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GEORGIA ENTERPRISE.
WILLIAM L. BF.EBI, Bonom.
71 COVINOTON GA
EJUDAT MORNING APRIL 9, Sfe49
* The Empire.
The Macon Telegraph publishes an extract
from the article of the New York Citizen, cop
ied in the News* few days since, in disclosing
the plans of tho Union League of Philadclpha
and drter Northern cities for the erection of
Mi £mpirc upon the ruins of the Inion, with
General Grant as Emperor, and remarks as
follows:
“ A eery lively story, certainly •, and nil we
Have got to say about it is that we do not care
what they call a government working outside
the limitations of fundamental law. They
may call it a free republican government, but
the false pretence is demoralizing, nnd the ex
pense and inconvenience of keeping np the
machinery of a free government are needless,
while that machinery itself, worked in the in
terests of absolutism aad lawlessness, is in.
congruous and ill adapted to its purposos.
i “Look at all the ridiculous fuss we have had
fend are having, for examples, to blot out the
Southern State# and annihilate State indcpen>
dence in general—bow much better it could
have been done by an imperial rescript, than
i has been done by the clumsy combi nation
(f( a Supreme Radical Congress, nogro suffrage
a»id carpet-bngism, insulting the common sense
of the people with a pretenee of worship un
der constitutional law.
ji PAnd if they give us at last, Ili# Imperial
Majesty, U. S. Grant, by Grace of God Empe
ror of America, few sensible men will doubt
It as an improvement on what we have got
now. Would it not be far better for the South
to take her chances under the eontrol of one
•ingle mail, than to be bedeviled year after
year with Congressional reconstruction tyran
ny—-negro suffrage—negro and carpet bag rep
resentation —bogus elections of all sorts the
extravagance, tyranny and corruption of Slate
Legislatures, and the whole round of enormous
end oppressive taxes, for a State ’Government
which, in point of fact, is no government of
the people and is not worth a red cent for any
praiseworthy purpose whatsoever ?
“ We any that if things are to go on in this
way, we don’t believe there are a hundred
Georgia whites who would not hold up both
hands for some autocrat to substitute his single
will for all this bald and ridiculous imposture
of a government, and to obliterate with one
strike of his pen the whole of the absurd and
costly machinery by which the shallow pre
tence of Republicanism and free government
is kept up in the South. We say, then, if our
masters cannot find it in their hearts
\o give us something better than the bogus
’'Republicanism we have got, let them bring on
their Ulysses I, and we will try him awhile
upon the new schedule. The South is in that
fix, in the way of so-called civil government,
that she cannot be worsted by a change.' 1
[From the Richmond Enqu'rer.]
“Anarchy is Reconstruction—Confusion is
iLoynlty.”
Yesterday, by order of Congress, the gov
ernment of Virginia went to pieces. We have
no officers of any sort, save here and there a
eealawag or a carpet bagger. The Military
commander of District No. 1, says he cannot
fill ths offices, and consequently the clerks’
offices, the sheriffs’ offices, and all other offices
are closed. No one can get out a license to carry
on trade ; nobody can lodge a complaint be*
fore a magistrate , no deed can go to record ;
no injunction can be*procured from thejeourts >
Our women cannot marry. Anarchy is recon
struction, and confusion is loyalty. What have
the people of Virginia done to be left without
nay government ? They are not allowed to
manage their own affairs in any manner, and
Congress is so busy that it only finds time to
decree disintegration."
On. Grant’s Illness.
Radical organs in Washington from day to day
announce the illness of the President without
pnee stating the character of his disease. This
(act with the additional fact that no apprehen
sions of immediate danger are expressed, have
induced the general belief that tbe General’s
eslment is of a chronic character, and not at
all alarming in its nature. The nearest ap
proach to «lu«1 explanation of the President's
frequent attacks that has come under our eye,
is contained in the following paragraph from
a.apecial dispatch to the N. Y. World. The
writer says u th* indisposition of the President
baa become a dally event in the White House
whereby be is conveniently saved interviews
with Congressmen and office seekers. He al
ways begins to It* unwell ac nine o’cleck in
the morning, continues secluded until calling
hours arc over, and rides oat behind two
horses and one cigar every afternoon.”
Another writer intimates that the President’s
iudesposition is aggravated by the Tenurc-of
offioe muddle. Perhaps he smokes too many
cigars.—Savannah Newt.
Bogus Gift Enterprises.
