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(JRORfIIA ENTERPRISE.
* WILLIAM, L. BK.KBK, Editor.
* CU y\ i N OT( >n' fl A
FRIDAY MORNING MAY. U, I*B9
B \ l{ It V !!* • I' s .
f‘ Ti« o T>' - ocl'inin , inn of Count Yalmnsedu,
sav- the New York Triliun*. ordaring the ex
ecution of every Cuban who may be found
uw«v from his limn" without beinct aide to give
a • jsf\fcif»r«fttpry explanation, will he classed
among the most infamous exhibitions of niili
tarv despotism recorded in the history of eoun-
Vries laying claim to civilization. We would
doubt the correctness of the report, if the Cubic
did not state that Cuban papers received in
Key West eontain the proclamation.” —[North
Carol ina Standard.
The cruelty nnd oppression of the order re
ferred to. may wall he characterized ns “ in(a
mous.” Even Cubans, horn and trained under
she dark shadow of imperial Spain, groan under
the infliction of such despotism. The Radical
press of America is shocked to record the
proclamation of the Spanish tyrant ; but where
was the tender sensibility of that same press
when the lnye.l Roast Rutlcr issued his order
•dying unbridled license to his brutal soldiers
abuse both person and property of the peo
ple of N«w Orleans? History will remember
Sheridan’s vandalism in the lovely Valley of
Virginia, ton; and indelibly burned into the
records of avenging Justice, the cruel waste
and pillage of Atlanta and Columbia call for
vfcngeance on the head of Sharman. Remem
bering these things how disgusting does all
this pretense of sympathy for lrborrty in for
eign lands appear. Ye hypocrites ! before ex
porting your love of liberty to the mongrels of
Cuba, go blot from the map Fortress Monroe,
the Dry Tortuga a, and the other scenes of law
less tyranny which have rendered American
•liberty a by word and reproach in all the world.
Strike off the chains which have degraded ten
Sovereign States to the condition of tributary
provinces, and restore to your own freeborn
citizens the rights you have wrested from
them ; after that is done, repent and mourn in
sack cloth and ashes for the millions murdered
by your iniquity ; and then it will he soon
onongh for you to sympathize with the op
'pressed of other lands.
Another Radical Senator Shot.
On the 10th inst.. Joseph Atkins a promi
nent Radical member of the State Senate, was
shot by an assassin in Columbia county.
' There is as yet no positive proof to indicate
who shot him. though the tracks of a pair of
No. 10 negro brogaaß were found at the place
from which the gun was fired. The deceased
had won the contempt of the white people and
the hatred of the negroes by his dishonorable
conduct; but all law abiding people will re
gret that he was killed in this manner, as it
will furnish an ample basis for another Radi
cal slander on the South.
Malvern Hill.
A correspondent writes thus of the Confed
erate burial place at Malvern Hill, Virginia :
“ The cemetery keeper offered to act as our
guide, and after showing us the fort and its
adjacent rifle pits, he escorted us to a large
field on the Northwest side of the fort, and
tlmre a most terrible scene presented itself.—
Thousands of Confederate soldiers who had
fallen in thair desperate and persistent attempt
to take Fort Harrison, were buried by the Con
federates where they fell. Twenty acres or
more have just been plowed up by the owner
of the field, and the plowshare turned to the
surface all these skeletons. Over the whole
tract the hones aro strewn in profusion, and
grinning skulls stare the visitors in the face
on every hand.
When the farmer was questioned, he said the
land was now the richost place he had, and in
’ justification of his sacrilegious act stated that
•hb didn't put’era there, nohow.’ We learned
afterward that the hones had been taken away
by the cart load and sold to fertilizing mills in
Richmond. Two humane men, too poor to do
anything else, came one day we were there,
and attempted to burn some of the bones to
prevent the wretches from carting thorn off.
Bat a long job they will have if they attempt
to burn them all.
Yet these aro not the only fields of Confed
erate bones *w« have seen, nor the first instance
of disrespect for their dead that we have wit
nessed. Perhaps thcy«aro too poor, as they
plead, to bury them. Then, in the name of
humanity,why do they rear a stone monument,
forty-five feet square at the base, and ninety
feet high, at Richmond, to the memory of the
1 Confederate dead’ in the cemetery, and leave
their bones to bleach in the fields?"
