Newspaper Page Text
The Enterprise.
7vM. L. BEEBeT Editor.
PUnUSITICD WKKKI.Y nY
ANDSRSOM & HAWKINS
AT *2 PHU AMNI'M.
FRIDAY AtMUL, 4 1873
SOCIAL EQUALITY.
Among the numerous phases of epidemic
insanity by which the oiviliathm of tl.e age
) 1(U bcn disgraced, no tr. >rc absurd theory
hae been advanced than that, which prop***
the establishment of social equality among all
tho people of our country. Not even when
confine 1 to thoe of the same race will this
system be futhd prae iooble. Some will sink
below mediocrity in morals or intelligence,
while other* will riso far above the average of
their associates in one or both these essen
tial qualifications for social position. But in
surmountable as ore the difficulties in establish
ing a K ocinl organisation on principles of
equality where nnturo has placed no lino of
doinarkntion to define her distinctions, these
all appear trivial in comparison with the
clcaMy marked gradations which tho Creator
has written in the various races of the human
f imily. As well might we deny the variance
m color or physical development of the several
races as to ignore those gradations intellectu
ally and morally which have never been known
to rail to mark the Caucasian as the highest
and the negro ns the lowest type of humanity.
Instinctively these positions are claimed and
coheeded by the races respectively ; and it is
nol a less grevious wrong on the lower than
on the higher type to ignore this natural dis
tinction.
Politcal demagogues, however, linve availed
themselves of the peculiar delusion prevalent
in this day, under the fnlso cry of universal
equality, to subvert the only true republic
ever organised on earth, and the same party
now seek to enforce social equality between
the races for the completion of tho ruin they
have so successfully inaugurated. Hitherto
it lias been the good fortune of Georgia, by
the prevalence of wisdom in her councils, to
escape much of the misery inflicted on some
of her sinter States in their so-called rccon
s ruction ; but the recent ruling of Judge
Erkine, requiring negro jurors for his Court,
indicates the purpose to enforce upon us the
evils which have been cxemplifi and iti South
Carolina and Louisiana. These horrors urn to
be deplored ; but the object of their infliction
can never be attained, from the fact thnt God
has forbidden it in the laws of our physicial
existence. Not only is equality between the
two races an utter impossibility, but 6ven
among those of the same race social equality
can never be enforced by law.
JUDGE ERSKINE AND B. 11. HILL,
■Whatever may be the decision of the U. S.
Supreme Court on the vital point involved in
the decision of Judge Erskine, asserting the
authority to select such jurors as will do the
bidding of the party in power, instead of draw
ing them as authorized by the laws of the
* States in which his Court is held, there is no
room for doubt what judgment an intelligent
and impartial public and the calm verdict of
history will pass upon this manifestly unjust
rilling. The unanswerable argument of Hon.
B, 11. Hill will stand as long as the record
of this decision ; and no one can read it with
out being convinced that party rancor instead
of judicial wisdom, dictated this departure
from the established custom. Oa this subject
the Macon Telegraph says ;
Tho country owes a lasting debt of gratitude
to Mr. Hill, for his grand and exhaustive argu
ment in the United States Court, in defenec of
our jury system. This effort should procure
a general amnesty for him, from all political
opponents. An appeal to the Supreme Court
of the United States will be taken from the
decision of Judge Erskine. Mr, Hill showed
most triumphantly, that the Federal Constitu
tion, the decisions of the highest tribunals, all
previous antecedents, nnd unvarying custom,
had determined thnt all juries should be con
stituted and qualified under tho laws of the
State where the sessions of a court were held.
110 traced far back, amid tho records of En
glish history, the origin of trial by jury, nnd
the sacrifices and struggles which were braved,
ere this inestimable palladium of liberty was
wrung from an unwilling despot. His entire
speech was a master-piece of argument and
oratory.
From a learned member of the bnr, we are
informed thnt under the present ruling of the
Federal Judge, which practically ignores and
overrides our State Constitution, in Decatur
county, every white juror, five in number,
was selected from the radical party, and the
remainder of the quota made up of buck ne
groes of the same ilk. We regard this attempt
of the Fderal Judiciary to trample under foot
our State institutions, and obstruct the true
course of justice, as the most alarming and
dangerous usurpation, which has threatened
the pence and safety of the South. Will the
higher tribunal of the nation sustain the de
cision ? We shall sec.
m
Adv jly an Prosperity.
