Newspaper Page Text
: l\
Volume 2.
[For I lie Democrat
The Eiddle!Read.
I r<‘«J of a young artist once,
Who painted for the kings ;
Vet he was an undoubted dunce,
In unimportant tilings.
lie mixed up colors—knew them all—
And laid them on with vim ;
Each name, to mind, could quickly call;
Vet one tiling troubled him. •
He colored, well, the earth and sky,
And life-dike painted trees ;
Then always heaved a gentle sigh
To imitate I lie breeze.
Hotli birds and beasts be painted fine,
And fish, by nature finned,
H,it could not possibly divine,
The color of the wind.
]li< puzzled miiiil went o'er again
The learning lie had got,
And left him sadly moaning, then,
••The knowledge cometli not.”
•
lint once a storm came howling past,
With wind of freezing breath ;
The trees were wailing from the blast,
Which laid them low in death.
Then up the troiiUled artist.sprang,
Determined, in his mind,
To go- where loudest was the clang,
And sec the wintry wind.
Willi flashing eyes nnd burning' check,
He sbized his hat, with haste,
So line he wrote, no word ditl speak,
Nor time, in thinking, waste.
But rushing rashly, rapid out,
His vest about him drew,
And found the lAnd, beyond a doubt,
That day, terrific blew.
It. 0. E.
••The Rest,” Jan. 2d, 1873.
Georgia Under Democratic Rule.
II. V. Iledfield, the widely known
and wide-awake correspondent'of the
Cincinnati Commercial, was in Atlanta
a few weeks since, and after taking his
usual close observation of matters, writes
as follows on the above subject:
’ ‘‘Georgia is getting along well—bet
tor. perhaps, than since the war. Bul
lock and his gang ran up a heav*-State
debt .but by the present regime it is not
being increased. The State gets along
. much better under Democratic than
under Republican rule. This is a fact
Irdwii to every man of average intelli-
gence in the State, of whatever partyfif
you get into his heart deep enough to
reach the truth. With Bullock and his
disgraceful Legislature in power, there
Was a continual broil and an appalling
amount of stealing, both of which have
in a great measure ceased with the ad
vent of a new set to power. I do not
say this in the interest of any party, but
h -cause it is the truth. It is no now
thing in the world for a slice of country
to get along best in the hands of those
'who own it. When it hurts a party to
tidl the truth tlierq is something the
matter with the party and not the truth.
Death of Louis Napoleon.
A cable telegram announces the death
of cx-Empcror Louis Napoleon, which
occurred at ChishelhufSt, England, yes
terday morning. It was known that his
general health, not good before, had
been failing ever since his exile', and
■the reports of Ids recent illness had in
some degree prepared the public mind
bjr the melancholy event. In this
country the death of this illustrious ex
ile will excite no extraordinary interest,
heingaregarded only as the peuhaps pre
mature though- natural close of an
eventful and extraordinary career. In
Europe, and especially in France, it will
l*"ihiee a profound impression.
Like the first and second. Napoleon
h" died in exile, sinking into the grave
'aider the accumulated misfortunes of
hb brilliant but disastrous dynasty, re
pudiated and condemned by the major-
n . v "f that brave but fickle nation whom
he so deeply wronged and so devotedly
Served..Like that of his illustrious ttlicle,
the great Napoleon, his has been a
strange, eventful life! in its remarkable
' leissitndes, its glory, and its reverses
»huust equalling th<* romance of the
; ‘ u W ages. First the pampered of
r ".va!ty. then the objectless votary of
1'wsuretTicxt the bold and reckless ad-
'enturer. then the hapless captive, then
^people's deputy, next &c Republican
^^tdent. the successful usurper, the
Dniptisbej herogeaprtVe^and feitly the
! "eriess heart-broken exile. an
«'cntful career to be ^compressed • into
brief life;
.. ‘ ea ves an heir to his name and to
' ll| den dynasty, a Prince, now ap-
pfoaehing his majority ITis destiny is
a teystcry which time alone can
hi ay it not be equally eventful,
■ ■■‘Us and unfortunate as that of his
^ ’■ c ° ! xsors ? I s it reserved for him
r *tore the Empire, aiid emulating
p l lU ° Emperor, in the plenitude of
^ to bring back to France the
^ ns of the exile, to repose with
I Ul ^is ? re: ‘t ipeestor in the costly
I ^leani of the Invalidcs ? All this
I >lIIC Wou 'd not be more wouderful
1 ^ R ^t bypassed.