To the Press of the United States :
i beg to caution strangers against New York
circulars and prospectuses of tickets, shares
and chances in co-operative unions, or gift
enterprises,, or (killar stores,, or any other poe
aible scheme whereby property or value is
promised greater than the price asked to be
paid. Every such advertised scheme is neces
sarily a swindle and false pretence. There do
not and cannot tangibly, exist any such
schemes in this oity. Country newspapers
which advertise them simply aid in the swin
dle. If all the newspapers in the Union will
now make a point of publishing and reitera
ting this information they will charitably, and,
T think, effectively oounteract the swindling
intentions of those who use the mails for false
pretences, and will also save to the unwary
hundreds of thousands of dollars.
A. OAKEY HALL.
Mayor of the City of Ntw York.
[Communicated.]
The Negro as a Laborer.
Mr. Editor: —lseeinyour last issue the
words of General Forrest in regard to negro
labor. “They are the beat laborers we have
ever bad in the South,’' says he. This has al
ways been my opinion, and since the close of
the war and more especially within the last
year lias my idea in regard to this mattor been
more strongly established. I contend that the
negro has always been, is now, and will con
tinue to he, if we but manage him right, our
best and most faithful working hand. A large
portion of the Southern States is a very warm
climate, and that section lying immediately on
the coast is not only hot but during the sum
mer and fall months very sickly. The negro,
it seems, is about the only class of persons
that can live and toil in the farm successfully
in those parts of the country.
They have their health there, while the
white race cannot; yet we car employ them to
cultivate our land* for us. Now, I am oppo
sed to all immigration societies formed for the
purpose of bringing to this country white la
borers of all classes from different parts of the
world, to take the places of negroes on our
farms. Why, sir, if you were to bring them
here how much better would they work than
the negroes? They would not, I contend,
work half so well; besides, they would claim
for themselves rights which the negro never
thinks of. They would soon begin to feel that
they were your equals, if not your superiors;
and they would in a short time claim privi
leges that you could not allow them. You could
not agreeably to your sense of duty to your
fellow-man speak to him as you would to one
of an inferior and entirely distinct race, as the
negro.
We speak to and. order the negroes on our
farms nearly the same as we did in the good
old days of yore ; and’tis all right with them.
Why ? Because they know nothing else.
Obedience to a superior race has been taught
them from infancy. Now, eir, the agricultural
interest of our country must not go dovfh. It
is useless for me to stop in this connection to
argue the necessity of keeping up the farming
interests of our land. ’Tis plain to all.
My point is to keep the negro here as a la
borer, treat bim kindly, give him justice, make
good and honorable contracts with them, com
pel him to comply and when he has done so,
give him his dues, for the “laborer is worthy
of his hire.” Treat him in, such a manner
that he will respect you ; act towards him as
your inferior, but as an accountable being;
remembering though once our slave he is now
made free. Hard as this may be, it is never
theless true, and it is to . our interest to make
the very best of it we oan. Treat them in
tiiis way, and they will work for you much
better than any of your emigrants, who per
haps at least two thirds of them, are out-casts
and refugees from justice. Alargejinajority of
the emigrants that you will get to come to this
country, who are willing to equalize themselvce
with the negroes and tp hire themselves as la
borers in the cotton fields, are men who have
no employment at home, and are the scrapings
of the country ®nd who will not stand one
moment upon right and justice. And I tell
you now, if we get such men amongst us and
the country filled np with them, we are gone,
I had rather risk my property—yea, my life—
in the hands of tho negroes we have here than
in the hands of such men ns you will get to
come over here as laborers. As bad as the
negroes are to steal, they would not be a cir
cumstance to these men. Besides, these emi
grants cannot endure tho heat to labor in our
cotton fields during the summer months ; but
the negro can, it is what he was raised on. I
tell you the idea of trying to get rid of all
the negroes in the country by sending them off
and killing them up is wrong. When they
(if they ever do) get out of this country, then
you will see the agricultural interest go down,
and with it everything else ; for it is the basis
and chief corner stone of the country. I know
that a large majority of the negroes vote
against us, but perhaps this will not last long.
and it will not if wo will take the matter into
our own hands and treat the negroes in such
a manner that they will respect us and be
willing to be governed by us. We, the South
ern people, have it in our power now to become
one of the wealthiest and most populous sec
tions of country on the face of the Globe. No
part of the world can raise this valuable sta
ple of cotton so successfully as wc can, and we
have the very labor that is necessary in rais
ing it at our control or at least nearly so. I
might go on and say something in regard to
the best plan of hiring this labor, but I have
already written more than I intended.
A GEORGIAN.