Tiie great expounder of human char
acter has said, “Sweet arc the uses of
adversity.” lfc then compares it to a
toad which, ugly and venomous, still
I,ears a “precious jewel in its head.’’—
Whether the “jewel” is truth or fiction,
the comparison is beautifully poetic.—
Adversity,” says the Eastern sage, “is
like the season of the former and the
latter tain, cold, comfortless, unfriendly
to man and animal. Yet, from that sea
son have their birth the flowers and the
fruit, the date, the rose and the pome
granate.” This applies as well to na
tions as to individuals.
Prosperity, too, has its ,‘precious jew
el' —its former and latteV vain, and like
adversity, it has a glorious mission.—
Both are schools of good discipline to de
velop the moral and mental faculties—to
warn, to instruct, and direct. Adversi
ty tends to reveal and exercise the more
active energies of the mind, prosperity
the passive and noble functions. It is a
grand exhibition of heroism for a man to
rise after he has fallen, hut it is a grand
er never to have fallen. Lord Bacon
was great when he acknowledged and re
pented that his hands were soiled with
bribes. Lord Halo was greater that
his ermine was never even suspected of
impurity. Washington was noble when
defeated, disheartened, he gathered
atound him his little band of heroes and
prepared again nnd again to flir.g off
British domination—he was still nobler
when in the plenitude of power and af
fection and confidence, he gave up all
dreams of royal ambition and retired lo
his farm with the consciousness that the
glory and honor of his country Was nev
er tarnished by any private or official
baseness. Alexander the Great could
undergo with cheerfulness the rigors of
the camp, but not the seductions of the
wine cup, ami the Roman legions could
cut their conquering way through gran
ite mountains and icy roads and rivers,
until the world shivered at their valor,
and yet the mighty rivals nnd conquer
ors ol these veterans, under Hannibal,
could not for a single season preserve
tbfir bravery .amid the perfumes and de
lights of Capua,
Adversity, if resisted, invigorates the
nobler qualities o! character—prosperity
vitalizes the meaner. It is easier for a
man to battle with the ficklo goddess,
Fortune, until she falls under his stardy
blows, than escape destruction when
fallen into her soft, poisonous embraces.
It is better to struggle and suffer for want
of a supposed good, than to possess that
good if accompanied with certain evil.- —
Adversity humbles, prosperity extlts.
The one purifies ami the other is too apt
to puff up the heart and make it the re
ceptacle of pride, insolence, tyranny and
vain glory. The Spartan, w r ith his free
dom and black broth, was bettcrand hap
pier than the Persian with his luxury,
slavery and jewels. Anteus, the famous
wrestler, every time he hit the ground
his strength was redoubled—the fat
knight, full of sack and capons, if down,
could only rise to his knees. —[Colum-
bus Sun.
Drclnred Unconstitutional.
Judge James Johnson, of the Muscogee
Circuit, has recently decided the freedmnn’s
contract law ot 1866, making it a misdemeanor
for n planter to hire a freedman who is already
under contract with another —to be unconsti
tutional. Two cases of this kind came up on
the criminal docket, and he ordered a i olle
prosequi entered in each instance. Judge
Johnson’s reasons for his decision, as stated
by the Augusta Chronicle, were these : 1 his
law abridge* tho rights of citizenship by in
flicting a system of compulsory labor upon a
certain class of persons. The constitution
says there shall bo no involuntary servitude
exacted except for the commission of erime ;
vet this law, by its operations, compels a
freedman to remain with and perforin labor
for a pldhter, although lie does not desire so to
do, and, if left to his own free choice, would
depart at once.
The compulsion consists in using the people
of the neighborhood ns a sort of guard over
the laborer, as it is made a misdemeanor for
any person to hire or employ him. This*
Judge Johnson claims, puts the boot on the
wrong foot, as the freedman himself, not the
planter thus employing him, is the responsible
party in the matter. If a freedman contracts
to work for a planter, and for any reason
whatever leaves his employer before the time
of service expires, the planter must hold that
freedman responsible in a civil suit for dam
ages, and not seek redress through a crim
inal suit, under the law referred to, against
another planter, who may have subsequently
employed the deserting freedman.