°ve and Powder and Foison.
**'»*»**^» lU” UldpS j OUL a JJU1 v a DUiuii
ere are two more singular suicides showing theagrrfciiltdraL niincral and i Oqra Pearl there
to record—one of a young man of twen-
ty : 'five, and the other of a young lady of
sixteen. The former happened near - ^
Bards town. Kentucky, and the latter
near Eureka, Wisconsin.
Bland Ballard was the son of a
wealthy farmer, Thomas Ballard, Esq.,
living eight miles from Bardi^own. He
had contracted a matrimonial engage
ment with a Miss Rhodes, a respectable
young lady of the neighborhood. The
father of the young plan was angry be
cause lie had not been consulted, and a
few days before the marriage was to
have taken place, the son sought an in
terview with his father to talk the mat-
BA1NBRIDGE, GA., JANUARY 16, 1873.
if it mr ay
apart a small parish in Utah, send
commercial resources
translated intfe setfcraf
eorgia.
’uro]
imr g. g „Kc;S r pf nnp
hundred thousand dollars per annum to
any steamship company that will make
a satisfactory contract with the State to
establish a line of steamships, between
some European port and Savannah. It
would be much better if the matter of a
steamship line were left to private en
terprise, for these subsidies, whether
State or National, are likely to lead to
abuses and eventuate in a failure to at
tain the object which it is aimed so se
cure. But if Georgia is determined to
try the experiment, let her go on, and
as soon as she arrives,
nd see that she Is accompanied bv
Lapfa jFair, Jx»m, MaBsfield. Tennie C|
jL'laflin and Victoria Woodhull. If the
presence of the labors of these crinolin
ed missionaries does not put to flight
Bright Yonng and his polygamous
luosts in a very short time, we shall be
grievously disappointed. At any rate
we shall have the inost dangerous of
our .social nuisances iifcne spot, and
can deal with them at. our leisure.—St.
Loin* Rt-puhfican
ter over. After some explanation cm may-theib she has dealiBga. -witk..treat,
the part of the son, be asked his lather
what be thought of the matcl^ The
latter jreplied, “I think the girl will get
the worst of it.” This appeared to affect
the young man deeply, and remarking
me young man deeply, ana remarking *- -ja=s—.rg » *■
“I wish I was dead,” he went' away.— S' : CpDj^lg Woman.
He left the house and was seen no more
alive. At first, his departure from home
excited no surprise, but on the next
Sunday' he was absent from church,
where the bans were proclaimed accord-
ing_ to the custom of the Catholic
church. ■ This created some uneasiness
in his family, and a number of the
neighbors joined in a search for the
missing man. On the Tuesday the
searching party were attracted by the
barking of a dog in a thicket, about half
a half mile from Mr. Ballard’s residence.
They went to' the spot and found the
dead body of Ballard, and at his side it
dog belonging to the family, making hie
moan and guarding the corpse. At the
side of the body lay a revolver^with one
chamber empty. The ball had entered
the righttetuple,passed entirely through
the head, and out at the other side.
In the pocket of the dece; s ;d was
found SI00, showing that he could not
have been murdered for money.
The Wisconsin suicide was Miss Mary
Atkius. There was to be a festival at
Wauk.m to which she had been invited
by a young gentleman paying his ad
dresses to her. She had been slightly
ill for some days,' and her mother for
bade her going. Disappointed at this,
she swnlloiroii » Inigedwc of ntrTol»BM»e.