Knowledge. —lt is nc wonder if he who reads,
converses and meditates, improves in knowl
edge. By the first, a man converses with the
dead; by the second, with the living: and by
the third, with himself. So that he appropri
ates to himself all the knowledge which can be
got from tbote who have lived and those now
alive.
TiieGeorgia Wheat Crop. —The Rome (Ga.)
Commercial, of Sunday, says that the wheat
crop in that section is looking fine. No acci.
dent occurring between this and harvest, a full
crop is expected. Up to the present date, the
fruit crop has not been injured. Farmers are
planting' corn and with unusual cars. Cotton
planting has not commenced with us. About
tbe samo area of land will be planted this as
last year.
On Monday of last week, court day, there
was a high old time at Orange Court House,
Va. There being no law and no officers, every
body who had a quarrel on hand thought it
a good time to settle, and so they went at it,
hammer and tongs, and fought all day and all
night.
“Nul and Void.” —Some of the papers say
the act to reconstruct Georgia uu the Ethiopian
pattern declares all the legislation of the late
General Assembly null and void. If that be
so, some capital will have been wasted.
An Ontrng on- Insult to «vr Colored Sol
diers.
We are informed by the daily press that
“the Indians of the plains will not take scalps
from the heads of negro soldiers killed in bat
tle.”
Is not this a flagrant violation of the spirit of
the civil rights bill, of the new amedments to
the Constitution, and of tho reconstruction
policy of Congress ?”
This is the crowning insult t* our colored
citixens.
Shall the red skins he allowed thus to make
distinctions oo account of race or color ?
When the colored troops fight bravely, may
those untaxed Indians scorn tlieir scalps as be
ing no trophy worth the taking off?
This contemptuous treatment of the black
man by the red man is not to be borne.
Senator Summer must attend to this.
He must prepare resolutions.
fit must fulminate speeches against tho no*
ble red man of the forest, who when oil the war
path, dares toshow a savage disrespect to wool ?
He has abolished the word “white” in the
District of Columbia, let him abolish the
word “black” on the plains.
Let him cause it to be enacted that when the
untsxed red skin says—
“ Ugh, big Indian no scalp nigger!” some
body shall shoot him on tho spot.
It is not because of the difficulty of taking
the colored man’s scalp.
No sueh thing.
Indians scalp very short haired white sol
diers.
It is their contempt for the negro as an infe
rior race.
They must be taught better.
Here is missionary work to do.
And anew stipulation should be made in all
Indian treaties, that no distinction of race or
color shall be made with the scalping knife.
The insult is too cutting.— [Boston Courier.
The New Tennre-of-Office Lww.
The following is the new Tenure-of-Office
Law :
‘‘Be it enacted, if-c., That the first and sec
ond sections of an Act entitled ‘An Act regu
lating the tenure of certain civil officers,’
passed March 2, 1867, be, and the same are
heroby repealed, and in lieu of said repealed
sections the following are herebv enacted :
“That every person holding any civil qffice
to which he has been, or hereafter may be ap
pointed by and with the advice and consent
of the Senate, and who stiall have become duly
qualified to act therein, shall be entitled to hold
such office during t tee term for which he shall
have been appointed, unless sooner removed,
by and with the advice and consent of the Sen
ate, or by the appointment, with the like ad
vice and consent, of a successor in his place,
except as herein otherwise provided.
Sec. 5. And be it further enacted, That du
ring any recess of the Senate the President is
hereby empowered, in his discretion, to sus
pend any civil officer appointed by and with
the advice and consent of the Senate, except
Judges of the Uuited States Courts, until the
end of the next session of the Senate, and to
designate some suitable person, subject to be
removed, in his discretion, by the designation
of another, to perform the duties of such sus
pended officer in the meantime ; and such per
son so designated shall take the oaths and give
the bonds required by law to be taken and
given by the suspended officer, and shall du
ring the time he perforins his duties be entitled
to the salary and emoluments of such officer
suspended ; and it shall he the duty of the
President within thirty days after tho com
mencement of every session of tho Senate
(except for any office which, in hie opinion,
ought not to bo Glled), to nominate persons to
fill all vacancies hr offices which existed at the
meeting of the Senate, whether temporarily or
not; and also in the place of all officers sus
pended. And if the Senate during such ses
sion sbafl referee to advise- ants consent lo an'
appointment in the place of any suspended
.officer, then, and not otherwise, the President
'shall nominate another person as soon as prac
ticable to said session of the Senate for said
office.”