An Item 'for the Cotton Maniacs. —The
Journal & Messenger says : “The provision
dealers of Macon have been up to their eyes
in business the last week. They hare scarce
ly had time to eat their dinners. It is stated
by those in the trade that the sales in this
city of bacon and corn, on Saturday, were
h,OyObushels of the latter, and 50.000 pounds
of the former. What a-sweet morsel for oar
Western masters to roll under- their tongues,
eh? M
A large number of the most respectable
citizens of Jefferson, Tsxas, are kept in jail,
and denied a trial at law, because a man of
turbulent character was killed there some time
since by persons yet undiscovered. llow
would it do, asks the Age, to arrest General
• Butler whenever there is a missing spoon in
Lowell and keep him incarcerated until the
household article is returned.
Mrs. Ltvcgood committed suicide at lowa
City, a few days ago, by taking poison. She
"had been ‘fearfully wrought up’ at a revival
meeting, and beard the preacher speak of
backsliding as an unpardonable sin. She
feared she would fall from grace, and there
fore took her life before she should he tempted
to do so.
ru > « stc.imaneoHaWßMW.^aaaa
The Coin* Idnded t The Empire IJegun.
' The establishment of a journal called the
Imperialist, under the auspices of the Radical
Union League in Now York, advocating an
empire and an emperor, with a train cf aris
tocracy,courts, courtiers and dignitaries,affords
food for profound reflection among our people.
Is Frank Rlair a prophet? Is the empire to
ho established under Grant? It would look
as if the Monarchists, who have for the last
eiglit ycars been turning things "upside down,
inside out, and wrong side before.” in order to
prepare the way for the empire through agra
rianism and anarchy, thought thofr work
about accomplished, nnd the opportune mo
ment arrived for proclaiming the Empire.
l: 01i I fora Peter the Great,” sighs Wendell
Phillips, to lay the iron hand of despotic pow
er on the South. Oh ! for a Napoleon, sighs
the Imperialist, to build up the aristocratic
empire, to protect the national creditors nnd
preserve unsullied the national faith and
honor.
We have not doubted that there was in our
midst a class of men who longed for the daz
zling magnificence of an imperial government.
Rut they have heretofore kept silent; not be
cause they felt themselves to ho in any per
sonal peril in openly advocating their theories,
but} because they* knew theso doctiincs of
absolutism stood no show for approval by the
deliberate voice of the American people.—
They knew tint their only chance was to bring
about a combination of circumstances which
would render the love of liberty in the hearts
of the people dead and powerless.
At the foundation of our government there
were a class of men who wanted a monarchy
with.its royal insignia of purple, goldjand bur
nished chariots. Alexander Hamilton was a
monarchist. John Adams was a monarchist,
and wanted to place George Washington on
the throne, because Washington had no chil
dren, and old Adams thought ho would have
the best chance to succeed. Rut the Southern
patriots were Democrats who hated the word
royalty and its derivative loyalty. George
Washington, the great, good and unselfish
Washington, would not accept the throne, nnd
lived and died a greater man as President of
the Federal Union and the Sago of Mount
Vernon, than he would have been as emperor
or king. A union of republics was establish"
•and and the monarchists defeated.
Rut the defeated loyalists did not despair of
their cause. They merely masked their de
signs under the cover of pre-eminent devotion
to liberty, equality, fraternity. To attain their
end one thing was essential—popular govern
ment must be demonstrated a failuro. The
great trial which was begun then, of man's
capacity for self-government,must be defeated.
No better plan to accomplish this result could
have been devised than that which has from
the beginning been acted upon by the New
England monarchists ; to urgo the doctrines
of the Republicans themselves to extremes, to
carry them beyond their logical consequences,
and to out Herod Herod in advocating "lib
erty, equality, fraternity.” To overthrow the
Federal system by centralizing power and ma
king it irresistible, to carry the fascinating
generalities of the declaration of independence
to absurd results, to explain away and construe
to naught the Constitution, to devise mon
strous hersics and crochety isms with which
to distract and puzzle the politics of the coun
try, to array State against State and brother
against brother, nnd finally, create a great
national debt on which to build up a powerful
interest in opposition to the rights of the peo
ple, are the steps which have been accom
plished by this party of imperialism under the
specious disguise of "liberty, equality, frater
nity.” It was the ery of the French Jacobins,
and made Napoleon Emperor.
