined to take up the fol
lowing general questions this session : To re
peal tho tenure-of-offiee act; to strengthen the
public credit; to redistribute the banking cur
renev ; to organize tbo Judiciary; to enforce
the 14th amendment; to remove political disa
bilities ; to reorganize the Navy, and the Geor
gia question.
A motion not to consider the Georgia ques
tion, this session received only seven affirma
tive votes.
Thayer, Edmunds, Carpontor and Sumner
urged its immediate consideration.
During caucus on a proposition to restrict
the business of the session is was insisted, on
• the part of Southern Senators, that legislation
was required Tor the settlement of the claims nf
loyal citizens. Also, that Mr. Sumner's bill
preventing the intimidation of voters, &e.,
should bo passed. In addition, they insisted
that there should bo some general friendly
legislation for tho reconstructed States, in
order to create a better feeling, and that they
might understand that they were not neglected
by other sections.
Cure for Ingrowing Nails.— lt is stntcd
that the cauterization by hot tallow is an im
mediate cure for ingrowing nail*. Put a small
piece of taliow in a spoon, and heat it over a
lat»p until it becomes very hot, and drop two
or three drops between the nail and granula
tion. The effoetis almost magical. Pain and
tenderness are at once relieved and in a few
days the granulations all go, leaving the dis
eased part* dry, so as to admit of being pared
away without any inconvenience. The opera
tion causes littlo if any pain, if the tallow is
properly heated.
Singing is a great “institution.” It oils
the wheels of care, supplies tho place of sun.
shine. A man who sings has a good heart
under his shirt front. Such a man not only
works more willingly, but he works more con.
stantly. A singing eohbler will earn as much
money again as one who gives way to low
spirits aud indigestion. Avaricious men never
' sing. The man who attacks singing throws a
I stone at the head of hilarity, and would, if he
could, rob June of its roses and August of its
meadow larks. Singing promotes health,
| strengthens the voice, the orgaus of the throat
i aud lungs, and prevents or cures consumption.
. Singing is au excellent agent for promoting
mental hygiene.— [Herald of Health.
j Who expects the negro to die out? Isn’t he
j the “everlasting negro?”
Now Advertisement:*.
(Secrets ©f
iifeat Oiy*
A Work descriptive of the Virtues aud the
Vice-, the Mysteries, Miseries and
Crimes ot New Y °'k <'**>'•
1 If you wish to know how F mines are made
atul lost in a dav ; how Shrewd Men are mined
in Wnll Street; how Countrymen are swindled
bv Sharpers; how Ministers end Merchants ale
Black-mailed; how Dance Usds and Concert
Saloons are Managed ; how Gambling Houses
and Lotteries are conducted : I cw Btock and Oil
| Companies Originate and how the Bubbles Burst,
| read this work. It contains 35 _&*>« engravings;
tollsall abi ut the Mysteries and crimes ol New
York, and is the Spiciest and Cheapest work of
the kind published.
Price Only $2,75 Per Copy.
Bend foi Circulars and see our terms, and a
full description of the work. Addrc-s
JONES BROTHERS & CO., Philadelphia.
Pa , Atlanta. G u„ Cincinnati, 0., or .-t Louis, Mo.
CAUTlON.—lnferior works of n similar char
a» ter arc being circulated. See that the I ooks
you buv contain So fine engravings and sell at
$2,75 per copy. ________
Lock Haven, Pa.
Messrs. Lippincott k Bmsewell, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Gents: —We have been using your m An of
Gang Saws in cuf Mill, and (in I them, in point
of quality, superior to anv we have ever used.
Yours, Ac., SHAW, BLANCHARD & CO.
Orkin Bhaw, Foreman.
kj>:- ..
Jamestown, N. Y.
Lippixcott & Carswell: —We have no trouble
with your saws; they don’t need to b> lined up
with paper; wo put them on the Mandrel and
they go right along. Temper perfectly uniform
and quality unsurpassed.
Respect fully, CHAR. J. F' >X.
LIPFiNCOTT & BAKEWELL,
Manufacturers of Circular, Millay, Mill Gang
and Cross-Cut Saws Chopping Axes, all shapes.
Colburn’s Patent Axe Shovels, Spades aud
Miles’ Patent Covered Seoop^
\ \ AKTUB ASXI7TS. $75 to *2oO
VV per month, everywhere, male and female,
to introduce the GENUINE IMPROVED COM
MON SENSE FAMILY sewimj machine.