which bad been kept in the house as
ratsbane. Her sister saw her drink the
poison, but supposed it was tea. ' After
taking the deadly' drug, she - wrote a
note and sat down to her knitting, and
sat -singing and knitting, and seemed
perfectly happy. The young man called
We wish—for our- reader’s sake—
that we knewagrea^deaT^iDOurCora
Pearl, but we don’t. In fact, it is not
considered respectable or reputable' to
have any very accurate knowledge of a
lady who has not respectabilty, and on
ly and exceeding questionable reputa
tion. Where Mademoiselle Pearl was
born, who were her parents, how she
lived and what she did during the inno
cent years *of iufaney, childhood and
youth are as profound mysteries as the
secret of perpetual motion, or the-nature
and expense of the coloring* material
which qnhkfl
locks"$f the ThympSGJuiau.blond^lt She
d rop pad'in taA he Wild, Whirling world
•tf Rarisiatf society a little while be$qi*
the late unpleasantness between Franco
and ( Jermgny. aniHmuiediately assumed
the Iadehliripuf tbxWemi mond<—wield-
.tre’eT'-Uff r TW i iglffi 11 wiffd W-
morfjbw' jewels would have dazzled the
astonished.Solomon and
and Sheba; her eijhipagg was th« won
der of the Boulevards and the Bois <1^,
Boulogne: .her Ii'qusc was a gorgeous
few minutes" after she bad taken- fiMCthold so much beauty
was informed that I .sail so' little virtue. Mauj were the
devotees who worshipped at the shrine
poison, and
Atkins was ill and could not go to the
festival. He left without seeing her
and in two hours she died. The'note
was a last farewell to her mother and
sister.
the HERALD on the south.
Manfactures and Agriculture—Steps
Taken by Georgia—Savannah.
The Norfolk (Va.) Journal touches a
key-note, says the Herald, when it de
clared that a revolution in the manner
of managing agriculture and manuthc-
turcs in the South is demanded.' What
the South wants, It says; is a full devel
opment of its agricultural strength and
the establishment of manufactures. The
tiqie -has passed for big faints and broad
plantations. Under the new system of
labor there should be a new system of
husbandry, and the extensive fields of
the South subdivided and thrown open
to small farmers from the North and
Europe. The advantages of the soil and
climate, the low price of lands and their
proximity to markets, should be freely
advertised in the papers of the North
and West, and, we might add, in view
of the pressure of foreign immigration,
in European journals
In regard to manufactures, the South
wants them as .they hate them in Oil’
England %nd in New England^-ainl the
way to accomplish this is to invitd eaplt-d
from all parts of the world to -came -*to
the South and assist in developing her
v^tW|iu%taring and mineral reso^r-
ees.' And tfie best wav to bring
this desideratum is tor the peopfetif the-
South to set themselves diligently at
woTk to restore theiF sunny clime to the
reputation for law and order which the
mishchievous Ku-klux have so sadly
damaged, and to assure those who conic
among them to settle that they and their
property shall be protected by every
means within their power, and that their
rights, political, personal an industrial,
shall be guaranteed to the tullest extent.
Georgia has taken a step in the right
direction, in regard .to developing
resources. The “Committee oi
Dir
her .in gpod.lkith, and. not, after squeez
ing Jier treaeiAy to th4 last dime, drop*
unflerfaking as iwfeasifelo ^<1. £*-
■practicable. „ ,,, ,
ing tne s
with decidedly less grace and decidedly
more impudence than did Ninon deF-
Enclos of fragrant memory. She was
literally a pearl of great price, for it
cost much to make her acquaintance,
and it cost more to get rid of her ac
quaintance when made. Plebeian
though she was. and pauper though she
had been, she lived like a princess of the
blood royal, ller raimnent was more
resplendent than that of the Queen of
Sheba when she interviewed King Sok> :
of this mongrel Aspasia; rich were their
offerings, fierce were, their quarrels, 4
and swift and sure their ruin. The Pearl
purged the pockets of her admirers of
all their superfluous cash, and then kick
ed them out of door with that emphatic
elegance which belongs to her profession.
During the war she disappeared from
public gaze, but emerged from her class
ic retirement as soon as Paris had re
covered its equanimity, and set up her
couijt in the old fashion.
she renewed her victories anTTncreasca
her"spoils, bat no tidings of her doings
wpuld have crossed tneVAtlantic,• had it
Dot"beCn‘for a friffling 3 incident Vnteh
attracted the official notice of
.<3«hfe bsj3|Presfij(?nt Thiers. Made
moiselle Peon hada
soft-hearted, soft-
'BtxTTrmn^flieToh 'ST
banker of some prominence. When this
friend found his heart trampled on in
the usual way. he attempted to relieve
"his head by blowing out bis- brains.—
The pistol failed to perform its task
satisfactorily, an.d the young man sur
vived—let us hope to see the. error of
his ways, and find parental forgiveness,
the fatted calf, the gold ring, and the
nice clothes fn such cases made and
■d. Newjiondorous Thiers comes
Lowered to Ruin.