The New postal Law.
The Postal Appropriation bill approved
March 4, 1873, contains the following clause.'
“Provided, that all laws or parts of laws per
mitting the transmission by mail of any free
matter whatever he und the some is hereby
repealed from and after June 30, 1873,’’
This abolishes section 35 of the act of
March 3, 1863 :
“But tho publishers of weekly newspapers
may send to each actual subscriber within tho
county where their papers are printed and
published one copy thereof free of postage.”
This abolishes section 45 of tho same act:
“All publishers of periodicals, magazines
and newspapers, which shall not exceed six
teen ounces in weight, shall he allowed to
interchange their publications reciprocally
free of postage ; provided, that such inter
change shall be confined to a single copy of
sueh publication.”
Tho laws remain unchanged which permit
pre-payment of postage on newspapers at the
office of mailing or delivery, at tho option of
the subscriber, nnd pre-payment by newsdeal
ers “upon their packages as received.”
No reduction of postage rates has been
made. Farnsworth's hill passed the House
and .failed in the Senate.—Howell’s Reporter
Junius wrote : “I have learned by
much observation that nothing will sat
isfy a patriot but a place.” Evidently be
must have had in view the grand rush of
Republican office-seekers that may now
be witnessed in Washington,
Imitate the example of a locomotive.
He runs along, whistles over his work,
a nd yet never takes anything but water
when he wants to “wet his whistle.’’
Jury Scrip Wanted.
Any one having Jury Scrip to dispose cf, can
hear of a purchaser l>y reporting the lact at thi*
Office. 2t
PARA GRAMS.
Calhoun is out of butter.
Alabama Im* the small pox. .
Josh Billings lias gone to Florida.
Rev. .7. S. IViNon, of Atlanta, is dead.
The Thotnnsville Tim"* is anew paper.
Bnrnum's new show is two niilus long.
1 tic Treasurer has sold $91,000 oT tho new
Georgia Bonds.
Provident Brown has paid the March rent
for the State Bond.
New Y"rk State is nfinut to eon r or suffrage
upon wome.n who are worth $250.
3 here were overfl )0 onplieations for patents
at the IT, S. Pa'ont Office, last week.
Mrs. James Gordon Bonnett died ut Kocn
igstein, n few duvs sineo.
Gov. Smith will “ plav auctioneer,” nml sell
property before tho Court House door in At
lanta, on the first Tuesday in May.
Atlanta mourns the loss of a smalt, yellow,
orooke'-nosed, rat-terrier purp.
The Constitution savs the rustic beauties of
Kirkw md, hnvn “_;eese fights” in saw dust.
Gen. Pendleton, late ddef nf Ar'itlerv of
the Armv of Northern Virginia, lectured in
Atlanta on Monday night last, on Gen. Lee.
Evpn Roekmnrt now claims to have ft few
eases o( the Epi-gitis,
Bainhridgc has good sweet potatoes nt one
dollar a bushel, and a shooting gallery. Happy
B ainbridge.
Carrollton nnd Augusta have debating soci
eties in full blast.
Cut worms are playing rips with the early
vegetables in Blakely.
Savannah is smacking her lips over fresh
green peas, from Florida.
A voting Indy was Caught purloining fl iwers
in the Augusta Cemetery; the othpr 'ay; ahd
was fined 815 by ihe heartless Recorder.
We regret to state that Capt. Eve, of Colum
bia county, was thrown front his btlggv, tht)
other day, and had his leg broken.
The water still continues its effervescent
antics as it comes from the pipes of the Au
gusta Water Works.
Brooklyn stepped to the front of the world,
the other night, and indulged in the novelty of
a masquerade we Iding.
According to the latest information on the
subject, the world has a population of nbout
1,377,000,000 souls.
The United States will soon have 113,000
miles of Railroads.
Our notde an I— $50,000 Presiden*—took a
had cold on Inauguration Day, nnd the whole
Yankee nation has been indulging in a lively
sneeze ever since.
The annual meeting of Georgia Press As
saciation will be held at Americas, on Wednes
day, May 16. The election of officers will then
take plnce. A full attendance is desired.
The Chicago Times solemnlv asks : “ Hnw
can we escapefirc ?’’ 'Whereupon a New York
paper ipfirrms the Times man that the Gospel
offers every eneourngement to the downfallen,
but our opinion is lie had better get out of
Chicago, if he expects the gospel to reach him.