Paor. Bond, the 'Wire-Walker,' Falls
Tuirty Feet —This gentleman had previously
announced, by flaming posters, his wonderful
feats, and that he would exhibit in our city on
Wednesday, March 31 st. A large crowd
had assembled to witness the daring perform
ance. Ho walked forward and backward on
a five-eighth inch wire extending from the top
of King’s store to the Chester House, and af
ter performing several astounding feats, in an
attempt to drop and catch by his legs, through
some cause, lost his hold, fell to the ground
some thirty feet, fracturing his ankles and pro
bably receiving some internal injury ; be is not
dangerously hurt without such is- the case.—
We understand that he has performed some
fifteen hundred times and this is the first acci
dent. It is to be hoped that this will teach
him a wiaer lesson.—[Dalton Citixen,.
Death or a Venerable Man.— Simri Rose,
the veteran newspaper man of Macon died on
Sunday last from Pneumonia, in the 70th
year of his age. He had resided in Macon
from “time immemorial and his name was as
familiar as house hold words” in that city.—
lie was a bright Mason and Grand Secretary
of the Grand Lodge at the time of his death.
Quite Comfortable. —A religious contempo
rary states that one of our fashionable clergy
men, who recently went abroad for the benefit
of his health, was able to eat four meals a day
on board the steamer on the passage out.—
This ii getting along comfortably for a start.
—N. Y. Herald.
A negro woman was killed in Milledgeviile
on Monday. It seems a crowd of young men
were standing together conversing, when the
woman passed. Some remark was made to
her, which led to a difficulty and tho stabbing
and killing ofthe woman. Tho woman identi
fied herslayeron her death-bed. He was com
mitted to jail.
Ge to Sleep Enrly.
Many children, instead of being plump and
fresh as a peach, are ns withered and wrinkled
as last year’s apples, because they do not sleep
enough. Some physicians think that tho bonos
grow only durirg sleep. This I cannot say
certainly; but I do know that those little folks
who sit up late at night are usually nervous,
weak, smull and sickly. The reason why you
need more sleep than your parents is hesause
vou have to grow and they do not. They use
up the food they eat, in thinking, talking and
working, while you should save some of yours
for growing. You ought to sleep a great deal
if vou do not, you will in nativity consumo all
vou eat. and have none, or not enough to grow
with. Very few smart children excel, or even
equal other people when they grow up. Why
is this? Bocause their heads, if not their
bodies, are keptjtoobusv, so they cannot sleep,
rest and grow strong in body and brain. Now
when your mother say# Susie, or Goorgie, or
whatever your nsmo may be, it is time to go
tohed, do not worry her by begging to sit up
just a little longer. But hurry off to your
chambers, remembering that you have a great
deal of sleeping and growing to do to make you
a healthy happy, useful man nnd woman.
[Rural New Yorker.
Choptank# hail his wife arrested for assault
ing him with a fire shovel while at his devo
tions. It was an aggravated case. But Mrs.
iChqptanks asked to be heard, and she said
‘that little Choppy didn’t dare give her any of
hi# ears in his talk ; but he abused her in his
prayers, and this occasion he was on his knees,
with a crowd about the door, gathered there
by his ‘hollerin’ and a ‘callin’ on the Lord to
forgive this black-hearted woman ; make her
tell the truth, 0, Lord,’ he hollered, ‘and make
her quit gaddin’ about and lyin' to the neigh
bors,’ and I couldn’t stand it, and jist took him
a swipe with tho flat of tho shovel, and I'll do
it agin.’
Butter 16c. Per Pound. —The morning
light is breaking; tho darkness'disappears.
A plant has been discovered from which an
excellent quality of butter is manufactured at
a cost of about sixteen cents per pound. A
factory is now in operation in New York city,
and the company intend to manufacture this
butter extensively. So says the Rochester
Democrat, which contains an advertisement for
tho new company. Unless the cows ‘come
down' more freely than heretofore, every one
will ttccotne patrons of the new butter plant.
Tjie Revelations ov Prophecy. —ln 1843,
Ileniy Clay, who led the Whig hosts in the
great campaign of 1844, made the following
prophecy :
The agitation of slavery in the free Stat ■
will—
-Ist. Destroy all harmony.
2d. Lead to division.
3d. To poverty.
4th. To war.
sth. The extermination of tho black race.
Cth. To ultimate military despotism.
Let I’s Have Peace.
, — U. S. Grant.
“Let us htvo ptrxce,” the “Captain” said,
And as tho tumult coa-es,
AVe find not only we have poaev, .
Rut really we have pieces!