But the hour has arrived for tlirowing off
the disguise. Sufficient has been accomplish
ed to make the result certain. The fruit has
ripened under Radical teachings and policy,
andjthe Imperialist leaders have only to reach
forth and pluck it. Therefore they throw off
the disguise. The poor dolts and fools in the
Radical party did not see (this, but marched
up to the polls under tho humbug cry of ‘un
ion, liberty, loyalty,’ and deposited their votes
in favor of slavery of the white man and a
despotic government. They were warned, but
they hardened their hearts and} blinded their
minds to the facts. They have been humbug
ged with theory of national faith, nnd have
yelped for protection to the national honor,
and now these moneyed nabobs, like the Stew
arts and clamorous lick-spittles like Phillips,
will no more trust them than they would trust
a pick-pocket, and declare that an imperial
government with an emperor, aristocracy,
titles, honors, dignities, is neoessary to save
the nation from disgrace. A .government of
tho people "means lawlessness, corruption,
insecurity to person and property, robbery of
public creditors, and civil war.” This is the
viper you have been nourishing under the
name of the "Republican party.”—[Albany
Republic.
Draining the Lakes.
A Leavenworth paper broaches a grand pro
ject, by which Chicago proposes to distance all
of its rivals. A ship eanal, one thousand feet
broad and sixty feet deep, is to be constructed
ncross tbe State of Illinois, to some point on the
Missouri river, enough below the level of Lake
Michigan to admit of a steady flow of water
into the Mississippi. The river St. Lawrence
will become but a brock. Niagara Falls will
stand a damp wall of rock, if indeed the water
does not flow back over them, forced by the
tremendous suction of Chicago. Buffalo, Cleve
land, Detroit, and Milwaukee, will bo sixty feet
above the present high water mark, and mill
ions of acres of new land will appear in the
shallow lakes. New York will be nowhere.
The largest vessels in the world would navigate
the Mississippi, “ and steam tugs of extraor
dinary power”—we quote the Leavenworth
paper—“ would bring sailing vessels from New
Orleans to Chicago in four days.” The work
will cost only $84,000,000 ; and Chicago, with
the help of L"avenworth, will raise this little
amount in a few days t
Tall, g Isn't righting.
The Louisvills Courier-Journal says Senator
Sprague, Rhode Island's Radical Senator,
won’t half do after alf. Wo have been dis
posed to hunk a little upon his pluck, but ren>-
ly we hack out. He confesses that, by the
advice of Senator* he left the Senate Chamber
lon Thursd.av night to avoid a personal collision
with Senator Abbott, of North Carolinn.-
Personn! oidli'iioiis are bad filings, an 1 sh l old
certain!v be avoided when they can be avoided
honorably, but really Sprague talked so much
in bis late speeches about tho cowardice nf
General Burnside, and tl.c cowardice of the
regiment of voting millionaires or Croesuses of
Rhode Island nt Bull Run, that ho ought hv
all means upon tho first occasion he could find,
io have earon fire abundant. Rut, instead of live
coals washed down with aquafortis, ho seems
to prefer taking a coal snack nnd rinsing Ids
month with fee-water. And there's Senator
Chandler, nf Michigan, who, on Thrusdny made
the most terribly fighting speech against Grpat
Britain that has ever been heard in Congress
for years; but just read what the Chicago
Times says of him:
Considering that Zaehsriab Chandler was
insolently snubbed by Wigfall, of Texas, and
did not resent the insult, nnd that among the
Congressional cowards nt Bull Run -ho made
the best time in returning to Washington from
the battle-field, and (lint lie bad his nose pull
ed and a milk pitcher broken over his head by
Hannegan, of Indiana, and that he has noi
more courage than Bob Acres, or Ancient
Pistol, it is singular that he will adhere to his
habit of indulgence in swagger.