Let a missionary be ordered there at once.
“ Board for the summer can he had at a large
shady brick gentleman’s residence,” is the
way the Local of Western paper puts in a no
tice of his boarding house,
I lie Reporter says a Connecticut paper
solemnly asserts that a gentleman recently
fractured the ceiling just above a chair in
which a red hot poker had been placed a few
minutes before.
The same journal states there is a woman
out in Duluth who weighs 360 pounds. At a
little distance it is said to bo quite difficult to
determine which is the larger of the two, the
woman or the town.
They must be a wicked sot over in Thomp
sonville, Connecticut. At any rate, the local
paper asserts that when the congregation as
sembles at the church on Sundays, the Saxton
has to look the door to keep them in until the
sermon and tho “collection” is over.
It must bo consoling to the Tobacco pro
ducers to know that the annual consumption
of that weed is 970,000.000 pounds.
A young lady in Michigan recently drew a
$7,000 farm at a Gift Concert, and now all the
poetical aspirants in that section describe her
as a “ thing of beauty,” although she is lame,
cross-eyed, has red hair, and no teeth, with a
disposition somewhat after the make of a cross
cut saw. But then, you know, there is no ac
counting for the taste of some folks.
A paper out West wants Colfax and Ames
for President and Vice-President in 1876.
Wi 11, in that connection, wcsuggest the names
of John A. Murrcl, Aaron Alpeora Bradley,
(simply negro,) and the Wickedest Man in
New York, as a suitable Cabinet. Kono 1
E. F. Spann and Susan Eherhart, who were
eonvicted in Webster Superior Court last fall
of the murder of Spann’s wife, and sentenced
to he hung, and the judgment of the Court
having been affirmed by the Supreme Court,
they have been re-sentenced to he hung during
the present month.
Under the Russian Press Law, the Minister
of the Interior can withdraw any book or mag
nzine from circulation which he may consider
hurtful to the Government; and every work
has to be presented to the Council of Ministers
for examination seven days before the same is
offered for sale, under penalty of confiscation,
and imprisonment of the publisher.
The biggest fool in these United States, is
the lion. Clarkson N. Potter, member of Con
gress from New York. He has actually re
fused to receive tho increase of pay which they
voted themselves on the eve of adjournment.
Well, if that ain’t “forced” patriotism, then lie
ought to go and give it to our noble and—
sso,ooo President—and then lie will he ready
for the stake, wo know, though wo are sorry
to say they have stopped burning martyrs in
this country.
Whose Handsome House is That?— Such
wm tli inquiry of rho tnv<’W, ns lie passed
an unusually well finished residence not many
miles from here. The style of the sashes, the
clearness of the class, the henuty of the blinds
and doors, the neatness of the oolumns and
ballisters around the piazza, the perfeot pro
portion of hrnekets and mouldings, nil struck
the traveler with pleasure and admiration. All
the nbive were furnished by Mr. P. P. Toale,
of '"’linrleston, S*. C. Prices sent free on ap
plication. Itn24
— ll -■ —•• •• Ow*-
You who lend sedentary livo*— Printers,
Tailors, Shoe makers, etc—will find a groat
relief for the Constipation, from which, vnu so
often suffer, hy taking SIMMON'S LIVER
REGULATOR, It is a simtde, harmless, veg
etable compound, sure to relievo you, and can
do you no injury. 1m24.
SYRUP.
8 Barrels from 60 cents to Si,oo
l>cr gallon. T. N. Pitts.
COFFEE.
10 sacks for cash cheat).
T. N. Pitts.
Pay Up.
PERSONS Due me will please come forward and
settle. 1 SKI,I, FOR CASH—not longer than
30 days, over 30 days I charge Bank rate of In
terest. T. N. PITTS. ..
Pish.
WHITE Fish and Mackerel. I aell them as
chean as anyliod - that keeps sound fish.
Come and see me. T. N. PITTS.
CLOTHING.
Oentiemen will do well to call and examine my
stock ot Clothing before purchasing elsewhere, as
1 am selling very low. J. T. CORLFY.
FINE FLOUR~
I keep the celebrated Atlanta City Mills Flour,
which I will warrant to be as good as the best
I am selling it very cheap. J. T. CORLEY.
noon tobacco.