W ,seeks we have of former tilings,
Belies of the “ revolution
Peace without the joy it brings,
Piese-s of A Constitution! P. 11. R.
[Marietta Journal.
PAT F'.N’lMt ROOMS.
From the N. Y. Weekly Tribune.
AVithin a few years several patents have been
issued for improved brooms. The end aimed
at by all has been to make a broom which could
h# renewed at small cost by inserting anew
brush. To combine this quality with elasticity,
Sghtness, durability and beauty was difficult
and seemingly impossible.- An Ohio investor
conceived ft plan which, it was thought, would
answer, hot a brass cap such as bis broom re
quired was declared’ impossible to make. Mr.
C. A. Clegg thought differently. A skiiifui
workerin brass was employed, who, after eight
months' study and labor, produced the cap now
used on Silvers’ Patent Elastic Broom. This
cap is a marvel of mechanical ingenuity, being
stamped from a single piece of brass, without
seam, and if used with care, will last a life
time. AVith the improved cap, we shall be
surprised if the Silvers’ bruom does not become
popular among housekeepers in city and coun
try.
The American Agriculturist, Orange Judd,
editor, says :
That gross impositions have been practiced
in vending the patent brooms and ‘ rights,’ we
doubt not, and have been tbe moiecautious and
thorough in investigating the merits of anew
one. Silvers' Patent Brooms have been tested
by several months’ use In our family, and the
writer has, without instruction, and with en
tire ease, prepared the brush and filled the
brooms to his perfect satisfaction. The ladies
pronounce the brooms much superior i'rr elas
ticity and durability to the old ones, and they
are adopted as a family institution.
The Broom Corn in Silvers' Patent i» so
elastic that it is warranted to wear twice as long
as in the best tied broom ; sweep with half the
effort, and not wear the carpet one fourth as
fast, thus making it the best and cheapest. It
is adapted to city and country, as persons who
don’t want to make their own brooms can buy
tbe Filled Loops, ready for use, for less price
than the common brooms.
Messrs. C. A. Clegg & Cos., 38 Courtland st.,
New York, the sole manufacturers and owners
of Silvers’ Elastic Brooms, will send the Patent
Parts, which last a lifetime, to farmers (where
they have no agents) with full instructions for
making their own brooms, by mail, prepaid, on
receipt of $1 25. They also employ good can
vassing agents by the month, or on commission,
and supply country merchants where they have
no agents. 21t3
He that walketh with the wise men shall be
wise.
To the Working Class —I am now prepared
to furnish all classes with constant employment
at their homes, the whole of the time, or for the
spare moments. Business new. light and profit
able. Fifty cents to >5 per evening, is easily
earned bv persons of either &ex, and the boys
nnd eirls earn nearly as much as men. Great
inducements are offered those who will devote
their whole time to the budness ; and that every
person who secs this notice, may send ine their
address and te-t the business for themselves, 1
make the following unparalleled offer: To nil
who are not well satisfied with the business, 1
will send #1 to pay for the trouble of writing
me. Full particulars, directions, Ac , sent free.
Sample scot bv mail for 10 cts. Address
E. C. ALI.E.V, Augusta, Me.
A' G KN T STnT ED FOR GOLDEN
SHEAVES.—The'wotk abounds in thrilling
sketches, moral tales, strange occurrences, gems
of thought, strain* of e oquence, stirring inci
dents, rich repartees and choicest specimens of
the purest literalure. Pleases all, offends nore.
Price very low. AdJre s ZEIGLER, MoCURDY
A Cos, Cincinnati, O, Philadelphia or St Louis.
AGENTS WANTED for the only steel eo'
graving of Gen. Grant anil his family, pub'
lished with their approval. Size 16x19. Address
GO''PSPEED A GO., 37 Park Row, New York,
MENDELSON’S NATIONAL
BANK KOTE REPORTER k FINANCIAL GAZETTE.
A. COHN, Publisher Office 76 Nassau St., N. Y.
Reports and describes Counterfeits so accu
rately that the poorest, judge may detect them ;
quotes Banks and Bank officers; also, Price
Currents of various merchandise, and of the N,
Y. Stock Exchange, besides other valuable in
formation. '- ; ubscriptions may commence with
any month. Monthly (per annum,) sl.6i>. —
Sk.ni Monthly (per annum,) $3,00. All letters
must he addressed to A. COHN, Publisher 76
Nassau Street, New York. Letter box 619f1,
Lock Haven, Pa.
Messrs. Lippincott & Bakewfll, Pittsburgh, Pa.