This machine will stitch, hem. fell, tuck, quilt,
cord, bind, braid and embroider in a most supe
rior manner. 1 rice only $lB. Fully warranted
for live years. We will pay SIOOO foi any ma
chine that will sew a stronger, more beautiiul,
or more elastic seam than oars. It makes the
“Elastic Lock stitch.” F.ve>y second stitch can
be eut, and still the cloth cannot be pulled apart
without tearing it. We pay Agents from $75 to
S2OO per month and expenses, or a commission
from which twice that amount can he made
Address SECOM B A - CO., Pittsburgh, Pa, Bos
ton, Mass , or St. Louis, Mo.
CAUTION—I)o not be imposed upon by other
parties palming off worthless cast iron machines,
under the same name or otherwise. Ours is the
only genuine and really practical cheap machine
manuacl uivd.
GENTS WANTED TO SELL, TUB
“PENN LETTER BOOK,”
For Copying letters without Pres or Water.
This Great Time, Labor and Money-Caving In
vci tior brings a really indipsr sable feature of
business within the reach of all— Pi ice, $2,25
and upward.
None see il but t<> prai-o its simplicity and
convenience, as it, recommends itself, and sells
at sight,. Adapted to ev.ry kind of business.—
It and ips net play <>ur, as the first sale is only the
beginning. Exclusive territory given. Fur
testimonials, terms, Ac., address P GARRETT
>k Cos., 702 Chestnut sir.-rt, Phi ade pliia, Pa.
nriiTura
To the VVockjno Class —I am now prepared
to furbish nil classes with constant employment
at their homes, the whole of the time, or for the
simre moments. Bust ness new. light and profit
able.. Fifty cents to *s'per evening, is easily
corned bv persons of either cex, aid the boy*
and girls earn nearly as much as men Great
inducements are off red those who will devote
their whole time to the bn iness ; ami that every
person who secs this notice, may send me their
address and test the business for themselves, 1
make the following unparal'ele I offer: To all
who are not well 1 satisfied with ihe business, 1
w ill e«ud $1 to pay for the trouble of writing
mo. Full pantu-uinrs, directions, Ac . sent free.
Sample seDt bv mail for li) eta. Address
E. C. ATJ E.V, Augusta, Me.
A7V fxlTfefllll :l J ear ean madv by live agents,
fjj selling my new aud valuable in
vention. Andress J. AHEAI N, 63 Second St,,
Baltimoic, Md.
\ U D E L 1811 P E U if! L ST
for marking clothing, ac.
Single, 60c.; 3 for #1 ; per iloz. $2 75; per grs.
S2B. Sent, freight paid, on receipt of price.
More convenient than ink.—Am. Agriculturist.
Invaluable to housekeepers—Godey’s Lady’s
Book, Avery useful article.'—Am. Institute
Report, 1807. Address INDELIBLE PENCIL
CO., Northampton, Mass.
AGENTS WANTED ill every tonn to soil the
celebrat'd Cnn'inu Mowers ami Reapers —
Lightest draft and most durable machiscs made
Send for circular. Clipper Mower a Reaper
Cos., 12 Clift st , New York.
S3 W O N D E R.
IND U£ T R Y SK W 1 N G MACHINE.
| Only Three Dollars. Simple, practical and
I durable Makes the Lias,tic chain stitch, and
adapted to all kinds wf |dain sewing. Any child
e«n operate it An Claga.nl (lip. Testimonials
daily, in perfect order on rbceint of pi ice,
s3.’ Address INDUSTRY SEWING MA
CHINE GO., Manchester, N. H.
The Patent Magic Comb.
Will color gray hair a permanent black or browD,
i Sold everywhere. Sent by mail for
Address WM. PATTON, Treasurer,
Magic Comb Company, Springfield, Mass
j VV AWTED~ACENTS—To sell the
h ami.rigan knitting machine.—
Price $26. The simplest,, cheapest, and best
Knitting Machine ever invented. Will knit 20,-
oOu stitches per minute. Liberal inducements
to Agents. Address AMERICAN KNITTING
MAt H INE CO., Boston, Mass ,or St. Louis, Mo
~A GENTS, KA If M ERsTIIAKI)EN ERS, AN D
J\. FRUIT GROWERS.—Send for particulars
ol “Best’s Improved From Trie ana Yme ln
vigorator and In-ect Destroyer.” Samples to
test will be forwarded to any part of the United
States, and perfect satisfaction guaranteed.