From the Atlanta Hiyald, of the l(Tth
instant, we take th&^SSowing: •
We learned, yesterday, that a yonng
lady of highly respectable connections,
had been enticed from her home, in
Gwinnett county, by a man living in
this city (who has a wife), tinder the
pretense of his being a single man.
The facts, as we have gathered them,
are as follows: The party had been
traveling around, through the neigh
borhood in which the young lady lived
for several weeks previous to her de
parture for this city. During the time,
he paid marked attention to her, and at
last succeeded in winning her love. The
two seemed to be very much attached to
each other, and were together a greit
deal during the time of his stay, ^fter
Remaining some two weeks, this party
Ifeft for this city.
. A few days afterward, the young lady
left her home under pretense of spend
ing a few days with her relatives who
lived in the neighborhood. Arriving
fit her friends’s; she spent the day and
night there, and on the next morning
took the train for Atlanta.
Upon her arrival here, she stopped at
a boarding house near the Air-Line
depot, but remained only for a few mm-
utedfwl&ii slie left for another boarding
house. While here some one drove up
in a wagon and remarked, “Your bag-
gag^jis all riglft, Miss;” whereupon she
left with the party in the wagon.
They drove to.the Air-Line depot
wliije sbuu.nie.t her lover. lie then put
herjf the wagon and left the depot.—
Nftwb knew where they went to.
Her family, after waiting some time
for Tier rernm. Becainc'ulSTUietr Tnr nnr
safety, and instituted inquiry and search
for her. At last 4fcoy ascertained that
she had left bn the train for Atlanta.
OnD of her brothers was immediately
dispatched to this city in search of her.
Arriving here on Tuesday last, he laid
the ease before the police authorities,
who immediately detailed officer D. 31.
vQueen to discover her whereabouts. In
a short time he succeded in finding her
at a room in fhe second-story of a build
ing on Whitehall street. He then re
ported the fact to her brother, who im
mediately carried her to her home in
Gwinnett county.
After learning these facts, wc pro
ceeded to investigate the other side of
■jthe question.
The version is different in regard to
the young lady’s virtue,-which they say
is questionable, and that her brother has
attempted to levy black^-mail, upon the
party charged with having ruined the
jyoung lady, requiring of him the pay
ment of SI00 for damages. And it is
also asserted that other parties had been
equally familiar with her sometime be
fore this. These statements we give to
- without furthor comment,
leaving them tb judge as to the wrong.
and to decide who is the most fitting
sulije^ffor condemnation.
provide^. -- •; . ■ ,-p
upon the stage. He surveys tho.ban'ker s
the geir-
tle C^irawifh tmtnr lWfells the former
AcVe’r tWi -and t$flFThe
latter to get out of France at o®c, htnf
f *njLSf retfTanvJjdre-
1 if the* matler stepped here, the people
jn:
iis great and glorious republic wer
not have much interest in it. and this*
article would certainly not have been
written. But it is reported on good
authority that the fair and frail exile is
about to take up her permanent resi
dence in America—so the interest and
the article both are in ordej-. We can
not. of course, forbid her landing upon
our free and happy soil; we cannot deny
her the privilege of nestling under the
protecting wings of the American eagle
—whiekMotpigisaauidhJtfcSps worth
less anUrtsealfy^bW Marshall be
i« importatiob ?
iSTIcwouIST
""•* Lcl
AN ENGLISH BUSINESS AND
CLASSICAL
SCHOOL
For* Hotli Sexes.
JOHN- H. FEATHERST0N,
PRINCIPAL,
* Baixbrjdoe, Ga.
Tliis institution will "open on the Second
Wednesday in January. 1873.
CO Cite K OF STUDY AND RATES,
First Cl;|ss—Spelling (Webster’s), Read
ing (lloDues)t Penmanship, . Arithmetic
(Sanford's), Geography (Monteith's), Gram
mar (Ruder**); Oratory, per-mouth, S2 ,TO.