Gents:—We have been using your make of
Gnng Saws in mr Mill, and find them, in point
of qoalitv, superior to anv we have ever u-ed.
Yours, Ae., SIIAW, BLANCHARD & CO.
Orris Shaw, Foreman.
Jamestown. N. Y.
LippincottA Bakkwell:—Wehave notronble
with your saws; they don’t need to bj lined up
with paper; we put them on the .Mandrel and
they go right along. Temper perfectly ua.foriu
and quality unsurpassed.
Resf»c folly. CHA 6 !. J. Fi>X.
LIPPINCOTT & BAR EWELL,
Manufacturers of Circular, Mulay, Mill Gang
and Cross-Cut Saws Chopping Axes, all shapes.
Colburn’s Patent. Axe Shov-ls, Spades and
Miles’ Patent Covers.! Scoop.
ATYTEB AaEMTTS. $75 to s2.*)
* » per month, everywhere, male and female,
to introduce th« GENUINE IMPROVED COM
MON SENSE FAMILY SEWING MACHINE.
This machine will stitch, linn, fell, tuck, quilt,
cord, l.irid, braid and eti.bieider in n most supe
rior manner. i rice only $lB. Ruby warranted
for five years. We will pay *tli)(K) 10, any ma
chine Hint will sew a stronger, more beuntilu),
or more elastic settfn than ours, it mnk s the
“Elastic 1 ork titch.” Eve y second stitch can
b«- cut. and .stilt the cloth cannot be pulled apart
« ithout tearing it. We pay A.ents irom $75 to
$“Oo pc.- on nth and expenses, or a coiitmhmior.
from which twice Hint amount canoe made
Address A CO., Pittsburg!), l’a , Bos
ton, Mass., or St, Louis, Mo.
CAUTION —Do nfot be imp. sed upon by other
pat ties palming off worthless cast iron • a chines,
under the same name or otherwise. Ours is the
only genuine and really practical cheap machine
manu act ur. and.
M At H I N E AY. *
The Albertson & Douglass Machine Cos.,
New L-rndon, Conn.
Manufacturers of Steam Engines. Boilers,
Circular Saw Mills, Cotton Gins, Colton (im
Materials, and every description of Mill and
Plantation Machinery. Have had thirty yeais
experience in the Southern trade, andean refer
to every Cotton Gin manufa. turer at the South,
doing business before the war. Circulars sent
to any address.
• THE FKvNKLJN
Bvicli. Macliino.
Makes 2,500 to 8,500 Elegant Brick per Hour.
TAfITII only Eight Men and Two Horses, or
' ’ 4,000 to 5,000 per hour by steam power.—
Has no complex machinery to be getting oat of
order or breaking down. I defy the world to
equal it. No pay requited untif after the ma
chine bns performed as above on the yard of the
purchaser. J. H. RENICK, Ko-.ui 28, 71 Broad
way, New York, City.
SORGO AND SOUTHERN CANE.
Tbe American Sorgo .Manual for 1869, odd.
tains full directi ns for cultivating Sorghum,
Manufacturing Syrup and Sugar, tbe latest im
provements in Machinery and other information
of great, importance. Sent free. Address GEO.
L SQUIER & 880., Buffalo, New York
•JMIE TANITE EMERY WHEEL Cuts fast,
| does not glaze, gum, he.it or smell, and is
cheap. For circulars, address The Tanitk Cos.,
Stroudsburg, Pa.
S3OOO SALARY, Address U. 8. Piano Cos., N. T.
cti A A DAY 'O agents selling Silvers’
Jjj lvr Patent Elastic Brooms, Horace
Greeley says: ‘I predict its success.”
CLEGG & C 0„ 38 Cortlandt st.., N Y.
SALESMEN WANTED by a Manufacturing
Cos , to travel and sell by sample anew lme
of g..ods, Situations permanent.; wages gotd
H. H. Richards A Go., 413 Chestnut street,
Philadelphia,, Pa.
EARLY HOSE POTATO.
ONE lb. EARLY ROSE sent by , N
mail, postpaid, sl. 4 lbs, ® ®
EARLY Rt)SF; sent by mail, post
paid, s;i,oo. Best Spring Wheat in
the wotld; the earliest aad most—
productive Corn; wonderful yielding Oats
white and h'ack—weighing 45 pounds to the
bushel. Spring Barley; Grass Seeds; Fowls;
Eggs: Hogs; the erreat Feed Cutter. Send for
the EXPERIMENTAL F ,RM JOURNAL—
most valuable Magazine issued in this country
—only $1,50 per year, Subscribe if you want
to make yi ur Farm pav. Address
GEO A. DEITZ, Cbambersburg. Pa.