'Hie Jamestown, Chautauqua county, Press
tells the following singular story :
"About forty years ago a young lady, eigh
teen years of age, full of life nnd beauty, and
a resident of this county, from some unknown,
or at least ungovernable cause, became sud
denly insane. For some time she remained
beneath the roof of her parents and received
the united efforts and sympathy of her rela
tives and friends. Rut slf to no avail. Tho
mental faculties were too surely broken. A
short time after she became an inmate of our
county poor houso at Dewittsville, where she
remained until a few days since, a curiosity to
strangers and wholly lost to herself. Well vre
remember, three years since, while paying a
visit to flie county buildings at that place,
noting the very strange appearanco of "Crazy
Ann.” There was something peculiar about
her derangement, so much so that we have
often called to mind incidents of her conversa
tion, and something peculiar about her man
ners ; but a few days since ‘Crazy Ann' re,
sumed her proper cognomen and is again sane.
What a sleep ! forty years of bhufk existence
and now a stranger to herself. She resumes
life where she left it « hen young,beautiful, and
the companion of the gay and mirthful. Now
she is old, feeble and gray, in the enjoyment
only of the fact that she is again rational and
busily engaged in making her own acquain
tances.
Two men attempted to rob the money wagon
of the American Express Company in Br. al
- New York, on Monday, but were unsuc
cessful, although they had knocked down the
messenger and had possession of the wagon.—
They were arrested beftlre they could drive off,
Non paying subscribers are thus talked of
hy a 'Western editor, who expresses .our senti
ments fully :
Wagons cannot run without wheels, boats
without steam, bull-frogs jump without legs,
or newspapers be carried on everlastingly with
out monev, no moro than a dog can wag liis
tail when ho has none. Our subscribers are
all good, but what good does a man’s goodness
do when it don’t do any good? Me have no
doubt every one thinks that all have paid ex
cept him, and as we are a clever fellow, and
his account a little matter, it makes no differ
ence.
Says the Louisville Courier-Journal : The
Governor of Pennsylvania is an extravagant
rascal. He burns valuable pianos as fire-wood,
liis political friends in the late Legislature
undertook to push through a bill in his behalf
for a $1,500 piano under the title of "fuel.”
Negro Appointments. —Henry 11. Craig
(negro) lias been apffbnted mail agent' on the
Montgomery and West Point Railroad, and
L. J. Williams (negro) mail agent on the
Montgomery and Mobile Road. L. S. Berry,
another r.egro, has been appointed mail agent
on the Mobile and Ohio Road, So says the
Montgomery Advettiscr,
An lowa paper intending to tell us that a
prisoner escaped says : ‘The constable and
prisoner disagreed as to which was the host
route, and as tho prisoner lias not been heard
of since, it is supposed that lie took the wrpug
road.’
The Athens Watchman learns that on Tues
day of last week a very respectable young lady
named Gray, sixteen years old, while at the
spring near her mother's residenoe. in Ogle
thorpe county, was brutally outraged by a
negro man named George Ilopkins. After he
had accomplished his purpose, he shot her
through the head with a six shooter, and it is
supposed she died .instantly. Her body was
found some two hours afterwards by her moth
er. Wc learn that the negro was arrested on
Thursday and confined in the Lexington jail.
One of the important financial measures
which Secretary Boutwell will soon inaugurate,
says the Washington Express, is the enforce
ment of the act of 1802, authorizing the Secre
tary of the Treasury to set apart a portion »f
the public revenue for a sinking fund to pay
off the public debt. This law has been on the
statute books nearly seven years, and, while
it is discretionary, has never been complied
with, owing ta the largo expenditure and de
creased revenue of the Government. The re
duced appropriations and contemplated reduced
expenditures for the new fiscal year give rea
sonable assurance that a sinking fund ern *be
created from July I.
Two Noticeable Decision*.
Judge Parrott, adjourned the Superior Con-t
of Whit fluid County on the -id inst., on account
of his feeble health, fir the term.
He rendered rare decision that is remarkable
enough to he noMerd. Land in tlm hands of a
purchaser had been levied on und r execution
against a nrevioiis vender. The purchaser
claimed a h -instead and the Judge allowed
!t So that under thi* decision, it is imma
terial against whom the debts mnv be, n man
who has property can claim a Immes'end an it
against his own debts and the debts of every
body else, whether subject to those debts or
not.