T have jut received Five Boxes more of that
good Tobacco, at the same price. Come and get
a pood chew. J. T. CORLEY,
Scovil Tirade’s Itoes ,
Also the Handled Hoe which gave so much
satisfaction lnt. s-‘n-*n.
STEPHENSON A THOMPSON’S.
. SEED OATS,
Sdeeted White Seed Oats, clear of mixture, at
.1. T.Corlev’s New Store, in Covington.
Bulk Meat
Ham s, Sides and Shoulders
FINE, NICE AND CHEAP.
#©“Co to ANDERSON & DeLANEY
BOOTS AND SHOES.
Why go barefooted when good Roofs and
are so cheap at _ J. T. CORLEY’S.
FRESH ARRIVAL OF DRY GOODS
at J. T. Corley’s New Store, in Covington. They
are cheaper than ever. Oo and see them.
Molasses and Syrup.
ANOTHER Hogshead of Fine Molasses and a
Splendid Article of New Orleans Svruft, by
Stephenson ,fc Thompson.
New Spring Goods!
A Fine Lot of Spring Goods just re
ceived. Come and se“ them.
J. T. CORLEY.
Stationery.
.7u!t Received si’select assortment of every
variety of Stationery. Coll and examine the
qnali'y and price. BHANII \M & JONRS
A. K. Seago,
WHOLESALE GROCER,
And General
Commission Merchant,
• ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
ADo, Agent for the sale of Baugh’s Raw Bone
and Eureka Fertilizer, and dealer In Chesapeake
Gun.no. Planter* Supplied, either for cash or on
approved erop Liens, with Corn, Baeon, Flour,
Tobacco. Groceries, Ac. Early application should
be made by individuals, settlement, orcounty clubs
or societies, In order to make sure of supplies, on
the best terras. A, K. SEAGO,
191rB P. O. Box 97, Atlanta, Ga.
~brmham&Tonss
D RTJ GGrISTS.
COVINGTON, GA.
WE KEEP a Well selected stock of PURE
DRUGS. Medicines, Chemicals and Patent
Medicines of all kinds, always on hand; Our
Paints, Oils, Colors, Die Staffs, Window Glass, Fatty
COMBS, BRUSHES, SOAPS. PERFUMERY
AND FANCY TOILET ARTICLES,
Will be found COMPLETE.
Wine Brandies, Wines, Whiskies, and
Champagne, For Medicinal Use.
We will sell Drugs as CHEAP as they can be
ought in Atlanta at retail.
ALSO, FINE TOBACCO VNI> CIGARS,
ICiT Physicians' Prescriptions carefully com
pounded,
E. V. BRANHAM, M. I).
W. T. JONES.
Dr. BRANHAM
OFFERS his Professional Services to the citi
zens of Newton and adjoining comities.—
Office at the Drug Store, where he will be found
day and night.—G-tf.
tß+n till prrdsyl Agents wanted I Alletsssesof
V, -ZU working peonjr, of either sex,young or
oia, make more money at work for us in their mo
menta or nil the time than at anything else. Particular*
free. Addrere O- Stinpon On.. Twn. i
C OF FI X s'. ’
I wish to inform the citizens of this place and
vicinity, that 1 have opened a large and complete
assortment of METALIC BURIALCASES CAR
KETS, and COFFINS, of all sizes and Descrip
tions, at No. 1, DeGive’s Onera House, Marietta
street, Atlanta, where I am prepared at all times
to fill ’orders lor any kind of Coffins. Inm also
agent for TAYLOR’S CORPSE PRESERVE
C. BOHNEFELD,
nil- Marietta st., Atlanta,
“PAIN-KILLER.”