AN. LANCASIRK will buy Iow& Lands and
• Chicago property ; also. Lands and City
Lots sold for taxes and otherwise encumbered.
18 Wall street, New York.
i SK vour Doctor or Druggist tor SWEET
J\. QUININE —it equals (bitter) Quinine Is
made on'y by F. STEARNS, Chemist, Detroit.
DURNO’S CATARRH SNUFF cu.es u,s
eases of th•• Head and Throat, the worst
forms ot CATARRH! Drugaists keep it; or,
a box will be sent prepaid by mail for 30 cents,
or Four for One Dollar, by the proprietor, j’
DURNO, No. 1,235, P. 0., New York City,
A Valuable Medical Book
riONTAINING IMPORTANT PHVs.ro
I_VCAL INFORMATION to vounJ i°Lo(sl
templatmg Marriage, sent free on ,e, 00 »-
cents. Address the CIIEMICAI INs-mw of **
43 Clinton Place, N. Y. L INbT ITUTE,
H<W to Invest a Dollar "
To invest a dollar profitably ~,.,.1 „. ’
Certificate in s°' 5 °' f »r *
Packard & Co’s Holiday DistrihuM
OfP»*nos, Mki.oubona, Watches, /W., 0n
Valued at $750,0fi0 ' RY| *».,
Ev-ry article disposed of on the $1
not to be paid for until you know what ’
to receive. Certifieat.es and circulars ,r '
receipt of 26c. or 5 for s|. PACKARD ,T\ n “
58 West Fourth street, Cincinnati, Ohio
TAUSSIC, LIVINCSTOM, *
COTTON F v CTO Its, U, »
and—
-COMMISSION MERCHANTS
No. 84 So. From St., and 35 LelßiagT’"
PHILADELPHIA, P\
t?TAdvance. Made Charges Reason,,b e -u.
Correspondents kept thoroughly posted i»,,
chances of the market. * *“
BOYS! B 0 YTP~"
Something yon all want—A Pistol, ij._ ,
Shot Gun, or Rifle. A little time will « r ’
you one free of co»t. A Musket. Bliot
Austrian Rifle for a Club of “Thirty” w
in Oup
GREAT ONE DOLLAR g A L F
Revolver, Shot Gun. Rifle Cans or SI ’
Rifle, for A Club of One Hundred. iai Y*
Sporting Rifle, for Club of Two Hundred
Six-Shooting Revolving Rreeeh Loading Pie.
for Club of Three Hundred, or year choice,,? ’
hrge number of other articles f, r the abo *
clubs too numerous to mention Send r,,- ~**
enters. S. 0. TIIOMP-OK m
136 Federal street. Boston
COMFORT AND 1 URE FOR TIfETCPruE
ED.—Sent post-paid on receipt of ten cent.
Address DR. E. P. FOOTE, author of Medic*}
Common Sense, 120 Lexington Ave., Cor. g,,.
Twenty-eighth Street, New York City, If f
Special Notices.
Important to Persons Advanced inTeaß
Troubled with Constipated Bowels
And Difficulty of Passing Water, Imptrf,.
Digestion, 1
FOOD CONVERTED TO WAVER.
Letter from a well known citizen of Ohio, i,
J Hildreth, aged 68 years, M insfi. ld. O.
Mansf)kld, 0., March 21,68,
Dr. Rauwat:— Enclosed find one dollar
Send bv mail as many ol youi Regulating Pni]
as you can afford. I wish your Pills and |{«j|.
vent. I like them very much and recommenj
them to others. Our druggists have none • ther
say the run is so great they have sold out, I
am free to sav, for myself, they are the hot
medicine 1 ever found. I wish you would in
form me if there i» any danger if they art m
tinned in the system foi a length of time, by
taking one or more every evening for a length
of time, as there are many good medicines that
are ii jurioiu to t ke for a length of time *
* * * I have for severalyearsbeen troubled
with Costiveness, so that even injections wttd
not procure an evacuation. I was all the titrein
more or 1 ss pain front the flatulency, witb.liw
discharges of wind. ‘At the same time 1 wi
uffliced with urinary difficnli ies ; «t tin ea it
almost killed me to pass water, very seantysni
in drops, at other times large qnant'hi. s, a'lmnt
amounting to diabetes. My age is GBlp ed
everything I thought would do good; notl w
alfoided relief In short, I procured one box *
Railway’s Regulating Pida, took six, fieeevig.
nations followed—no si.-kness, no pain. Tnk
two at bed time, this secured a stoo' each d»vy
sometimes would take three, at othets four, ei h
day—result, regular for several days, wiilio.t
pills. All pain and trouble f, om wind ceased,
Got one bottle of K R. Resolvent ; t rine non
ail right. I nm well known, more or 1-w, ail
over thiv State, and not unfavorably for trull
and veracity. Send pills without del >y
f-ign. and,) J. HILDRETH.