The ea-e u ill probably be taken up.
He decided one other notioraWe point.
A purchaser nf real estate claimed that it was
;dt subject to the judgment against a vender
who sold the land m re than four years ago ;
that the statute of limitations was not suspended
as to judgments.
The Judge ruled that tho statue runs as to
tudgments, and therefore the land was sub
iect, notwithstanding the fouryears had elapsed
that barred tho lien. Correspondence Atlanta
Constitution, 4th.
A Maine man gives his method of treating
baulky horses as follows.
"Let me inf»rnvhumane men and hostlers
nnd all who hold the rein, that the way to cure
baulky horses is to take them from the car
riage and whirl them rapidly round till they
are giddy. It requires two men to accomplish
this, one at the horse’s tail. Don t let him
step out. Hold him in the smallest possible
circle. One dose will often cure him; two
doses are final with the worst horse that ever
refused to stir.”
Rumor says that tho New Hampshire dele
gation in Congress have written an indignant
letter to President Grant, protesting against
his refusal to extend action on the appointment
of Minister to Spain, in order to give Mr Hale
time to vindicate himself from some of the
charges made against him. So it goes. The
Bridgeport Farmer says, poor Grant is between
two fires, nnd do as he will in such matters, he
is certain to get a scorching. Like the chap
we read of. he is already begging loudly to be
saved from his friends. Let him, in all such
cases, give negroes the preference. To this
neither of the factions can justly object.— [Ex.
Special Notices,
A highly intelligent lady, a resident of
Syracuse, N. Y., s iys she w'as afflicted nearly
a year, periodically, with derangement of the
circulation, the blood rushing to the lungs
with such force as to threaten congestion and
death. This was attended'with the must in
tense pain in all parts of the body. Failing
to obtain relief from any of the physicians
whom she employed from time to time, she
was induced to try the Plantation Ritters,
and to her surprise and j jy they have relieved
her and she is now in good health and flesh.
Magnolia M ater. — Superior to rhe hest
imported German Cologne, and sold at half
the price.
GRAY HAIRS, BEGONE!
TUT'PS IMPROVED LIQUID HAIR DYE
is a perfect wonder. By its «so tho old become
young again. It converts the gray bead into
a beautiful black or brown. It imparts a nat
ural color to the grizzly mustache and whiskers,
and gives to the hair and board a softness and
gloss, that the young beaux -wight envy.—2t26
rsycHOLOGip attraction
or Fascination, as applied to the purpose of
life. Anew book, 400 pages, (nonpareil),
bound iu cloth. A curious book for curious
people. This work is no advertising scheme
or mere circular, but contains full instructions
.to exert this power over men or animals. Can
he obtained by sending vour address with post
age to the publishers, T. Yv . Evans & Co-, 41
South Bth street, Philadelphia. 3t20
OFFER EXTRAORDINARY.
Nearly Six Hundred s’ages of the Choicest
Reading for 50 Cents.
In order to give the people an opportunity
to become better acquainted with their beauti
ful magazine, "Once a Month,” the publish
ers will send the first six numbers of this year
for 50cents. -Each numberof “ Oncea Month”
contains 90 double column pages of the best
stories and entertaining instructive reading to
be found in any magazine in the country. Tho
subscription price is $2 a year. Its typograph
ical beauty is not excelled.
Send 50 cents, and you will got this beauti
ill magazine from January to June of this
year, containing 576 pages of choice reading.
Address T. S. ARTHUR k SONS,
809 & 811 Chestnut, St., Philadelphia.
MOTHERS, BE ADVISED.
Always keep a kittle of DR. TOTT’S CEL
EBRATED EXPECTORANT in the houso.
It is a certain and pleasant cure for Croup,
Coughs, Colds, &c. It is agreeable to the
taste, and children take it readily. Go to your
Druggist and get it at once, it may save the
life of your little one. 2t24
THE COSMIC DIAL,
With a rotating central dial, on our beauti
ful chart of the Northern Hemisphere, the
present time may be obtained all around the
earth, with the difference in time between any
two points East or West. It may he sot at any
time. It is a necessity in the school room,
illustrating equation of time at a glance. Price
by mail, sl, Address W. 11. Gardner, Editor
State League, Syracuse, N. Y. lOtf
SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS.