Second < lass—Spelling (Towns'), IHstory
(Stephens U. S ; ), Penmanship, Arithmetic
(Stoddard's) Grammar (Butler's) Geography
(Mouteith’a), th^uposition , (OuaekenlW’),
Elocution, Algebra (Davies ), Latin Gram
mar and Reader (Bullion’s), Oratory,, per
month, S3 50.
Third (lass—Spelling (Hebster’s Diction
ary), History (Goodrich’s Greece), Penman
ship, Arithmetic (Sanford’s), Grammar
(Clark’s), Latin Grammar, Caesar,' Virgil,
Rhetoric. (Bullion’s), Trigonometry (Loomis)
Mensuration, Herodotus, Current Literature,
Oratory, per’mojith, S3 50.
. A thorough course of book-keeping nnd
penmanship will be taught at night, extra,
per month, So 00.
All that is asked, is a fair trial, and a well
taught student is promised in' return-
E. J. Morgan. ' W. J. Harrell
MORGAN & HARRELL,
PRACTICING PHYSICIANS,
BAINBR D.GE, G.«. ' '
Office in their drug* store, north side of
court house square, cm Water street.
Stoves, Stoves l
TINWARE, TINWARE!
Cheaper than the Cheapest!
In order to close out my stock of Stoves I
have determined to sell them so low that no
one can fail to buy. 1 also have a fine lot of
Tinware, &e., on hand for sale very rcosona-'
ble. Call and see me,
H. E. COURTNEY,
t24 3m] South-Broad St.
R. H. WHITKLEY. JOHN E. DO.^LSOfc.
WHITELEY & DONALSON^
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Jiainbridge, Ga.
Will practice in tire Southwestern and Pa-
tjuhi Circuits.
Office up stairs, in Sanborn's new build
ing. octl 71 tf
I3cdell &: Co.,
Liquor l/eSlcrs^
TobacOo Agents,
140 Broad Street,.
oct24 6m]
COLUMBUS, GA.
M. Boley & Co.,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
PARLOR, CHAMBER and
KITCHEN
FURNITURE !
186 BROUGHTON ST.,
Center Jefferson and' Broughton,., opposite
St. Andrew's Hull,-Savannah: Ga.
All the latest styles kept on imnd. Mat
tresses'renovating and repairing of furniture
execu cd promptly and at reasonable prices.
mch21 1v *
Rankin house,
• J. IV. RTAX, Proprietor,
BroadStreet,
Georgia.
gulden, o.krk. .
& Shoes.
*4 .i K. N. IIYATT,
■Frrtfo'on'lllr Boot and Siior Mnkrr
If you want a nicely fitting l«o»t orsh-ic. and
01 do yoji ywti sert »ee,he will make
irffwvTiT. Oil'S tlteap too. He !» prepared to
do all kinds of work in his line, with the ut
most dispatch. A «trppK of the finest leath
ers a n ,l findings always on hand, and a good
gfttwiiurw. r *T
SoHiF-L^of Ac BStkeSson fcStegaTfs
banking house. t - )an
Administratoris Sale.
-By virtue of an order of the Court of Ordi
nary of Dougherty county. Twill sell at pub
lic auction, at the court house door-at Cd-
,-mitt. Miller county. Ga.. on the first Tues
day In . February next, as tbe^ property of
Suttitiel E. Kimball, deceased lots
numbers two hundred and eighty-four (-84),
and three hundred and eighteen (318), in
the twelfth T12tb) district of Miller county.
Sold for the purpose of distribution among
th*heirs.. Terms »f sale, cash; purchasers
to jjay for titles. _
' SULLIVAN' E. KIMBALL.
Administrator of Samuel E. Kimball.
December 5th, 18*2. [tds
DAN SHEFFIELD,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
- Colquitt, Miller county, fin.,
WrH give prompt attention to all business
placed in his hands. Collections made a
specialty.
SCHOOL
AOTICF
ENGLISH AND CLASSICAL
School
For Both ^exes.
P. TELLEft BABBIT, D. D„
PRINCIPAL.
Tltia school will hie opened on the first
Monday in January, in the new building on
the comer of Water and — streets, opposite
the residence of Wn, C. Dickinson.
fete- per month of Four Weeks First
class, $2 50; second class, $3 00; third class,
Si 00. jan2 2w«
FLE3IING & llUTHERFOKD,
ATTORXEYB AT LAW,
Laiuhridge, Ga.