Good Agents are wanted in every County iu the
United States. Address J. AIIEARN, 03 second
sheet, Baltimore, Md.
6MFOKT AND CURETtmdFiir RCPTI R-
J ED.—Sent post-paid on receipt,-of ten cents.
Address DR. E H. FGOTIi, author of Medical
Common Sense, 120 Lexington Ave. Cor. East
Tweuty-sightb *tr«et, New York cry N. Y.
VELOCIPEDE W HEjT*,
Manufactured by 41
3 - N - V\° W * & CO
- Ohio.
'lT.cy also make a prime article of Sunk
Hubs tor light Carriages and But,,. Li as, i
-end for price list. ° J
*JOOO N \ LAB Y, Address th 8.1 rifA
TAC2BIC, LIVSKCSTCN, *
ggT'JO.. F .CTOAs,
and—
■ COM 11 i SSO.\ MEttCIU.YTs
No. 34 So. Front St., aud 35 I.iiit ia St
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.
M id*. Charges Reason.*,,.
Ocrrospondonts kept thorough y posted i a ,
ciuinvtcs of the market 1
J A addre-ssS, M SpRXCER.t: Go.. Bratt] phoi .T
A p. .‘-AN CASTER widTmy
il. • ( Imago property ; also, L„nds nn/n
L.is sohl for taxes and otherwise «,cu-|JJf
18 W4l Ur.", New Y.'l-k.
v? rbin*f nrr m)11lk r seh ■ hTtTfrrr"
i A Men, who haring erred, desire a hdUeJi* 1
hood. Se. t. in sealed letter envelopes f rCl <ll j
charge. If benefited return ’the no,. .J
Address P ILtNTHUOS, Box P. Pl,it., \Jj£
’fi | h.\rness7cat Kith, sc idTfuutt
ALT iality—Cures legally guaranteed o. mon"
returned. By the Inventor of the OelelnuJ
Patent Invi-ible Organic Vibrator for lucur.y
Deafness. Send 10c. for Treatise on '
Catarrh and Scrofula. Dr. TANARUS, II STII.I.Wpn 1
198 Tile eker street, N. Y.
h <> h r i ir r~F
I suffered with CATARRH THIRTY YEAm’
was -ured in six we-ks by a simple reins] '
*nd will send the receipt, postage free tali
afflicted. Address Ri.V. T. J. ME AD,
Drawer 176, Syracuse, N,y
Dr, tutt’s sarsaparilla and ocei*
DELIGHT. The great lllood PurifiJ
DP. TUTT’S F XI'EC TOR A NT. A certain,.,,
for Coughs, Colds, Are. un "
DR. TUTT’S IMPROVED HAIR DYB. n,
best Dye in use. »
Dll. TUTT’S VEGETABLE LIVER pm
For Liver Complaint, Dispepsia, Ac.
These, valuable Preparations are. for sa.l«
Covington, by.. PACE, WOOD A-ROGfM
In Conyers, by DR. J. A. STEWART
In Jonesboro, by GEORGE MANSFIELD
In Thomson by DR. WM, PITTS,
BRAZILIAN COTTON~sS,
The SUBSCRIBERS have just receivedif.,
sacks of “Brazilian Cotton Seed,” »rd *«
offering them for sale. This is ssi.l “';*th
finest Cotton that has been discovered os th
Globe- H is vigorous and prolific. It »i!l
yield more than eomrnon Cotton, is long Ibri
and much finer, ana commands at least doutl.
the price of other kinds. It is eight to ten dm
earlier than common Cotton. The Seed weof«
for sale were grown by Mr. T. J. Stkvmi. it
Russell Cos., Ala. It grows well in Middis
Georgia, and all that have tried it are nil
pleased. Gall soon, or send in vour ordemt
once, TOMMEY k STEWART,
2m13 Whitehall st., Atlanta, Qi,
Special Notices.
answer to Medical irouiries.
Medical Department, R. R R. Office, )
No. 87 jlaiden Lane, New York.)