AUGUST DORR,
Ml£ R G 11 AN T TAI L O It,
Broad street, (tlersey’s Old Stand)
H As re-ei ved a comp’cte and magnificent stock
of Fi enoh, English, and Oerman
Cloths, Cassimers, and Vestings,
which he is ready to make up to order in the
MOST FASHIONABLE STYLE, and at prices
ae LOW as any in Augusta, A’so
Ready - irfiado Clothing,
of hU own Manufacture.
CENTS’ FUP.KISUING GOOD-l, of nil kinds,
which will be sold at the lowest possible prices.
£f@?*Give Me a Trial.-wqji
AUGUST DORR,
220 Broad Street, Augusta Ga.
Josh Billings says: “You ain’t obliged to
ask a gal's mammy if you ma go home with
her from a partee ; git the gal’s koncent, and
sail in ; it is proper enuff to ask her to take
yure arm, hut mind you, you liov got no rite
to nut yure nrin around her wasto unloss you
meet a hear on tho rode, and then, you are
bound to take yure arm away jest as soon as
the bear get* safely by.”
CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS,
—AND —
wIXI> o W SHADES!
Wo have .HIST RECEIVED’a Splendid Stock of
Rrus*els,fi plv, 2 ply and Venetian Carpets
12, 9, 7s, 6, 44 nud 3 feet
Floor Oil Cloths,
MATTINGS, RUGS
DAMASKS, LACE CURTAINS,
WINDOW SHADES,
AND CORNICES,
All of which we are offering at
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.
We now havean experienced UpholsUu or, nnd
are prepared to put down Carpets and make
Curtains in the best Styles. We invite inspec
tion from CASH BUYERS!
Cfl AM BERLIN, BOYNTON & CO.
Corner Whitehall and Hunter streets,
3,n19 Atlanta, Ga.
PACE, WOOD & ROGERS,
NAY* JUST OPBNKD
A Very Large and HandsomeaStock of
€'B«SS,
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
We invite our friends to give us a call, as our
Sto ku very Department is now complete.
PACE, WOOD A ROGERS,
South side of Square, Covington, Ga-
KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE!
THAT
W. C. HEWITT & CO.,
AT THE BIG SIGN, NO. 28? ,
BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA,
IS THE PLACE TO BUY CHEAP, PURE ANI) UNADULTERATED LIQUORS, SUCH
Brandies, Whiskies, Rums, Gins, Wines, Ales, Porter*
Bitters, &c.,
IN CONNECTION WITH THIS HOUSE IS A
LARGE RECTIFYING AND REFINING ESTABLISHMEFT,*-"
rOHE only Establishment of that kind in (he Southern States, where they make nothing
A. Pure and Unadulterated Liquors. They are also
IMPORTERS OF FOREIGN LIQUORS AND CJOA^
To which they would call the attention of the Trade. They defy competition, assuring Vj,
will favor them with their patronage, that they will sell cheaper than any house in o> e ■
W. O. HEWITT db OO-
Hewitt’s Globe Hotel, Fare Reduced to $3 Per Day.
6m26 One of the liept Hotels in tU«
SPRING MILLINvV^
Mrs. BAG BY & MISS CONNER >
opened their New Stock of s . e jiu(
Summer Millinery, and r<-9peHf„p ‘ f. u ID R
Ladies of Covington, and surrourohn^ 1 *
to call and examine them. ° c °nnt^
Their stock is ebrnjflrfe, enmwvi»jn
styles 11ats, ltonuet h, Ribbons, F,„.A . I ,.'**!
mlng*, <te., <fre., ( nil tin 1 see_o, tf '*• bin.
Special Sfottots.
B-A-R-S-A-tl-A^j^^pS
H,dden V ' r L j“ h °f Cro “Bh.U
For fiOO years the curative rionn-f
saparilla have Inin dormant in a r ' e ! of 8»t
root, that have escaped the notice 0 f of du
By the new process recently discover* Ik* ll
Radway, in extr acting the medicinal J *
from vegetable substances that enter
composition of RADWAY’S IM’vnvu&rtf
RESOLVENT, SARSAPARTLIJAnYI.
tftUine principle of Snvsapai il’a, f e ffrt
possess the true virtues ascribed to thl
obtained as it in w is under Dr. Tt Anw
new process, rescues, by ils wonderful e T®
power over all forms of Chronic, Skin
lops, aipl uncured secondary disease, it Cro, ' | •
tatlon of Sarsaparilla from the
opinion of the medical faculty.