Office over the store of T. B. Hun no well &
Co. Are fully prepared to fake charge of all
cases arising under the bankrupt bw. [ocl if
DR. TUTT S PILLS .
Increase the powers of digestion, and excite
the absorbents to action, wittppby all impuri
ties of the system are carried off. The old
stereotyped opinion that calomel must lie used
to “carry off the bile.” has given away be
fore the light of science. The vegetable king
dom furnishes a remedy, free front • all dele
terious effects. ■ •
They act as kindly on the fender infant,
the most delicate female, and iutirtu old a KC*
as upon the most vigorous system,' eradicat
ing every morbific agent, invigorating the
tlebilitatcd organs, building up the flagging
nervous energies.
Prick 25cts. a Bottle.
J66s^“ Sold by all druggists. •
DR. TUTTS IMPROVED HAIR DYE
This elegantj>reparation is warranted the
beat in the world. Its effect is instapgous:
it imparts no ridiculous tints; it will remedy
the bad effects of inferior dyes; is perfectly
harmless; it contains no sugar of lead: it lias
no unpleasant odor; it imparts a natural
glossy color.
Price One Dollar a Bottle.
Sold by all druggists.
DR. TUTT’ S' EXPECTORANT. *
Is composed of herbal and mucilaginous pro-
ducts, which haven specific effect upon"the
pulmonary organs, penetrating every portion
of them. It detaches fro® the bronchial or
wind tubes the irritating matter which ac-
cummulatcs, and assists them to throw it off:
it mitigates the pain; resists the pi-ogrogs of
infiamation; and removes the constriction of
the chest. The properties of this elegant
preparation are demulcent, nutritive, bal
samic, healing, and southing. It™.races the
nervbus system, produces re#oshing sleep,
and relieves gloom and depression of spirits.
It is very pleasant to take, causes no nausea,
and strengthens the lungs to resist attacks
in the future.
You need not go to Florida to cure your
cough. If you use this remedy you can re
main at hpme and enjoy its comforts, a priv
ilege of vast, importance to the suffer from
pulmonary disease.
Avoid OexsoiiTiox.—This disease is very
insidious in its approach, and its first ad-
vanct iuii'L h ia.a.ftnn. nullafl » riigjd cold)
should he promptly guarded against- - di-
ware,Melnys are dangerous. Don't neglect
that slight cold, or it will soon get beyond
control. The timely use of the Expectorant
will prevent much pain anil suffering. Dr.
Tutt's Expeetoranl is a specific for Crimp.
This dread disease requires prompt treat
ment; no mother should Over be without a
bottle of it; it is very pleasant, and children
take it readily. Dr. Tutt's Expectorant is the
most valuable Lung Balsam ever offered to
sufferers from diseases of the throat or eiicst.
Price 81 a Bottle, or Srx for $o.
Sold by all Druggists.. Prepared by
WM. H. TUTT, M. Dv,
18 & 20 PlattoSt., New York.
Sold in Bainbridge by C. C. KING & CO.
R. A. WALLACE,
DEALER IS
Paper, Envelopes, Cards, Twines,
Tags, Paper Stock, Inks,
Moss, Waste, &c.
135 BAY ST., SAVANNAH, GA.
nichf'] Orders promptly fiilled. [ly
CLOTHING!
iran
coimly. &*.. of Gradate V .Wx.
deceased, alljhenerisUaljleprov
in'gto the estate wf R. fe PoiveH,?
consiraag in# horses. males, at.
hogs, faruuim uteesils, pora, fodder,
huggy—m„1.) f.rbcnelitbfheirs and?
Sale to eoatinue from day to day V
sold. Terms cash.
WM. POWk
Executor B. F. 1
■ January 1st, ; 1873.
ROWER 4 BOWER,
Attorneys at la-
Bai.d*riJge, Ga. *
Office in the Uonrt House. [mcli2 ly
VALUABLE LftNPS FOR SALE.
I hereby offer .for ^ale. to a cash CUltOSl*
©T, wj pUntutit>u on Fliiu river known aa %
part of the Hutchison estate, containing 250
acres of ridge nnd hammock land, 50 acres
of which are in good state of •oult^vati^.^ .