There can bo no necomity, at this late dnv,
for the pres* to speak in commendatory terms
of this remarkable medicine, in order to pro
mote it* sale ; for it is a medicine that is known
and appreciated the wide world through.—
Whenever we speak of the Pain-Killer, ns in
the present instance, we do so in behalf of the
afflicted, rather than with the view of advan
cing the interests of its proprietors. For va
rious diseases, such ns rheumatism, cholera,
c’ olera-morhus, burns, sprnins, bruises, nnd
so on to the end of the catalogue, we firt* con
vince 1 that there is no remedy before the
people equal to Davis' Vegetable *• Pain-Killer,’’
and we know that thousands upon thousands
entertain the snnie belief. Certainly, we can
not refer to the history of nnv mod cine whioh
equals that of the Pain Killer. It was intro
duced in 1840, and from that time to this its
sale, both at. home nnd abroad, has constantly
nnd rapidly increased, and we rijoice at the
high reputation it has achieved, because this
reputation shotfrs that it has been the means
of relieving a vast amount of human suffer
ing. _ We hope the present proprie ors of
Davis? Vegetable “Pain Killer" will long live
to enjoy the prosperity they have so fairly
won. 6m. 23.
News A gene j.
A NT’ PERIODICAL In the United States oi
Europe lurnished at the publisher’s price, without
postage. Payment will he required when they
are delivered. You can get a sample copy of any
journal, nnd discontinue It 11 you choose. This
is the best opportunity evernflered to the rending
public. Give me a call, at John R. Davis’Book
Store, Covington, Oa. M. E. ELLIS.
Feb. 28, iS73.—tf.
GOOD WORDS.
FOR THE
PAIN-KILLER.
We can confidently recommend the Pain-Killer
— Toronto Baptist.
It i the mot effectual remedy we know of for
Aehea, Pams, flesh wounds, Ac.— St. Johns News,
P. Q.
We advise that every family should have so of
feetual and speedy n Pain-Killer. — Amherst N. S.
Gazette. " •
Our own experience js that a bottle of Pain-
Killer is the best Physician a traveler can have.
—Hamilton Spectator.
For both internal and external application have
found it of great value.— Chris. Era.
A medicine no family should be without. — Mon
treal Transcript.
Could hardly keep house witho it it.— Ed Voice.
Should be kept in every h* use in readiness for
sudden attacks of sickness.— Ch is. Press.
No article ever obtained such u bounded popu
larity.— Salem Observer.
One of the mo-1 reliable specifics of the age.—
Old North State.
Its power is wonderful nnd nnoqnaled in re
lieving the mest severe* pain .—Burlington Senti
nel.
An indispensable article in the medicine chest.
— N. Y Examiner.
It will recommend itself to all who use it.—
Georgia Enterprise.
Is extensively used and sought offer ns a really
useful medicine. — Journal, St. John, N. B.
No medicine lias acquired such a reputation;
it has real merit. — Ne'.cport Daily Nexcs.
One of the most useful medicines; have used it
nnd disrensed it for the past twenty years.— Rev.
Wm. Ward , Assam.
The most valuable medicine now in use.— Tenn,
Organ.
itisrenllva valuable medicine, and used by
many physicians.— Boston Traveler.
AVe always keep it where we can put our hands
on it in the dark, if need be.— Rev. C. Hibbard,
Bxirmah.
One of the few articles that are jnt what they
pretend to he. Brunswick Telegraph.
In my mountain travel* no medicine is of so
universal application as Pain-Killer. — Pev.M.H.
Bixby. Burmah.
PERRY DAVIS & SON,
Manufacturers and proprietors, 13d High st.,
Providence. R. I. 11l Sycamore st.. Cincinnati,O.
377 St. Paul st.. Montreal, Canada. 17 Southamp
ton, row, London, Eng. lm'23
For over FORTY YEARS this
PURELY VEGETABLE
LIVER MED'CINE has proved to be the
GREAT UNFAILING SPECIFIC
for Livfr Complaint, and its painful off
spring, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPA
TION, Jaundice, Bilious
attacks, Sick Headache, Colic, Depression of Spir
its, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Chill* and Fever,
&c., Ac.
After years of careful experiments, fo meet, a
great anil urgent demand, we now produce from
our original Gexiuine Powders
THE PREPARED.
A Liquid Form of SIMMONS’ LIVER REGU
LAT< >R, containing all its wonderful and valuabl
properties, and offer it in
ONE DOLLAR BOTTLES.
The Powders, (price as before,) $ 1.00 per package
Sent by mail 1.04
(ET* CAUTION IJVJ
Buy no Powders or PREPARED SIMMONS’
LIVEH REGULATOR tinless in our engraved
wrapper, with Trade Mark, Stamp and Signature
unbroken. None other is genuine,
J. 11. ZEILIN <Sr CO.,
Macon, Ga., nnd Philadelphia.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. 1y7.40
Katha?ron
Only 50 Cents per Bottle.