A vswei:. —Railway a Pills are coDtposd tn
clnsively of vegetable extracts, and are dissolve.)
jn tbt stomach, ar.d their properties absorb,]
through the cirAilation, acting on the Mood,
( chyle, : i'«e and other fluid* of the system, pms
ing off through the excretion*, and not like
mercury, civ otne 1 , corrosive sub imate. anting.
iiv and the common drastic substances that lorn
the basis of ordinary pills, aecuusulate in tbs
system end become deposited in the bonti.
joints, cartilages and eland* of the system, hut
they communicate th ir curative influents
through the hood, chyle. Idle sweat, urine, eir.
i Cwrecling, regulating, purifiin , cleansingami
puring from the body a!) unhealthy humor*,
and restoring functional harmony to the seerd
ing ves-els and orifice* of every g aud and orgoi,
In all eases of Dyspepsias. ' Liver Oomnlu'.t,
Imperfect digested Food, sh- ir infer nec-fjwmi
derful, and no matter hew weak or par ait *1
the bowels may be, or ho.v irregular or coslift
in the aged or others, one dose will ensure a Jii
charge, and one or two ensure regular stools,*!
least once a day. All aged g. ntlemen and to
dies, who have used them, prefer them to ill
others, and the young and vigorous find then
the most thorough regulator of the liver and
bowels known. In eases where the bowelsbw«
been paralyzed by lead, and other minerals. Mil
from artisans’ dia.ases, these pills have s curd
free passage where all other means failed. 1»
bilious attacks, inflammation of the bowels, err
sii-elas, fevers, etc., that cause ulceration sftb*
lining of the bowels and intestines, they r*
mi and, sure and healing. Every family should
keep these pill*. They are the best family phy
sieian in the world, and only 25 cents per hoi,
or $1 20 lor six boxes. Sent to any part of d*
United States by mail.
The gse of the Sarsapnrillian, or Renomttoj
Resolvent, in your case, showed its import****
in urinary difficulties. The aged are more**
less troubled wilh these affections ; 1
tbe digestive organs and imperfectly '
food, being the cause ; the insufficiency of i-hjto
or its unhealthy condition, fails to dissolve •**
substances taken into the stomach, so as top*
off through the alimentary canal, it 13(the foo®)
converted into water and seeks an escape thrt
the kidneys, thus establishing a foreign ~tr*
tion of these glands, henee Hie mine been**
charged with foreign constituents, causiM
posits of gravel, Lrtok dust, lit hie acid, album**
sugar, etc., irrit ting the bladder, c.using *«*»
ness, paralysis, catarrh, and pain to the csnil"
urethra in its passage nut of. the system. H»*'
dreds of aged persona suffering from
urinary disutrimoces and! diseases, may rid"
siired of this being the true cause. No*.®
such eases, Bucliu, Cubebs, Juniper, Gin. ***,'
are dangerous, and will prolong the cure’*
establish worse and new difficulties. C*™
are irritating and makes the urfne acrid, «*“J
ing pain, itching, etc., along its passage. E**v
well informed medical man knows what l***"
is a fact. Let th. se who are troubl -d, jj is *!v
the Sarsapariliian Resolvent and Railway’»«*
you will find almost immediate rehe'rh ,n ’
for you what, it has done for Mr. llild’***’'
This gentleman is a stranger to us, wegi**
testimony as we received it; of one fhet
assured, one bottle- of the Sinsaparilli* 11 ' ,
Renovating Resolvent, is worth all th# " n iJ ,
leaves that were ever gathered by the most'
lightened Hottentot, who, perhaps, ji
much about Buchu as the constitution, vvhe
it be shattered, wrecked or preserved pn re *
enttre
The Parcira Brava, Rarsaparillinn, « ni ' o j
v»getab!e substances, are gathered for Pr
way by pe sons of intelligence who a ! e a
quaintrd with the different varieties °\ lt ) j
root, so as not to make a mistake. W* ‘-J
trust the gathering of our roots to a M 0 iB ,
»ge Hottentots, hence the certainly of # ei *
the genuine root*.—2o