The place lias good dwelling, out-houses,
stabler, cribs, etc., all.now. and is situated at
a steamboat landing the Flint river, J8
miles from Buinoridge, and seven from Chat
tahoochee. Mir?. E. H. W. OTfcSON.
Refer to Demociui office. [Nov ^4-tf
Vinegar Bitters are at* a rile Fancy DriSV
made of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Refuse
Liquors^doctored, spiced, and sweetened to please the
taste, called ‘‘Tonics,’* “Appetizers,” “Restorers,**
► &c., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and rein,
but are a true Medicine, made from the native roots
and herbs of California, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants.
They are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-giving
Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the
System* carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring
the blood to a healthy condition, enriching it, rsfmdking.
and invigorating both mind aftd body. They are «asy‘
of administration, prompt in their action, certain in thmff
results, safe and reliable in all forms of disease.
No Person-can take these Bitters accord*
ing to directions, and remain long unwell, provided
their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other
means, and thq vital organs wasted beyond the poiat
of repair.
Dyspcpila or Indigestion. Headache, Paia
in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest; Div
ciness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste
in the Mouth, Bilious Attacl^ Palpitation of te
Heart, Inflammation of the LunTTPain in the regions of
the Kidneys, Surd a hundred other painful symptom,
are the olkprings of Dyspepsia. In these cooiplaiete
it Iuim eqial,aBd^neJiaulajrjJl «W
For FemiU, CouiulaliiMi iu yam, oc tU.
married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, dr the
turn of life, these Tonic^ Biucrs display «e derided t*
influence that a marked improvement is soon peietp-
tible. ’ i./.n' •’ *
For Inflammatory nnd Chronle llhev*
mat ism and Gnuf^Dyspepsia or Indicestifs, Biifms,
Remittent and. Intermittent Fever^ Disease^ of the
Blood, Liver, Kidneys atrd Bladder, these Bitters hews
been most successful. Such. Diseases are caused by
Vitiated Blood b which is generally produced by derange*
inent of the Digestive Organs.
They are a Gentle Pargaiive as wsIl M
a Tonic* possessing also the peculiar merit of acting
as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or
mation of the J^iver and Visceral Organs, a^d in Bilious
Diseases. 1
For Skin Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, Sall-
Rheum, Blotches, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Cer-
huncles. Ring-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eyes. Ery*
sipelas. Itch, Scurfs, Discoloration* of the Skim, HwiMn •
and Diseases of the Skin, of wliatever name or nature*
are literally dug up and carried ont of the system %
short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle ia
the^nosf incredufotnr iffihdb
such cases will convince 1
curative effects.
BAINBRIDGE CLOTHING STORE !
Soiilh^rii - 3I:ido
CLOTHING I
Cleanse the Vitiated Bleed wfiiwitf bit
find its imparities bursting through the skitt m Pimples^
ifi uptious, or Sores; -cNfsrife tf J WNen yoo find it cb-
simctad and sluggish in Lheyeins; cleanse it whejgit in
foul; your feelings will yed wheri:/ K«#tWfitod
pure, and the health of the system will follow^
Grateful thousands proclaim Vin4ai BlT-
tbrs the most wonderful Invigorant that ever sustained
the sinking system. ,
Pin, Tape* and. other Werrifl, Iark tug to
the system of so many thousands, are tSectsaUy de
stroyed and removed. Says a distinguished physiol*
ogist: There is scarcely an individual upon the fee Of the
earth jvhoss body is exempt from the presence of wonae.
It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that
worths exist, but upon the diseased humors and slimy
deposits that breed* these living mensters of iBtu.
No system of Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelada*
itics, will free the system from worom like these Bit
ters.
Keenan leal Diseases. Persons engaged hs
Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Type setter^
Gold-beynters, and Miners, as they advance in Iffb, utl
be subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against
this take a dose of WaLkhr's Vinegak Birrsfes eate
or twice a week, as a Preventive.