Dear Doctor :
We ai e compelled to answer your inqnirin
relative to the curative properties of SARSA'
PAR! LLI VN and i's associates as constiturDt*
in our RENOVATING RESOLVENT in Lung
affections, and its wonderful power in arestiq
waste and decay of the Longs, healing Uicm.
loosening the phlegm, and enabling the patieii
t > expectorate freely the thick sloughing main
deposited in the air passag e and «\\» “t Wt
I,ungs and Bronchi, arid rt the same time ke«p
ing up'tlie general strength of the palhut, re
pairtfi ' 'he waste with good sound and healthv
materia', imuarting nourishment as well »s pi
rifieation of the blood, —through the medienk
the press;—'hat hundreds ot others daily writ
ing us foi tutor atioo may know that we bm
a remedy in the RESOLVENT that will amt
the pi ogi ess of Consumption, either of th
Lungs, Liver, Kidneys, or Bo« e’s.
The Rrsolvknt is a compensating remedy;jl
communicates its cuAmtive p> wers thnughlh
blood, sweat, and urine; it re.teres fundionil
harmony and ei aides each soereting orgi.sk
secrete its proper constituents. Direct remeiitt
as Lin g Balsams, Cmi -h Syrup-Pectorals gives
to act. directly on the Lungs, as a regular Mr
edy, aie hurtful, as they augment the function*
of the Lungs at the expense of suspending of
Intel l u ti 'g the functi'insofthe Liver, Kidney*
■RndUk'n. if a patient suffering with a sever*
cough, with a sense of suffocation or weight«
the. chest, iri iialion or soreness in the thro.il,
pain in the shoulders, difficulty of raising«
expectorating phlegm, dryness of the skin, ofi
there is constipation of the bowels, unnatonl
appetite, great, thirst, or if the water dischstgh
: deposits substances like white of an egg, brW
dust, or thread like skeins, or if there i« pain i»
the small of the back, hips, stomach or bovet
chest, etc., from a dessert., to a table-spoonful";
Rrsolvknt, half an hour after each meal, »ni | '
(lie cough is troublesome, one tea spoonful* l
night, will afford immediate case, and will w**
remove all unpleasant symptoms.
As aids to the Resolvent, if pain is prsM'l.
The spine should be rubbed with the Resdy R*
lief, r.nd one to four of Kadway’s l’il's (coated;
to insure perfect digestion and regular eiM**’ |
tions from the bow Is. The nourishing proj*
lies of RADWAY’S RENOVATING KESOk
VENT, increase the strength and flesh oft*
patient. We do not claim that this remedyw 1
make new lungs, new kidneys, or other we* l *-
orgars, t,ut will arrest decay, heal ulcers, **
supply the waste that is daily passing off, " !l!
new, sound and health, material. Dr. B»dw*| \
can be consulted, ti oe of ch.irge, from 12 W 1
it m., at No. 87 MAIDEN LANE.
The nnbiic have but a faint i lea of the p*
importance of RADWAY’S RESOLVENT, J
the treatment, of chronic disease and dise*“
the Kidneys and urinary organs. Sars»p* rl ‘ 11 ’
aud Fareira Brava, two of its ingredient I
preparod by? Dr. Rad w ay’s process, supp' 1 ®!
want that has ever existed, in repai r * n ß *
waste of the bi dy with pure and
rial out of new rich blood, of arresting di** :
tion and decay, of restoring functions! h ar ,
ny, of securing strength, of dissolving ,?'!„ •
ooncretions, of curing every form of y
Bladder, and Uterine diseises; of *fopP>*?.
kinds of weakening, purulent, and
discharges ; of restoring the vigor ot IB**’’,
whether induced by self-abuse, impart *.,
lion, bid" habit of System, exp' sure, ornc ol
As the RENOVATING
PARILLIaN enters immediately into
lution, it commences its work ot pnrinosti 1
expulsion of acrimonious humors lrom *’
at. ouce. Skin eruptions, Blotches, *' ||{ [
Tetters, Worms and Insects, Black Bpo I
are removed by a few doses, and the s - IBC I
ul to s e'ear and beautiful appearance.
This remedy is superior to all
Biiuliu, Uubehs, 'Juniper, etc., in * . 'M
tarrh of the Bladder, Gravel, Brick I g W Ij
other morbid state of the Urine. H*«’
VATLNG RESOLVENT does not aug™ ' m
fsuci ioual secretions of one organ by s u *l ;
the secretions of others. , , n p nIVE^
Ask alw iys for Dr. RADM AY ■'' RE' -
or A VRSAPARILi 1 AN ItESoT.VENI.
> ,er bo,tle; or 6 bo :;lr KSay * e-mi
87 i
[ Stn' to all parts of the United States o