Ct promotes the GROVPTII, PRESERVES
the COLOR, and Increases the Vigor
and REALTY of the HAIR.
Ovrn Thirty Years ajo Lyon’s Kattlairon fob
the Haib woe first placed in the market hy Professor
E. Thomas I.yon, a graduate of Princeton College.
The name is derived from tho Greek, “ Kathro,” sig
nifying to cleante, purify, rejuvenate, or restore. Tbo
favor it has received, and the popularity it has obtained,
is unprecedented nnd incredible. It increases the
Gbowth and Bf.auty of tho Haib. It is a delightful
dressing. It eradicates Dandruff. It prevents the
Hair from turning gray. It keeps the bead cool, and
gives the hair a rich, soft, glossy appearance. It is the
bake in Quantity and Quality as it was over a Quab-
TEBof a Oentuby Ago, and is sold by all Druggists and
Country Stores at only Fifty Cent* pci Rattles
K Woman’s Glory is Her Hair.
LYON’S
ATHAIRON
Crackers
8 DIFFERENT Varieties just from the Bak
ery. ANDERSON & DeLANEY,
Sl-1860-X
■BSE
b'Vtfrs iji
IS PURELY A VEGETABLE PREPARATION, com
posed simply of wc.l known SOOTS, HERB3.
and FRUITS, combined with other propcities,
which in their nature aro Cathartic, Aperient, Nu
tritious, Diuretic. Alterative and Aati-lUMoua. Tho
wholo 13 preserved in a sufficient quantity ot spirit
from the M'fiAll ClJilfi to keep them in aay
climate, which makes the
PLANTATION
Bitters
one of tho mot dciirablo Tonl°i and Cathar
tic* in ihe wen Id. They arc intended strictly as a
Temperance Bitters
only to be used as a medicine, and always accordin ;
to directions.
lihey are the sheet-anchor of the feeble ar.d debih.
fated. They act upon a diseased liver, and etimulata
to such a degree that a healthy action is at ones
brought about. Asa lernedy to which AYcniin
arc especially subject it is superseding every other
stimulant. Asa Spring on<l Bummer Tonic
they havo no equal. They are a mild and gentle
}“ergative as veil as Tonic. They Purify flic L.'ood.
They arearplendid Ap; etiser. They make ihe weak
strong. They purity and invigorate. They cm a
Dyspepsia, Constipation and Headache. They acta,
a specific in all species of disorders which nndermimt
the bodily strength and break do* u the animal spirt • a.
! 63 Park Place, Few York. **
Car Load of Corn
JUST IN and for nlo cheap.
ANDERSON & DeLANEY.
Lumber!!
Lumber to all who will leave tlieir
orders with them, any kind or qual
ity. Give them an order.
DOORS,
Sash and Blinds,
Mouldings, brackets, stair
Fixtures, Buihlets’ Furnishing
Hardware. Drain Pipes. Floor Tiles,
WireGnar.ls, Terra Cotta Ware,and
Marble and Slate Mantle Pieces.
Window Glass a Specialty.
Circulars and Price Lists sent free
on application, by
P. P TOALE,
•j 20 Hayne and 33 Pinckney sts.,
I lyso ’ Charleston, S. C.
Look Here!
gOME OF Our Customers have
not paid their Accounts for Last
Year. To all who have not we will
say, that we do not propose to sell
Goods on longer time than for
Twelve Months, so come in and
“Fork Over.”
LEE & SON.
Covington, Ga., March 7.
FARMING
Hoes, Plows, Trace Chains,
Hames, Wooden and Bark Collars,
Horse and Mule Shoes, &c. &c.
Anderson & DeLaney.
Churns and Keelers,
WATER and Well Buckets and Hollow Ware
of every description at T. N. PITTS.
Temple Farm Pump.
Celebrated Temple Farm Pump.
Selling at Manufacturers Prices.
Machine Oil.
SUITABLE for Engines, Gins, Mill*, Ac. Call
and examine. T. N. PITIS.
MAC CO BOY SNUFF.
An excellent article of Lorillard’s gen
uine Maccoboy Snuff to be found at
OLD WHITTEN'S.