Bilions, Remittent, and IntirsMUtat
Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of oat
great rivers throughout tire United States* syrisily
thpee of the Mississippi Ohio, Missouri, Illinois; Tea*
tiessee, Cutnljerland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Bmoy
Rio Grande, Pearl, Alabama^ Mobile* Savaanri), Roan
oke, James, and many others, with their vast tribeta-
nes, throughout our entire country during the Summer
and Autumn, and remarkably so during leasees of
•.innsnal heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied
by extensive derangements of the stomach and Kvsr* mM
oilier abdominal viscera. There are always more or 1st*
obstructions of th«liver, a weakness and irritable shMU
of the ?tomacb, and great torjy*r of the kernels, being
dogged np with rrtiated acetimelatfoM. . fir theirkbo#
menu a purgatUe, euertipg a powerful mflueatfe mom
these various organs, Is essentially neeestaty. TnN m
no cathartic for the purpose equal to Ikt J.. Vauuu’s
ViNKciftR Bittkrs* as they will speedily lumove flbb
dark-col«*red viscid waiter wiib which the bowyle ai
loaded* at the same tim£^stimulating the secrewebs «
the liver, and gecevaUy ccstsrwg
>t the diq-stive organs.
tiie healthy, (ctacuea*
NOEL GAINEY £. CO.,
Feeling iliaL uu’*>i ilii induslrial purtmlts
oi-e . husialned. _tiuL —ceuflUX ^ 'riJln^vor
l>c truly pru'-perou''. nuve -TeTerniinOT fo
msnVftctdre ihcir JJJIHB rtockYto
bridge. They warrant tfietrg'Kxlk to R ' j
Cheaper and Better than the East
ern Make !
And challenge eoirti^riaun, in qualify. «ryle
and price. They kesj^tht^tept quality of
SHIRTS AND GENTS’ FURNISHING
GOODS I ^
*®“A Line cf Boots and Shoes
App^eJing to the people of Decatur, they
say achieve yonr inde]>enfience by building
up your o^n institutions. * [ mcliT ly
Nerofuls, or H.ins's JEvU, White Swellmg^
Ulcers, Krysinelas, ^veiled Neck, Goitet, ScrriJosa
I ivflammations* Indolent Li8 awnvAtioos, Alorrurii
fections, Old fiorcs, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore i
atC.. etc. In these* as in all other constitulim<|l,I
eases, WAi.iCKa’s Vinegar Bitters Jiave showa tl
great curative powers in the most obstinlta agl iMrifll*
*ble cases.
Or.Wsike m .
?ct on all tJiese cases m a similar manner,
the Blood they remove the causey aod by pm«
the effects of tiie inflammation (the tubercub
the affected parte receive health,and a ]
is effected. . . . .
The proper# I of ef DtC Wkun 1 ! VnWl
Bitters are Aj>eficpt. Diaphoretic and Camiiani>e»
Nutritious. Laxative, Dietetic. Sedative* CoaoflesHhri*
taut. SudefUic* Alreratitee, and Anti-pilioo*.. .
Tile Aperient and mild laxative mMliri
Difc WaI/Kbu’s Vineqar Bitters are the hast safe
guard m 'all cases of enij>tioiia and raitgtMM fedM;
titeir balsamic* healing, and soothing properties proteef
t?i5 huptors of the fences^ 'Iheir'MtitefNptiii
allay pain in.the nervous evstem. stomach, aad belli,
either from mffammatkmffefta, eteSe, r#ria|» eBt
Their Counter-Irritant influence extends tbrorijfeapt
the system. Th eh* Diuretic properties «cH|BklVi>
«ney% correcting and regulating the flew of urine. Their
Anti-Ej’ious properties stimulate the liver, iw tb ilWi
tion of bile, and its discharges through the b«liyydeci%
and are superior to all remedial agents, for the ebre m
Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc.
Fortify the body against dl
fyieg all its fluids with Vinegar Bitters.
dem-.e can tike hold of a system thorn forearm
liver, the stomachs die bowels* the kidneys, jmd the
nerves arc rendered disease-proof by this great kri|
orant.
Direct lime.—Take of the Bitters en r
at night fnr>m.a half to ono and one-half wii_
Eat good uourishing'fbod, such as beef rife
chop, vani.mai* roast bee^ aod vegetables,
out-door rxercise. They are composed of
ab.e ingredients, and contain no spirit, .
J WALKER* Prop’r. It. H. ScDOiALBri .
Druggists and (Jen. Agis^ Sae Francisco* CeL^
and cor. of Wa.-hinjr.r-o and Charlton Sis., NcfeTfe.
SOLD BY ALL DF.UGCISTS AND DEAUBB.