Sarsaparillian. Snrsapariin,
associateil wilh other ingredients of ext
nary curative properties, enters into ik? o"*'' 0 "*''
position of ecB ®-
RADWAY’S RENOVATING RESOI.VRijt
and this remedy m„y now be considered aia
most effectual and quick curative remedy j B ~
Chronic Glandular, Skin, Kidney, Bladder *!
Urinary diseases. In diseases of th« le
Bronchi, Throat, nnd Liver, it affords immefi
assistance.' It communicates its curative Dow»
through the blood, sweat, and urine.
ment it is swallowed it commences its work
purification and the expulsion of eoimrt b
mors from the blood. It repairs the w» s ; eo i
the body with sound nnd h»althy materia]
secures functional harmony of each depraved
organ in the natural s»cretion of its pr opw
constituents. In eases where there is difficult!
in the Kidneys and Diabetes, Gravel, OstiM
or Irritation of the Bladder, Bright’s 1)1*!*
etc., etc., is present,, this remedy will gi TANARUS(
mediate relief, and insure a cure.
Question. —-Dr. A 1 asks: “WilLvourSAl
SAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT mak7*j«£
nent cure of uncured secondary disease, nj
restore the vigor of life to those unfortuutUi
who by self-abuse or otherwise are sufferinri
waste of the life fluid?
Answer.—The purifying, strengthening. u j
reparative properties of this remedy is t rj | T
wonderful. In 1849-50, when this remedy wu
fiist introduced, it made extraordinary cureso(
persons who were treated unsuccessfully on the
Parisian plan, both in Euiope and in this
country, by vapor baths of Mercury, Arsenic,
Sulphur, and lodine, Potash, Mercur,, in sever
al form-, and by inunctions-, which only sup.
pressed or st ti -d tiie disease, ami persons curd
b- the Resolvent made under the old | roern,
afilieb and with Spermatorrhoea, Weakening Hie
chaige., etc., threatening impotencj, liavesinee
married and have children of from 5 to 15years
now living, without a sign of inherited disease.
This we consider good evidence of its Tnosocsa
CURATIVE AND FRUITFUL EFFICACY !"—(See ]>»p
14 of False & True. Dr, Rad way’s new medicil
book, article bended, "Ricord vs. Radway.”)
If this renndy, prepared under the old pro
cess, possessed such powerful curative proper
tics, its tallure now is improbable and almost
impossible.
In all cares ofSkin Diseases, Pimples, Blotches
Worms or Insecis, Black Spqts in the Flesh.
Sores, Eruptions, etc,, a few doses will romore
and restore the Skin to a clear and beautiful
appearance.
In Chronic diseases, Ulcers, Tumors, Fever,
Sores, etc., a cure is sure to follow ivs use. In
all diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder, Uretlis.sud
where the Urine deposit, s 'dimeots either of s
brick dust,color, gravel or Albumen, white shreds
of stringy matter; a few doses will ehung
these signs of t.-rrOr to its natural condition.—
SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT is a far bet
ter temedy for Kidney difficulties than Burhii.
See that, each bottle of Radway’s Resolvent liu
the word “Sarsanarillian” on the label.
Price: $1 per bottle; or, 6 bottles for |5.
RADWAY &■ CO.
87 Maiden Lane, N. T.
PRICE’S
iOOT, SHOE & LEATHER STORE,
The Subscriber ha-s »-w on han 1 a full assort
ment of
Boots db Shoos,
Shoe Findings,
Hemlock Sole Leather,
White Oak Sole Leath-r,
Kip Skins.
Upper Leather,
French Calf Skins.
American Calf Bkini
Lining Skins, it.
of Superior Qualify, which he o.ffi»rs»s
low as any house in the Southe.upestchants and
all others are respectfully req r.M« to calUnd
examine for themselves.
GEO. W. PRICE.
6w22 Peachtree Street. Atlanta, fit