The Bainbridge weekly democrat. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1872-18??, October 23, 1873, Image 1
Weekly Democrat.
Volume 3.
BA1NBR1DGE GA, OCTOBER 23,1673.
Number 4.
the weekly democrat
I.M PtBl.WHKD Evkbt ThcHSIUT
By BEH. E BUB8ELL, Proprietor.
ADVERTISING rates and pules.
Advertisements inserted at $2 per square
for first inserliuQ, and $1 for each subse
quent ol-v.
A squa-e i* eight solid linea of thin type.
Liberal terms made wi A contract advertiser*.
Local notices of eight linea are $15 per
quarter, or $50 per annpm. Local notice*
l„r less than three months are subject to
transient rates.
(oteract advertieera who desire their ad
.ertisements changed, must give us two
weeks’ notice.
(Imuging advertisements, unless otherwise
stipulated in contract, will be charged 20
c«ut* per square.
Marriage and obituary notices, tributes of
respect, and other kindred notices, charged
as other advertisement*.
Advertisements must take the nin of the
paper, as we do not aoAtract to keep them in
any particular place.
Announcements for candidaswC Are $10, if
only fur one insertion.
Rills are due upon the appearance of the
advertisement, and the money will be collect
ed as needed by the Proprietors.
We shall adhere strictly to the above rules,
and will depart from them under no Circum-
ftincea.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.
$3.00
2.00
1.00
10
/Vi annum, in advance,
f’er six mouths, in advance,
Per three months, in advance,
Single copy, in advance,
LEGAL ADVERTISIN'®
Sheriffs sales, per le»y, $3; sheriffs mort
gage cates, per levy, $5; lax sales, per levy,
<3; citation for letters of administration. I?!;
citation for letters of guardianship, -1; appli
cation for dismission from administration, 10;
application for dismission from giiariliaiinhip,
fi : application for leave to sell land (one
sqiia'el, 5, and each additional square, 3;
iipplicuVon for homestead, 2; notice to debt
ors a^d creditors, 4; land sales (1st square),
5. ami each additional square, 3; sale of per-
sliable property, per square, 2.50; cat ray
notices, sixty days, 7; notice t* perfect sorn-
ice, 7; rules nisi to foreclose mortgage, per
tonne, a, tides to establish lost papers, per
square, 4; rules c out petting titles, 4; rules
lu perfect service in divorce cases, 10.
Sales of land, etc., by administrators, ex
ecutors or guardians, are required by law to
be held on the first Tuesday in the month,
between the hours of 10 in the fore and
•I hi the afternoon, at the cuurt Louse door
in the county in which tlic property is situ-
Hied. Notice of tjioee sales must be given
i>, a public gazette 40 days previous, to the
day oi'sale.
Notices for the sale of personal property
uiu.il be given in like manner 10 days pre
vious to sale day.
Notices to the debtors and creditors of an
estate must also lie published 40 days.
Notice that application will be made to the
Court of Ordinary for leave to sell laud, &c.,
must be published for two months.
fit it ions for letters of administration,
guardianship, Ac,, must be published 30
in- lor dismission flora administration,
monthly for three raontlis—for dismission
Irui. guardianship, 40 days.
Hales for foreclosure of mortgages must be
pubYedicl monthly fur four months—for cs-
ubhsliMig lost papers for the full space of
three months—for compelling titles from ex-
eatArs or administrators, whtsxe’ bond has
lieen given by the deceased, tile full space of
three months.
1’iiLlieation will always be continued ac
cording to these, the legal requirements,
unless otherwise ordered.
Hum Drink eajf a glas? of rum or all skates in the Unfen, except tour. two months, and that it mitght induoa j lars a mouth. Servant girls in pri-
whisky, 88 the case may be, and in the election of Stale officers, anti ••Henry' - to let -the great party" alone, vale fatuities often jret but ten dol-
another when dinner was over. Din-, it generally prerails in the election and occupy himself with his private j lars a-year. In Ireland men get
nerwas always punctually on the of members of Cougress. In in me business — Tlu- Xatio* • j eight cents a day for reaping wheat,
of the States where it has been tried ! _ ! oats, barlev. rve and mowiue hav.
- M .. , . . . ! What Bacome* of the Som cf Success- * *
is there auy thought of abandoning .
it. Other questions are considered
. - • r - . - j®. ,-mvkvw - in the
until near betf time, which was al- i States and districts, and providing
for the exigency of death and resig
nation of the President alter election
and before inauguration. These are
table at 1 o’clock < he took no more
until lour {►’clock, and after that a
small quantity in his tea. His prac
tice was not to drink anything else j in connection with the votes
nt w
ways nine o’clock when he bad a
glass or two of whisky or ruin ; un
less indeed some neighbor or friend
came-in to join him. He was very
hospitable always, amt as I have re
marked, extremely regular in his
habits.
The eommittcc looked at one
another, and hesitated about pursn-
eing the subject any further. It
occurred to them however, that it
would be well to save themselves, it
fill Hen.
Next to the inquiry, what, becomes of
the pins? as interesting question would
be. What becomes :*f the sons of suc
cessful men? A few men and a few
firms are iu ifie hands of the founders;
suggestions which have been coo-’ but the8e are exceptions: .The 0 i d naUie
sidored, but of course no conclusion
could be arrived at
A Civil Bights Case in Mississippi
and the old trade genet ally pass into
the humis of others. Do you see that
•man shovelling iu coal? Xtell. his chil
dren. and children like his. will j.-stlfe
your pampered sons and ruksthiN laud,”
-ever!
A case b&.vd on the State civil
rights la w was tried in Macon. Missis- ^ said an old N’ew Yorker the other day.
sipjd, a few days si cc. The parties ! Tho r.ld names have ceuaetLin the puljSt.
w r ’“’ t *■"' ,UIK ' , 'N' 5 >, ii 1 f<) j|, e QgjQ were two* negr *es, named The famed men of the LaMcklfej,* hare
po8s.l e, m ri-gat i to t *•'*' j respectively Dirk Gray JautT Tdbv j a sttotjessir. The eminent jurists carry
Poindexter. Toby is the proprietor ! their honors with them to the grave,
of a restaurant, having two rooms j Merchant prinoes are obliterated. The
precisely alike, one for the aeconimo-; reason is clear The fathers laid the
datimi ot tlte “white trash,” and the j basis of business one way and the sons
other for his colored fellow-citizen, build another. Men who earned their
This arrangement did not exactly ac
cord with the civil rights ideas of
, Dick, wlio wanted toinjbibehjs'cock-
Coinimttee—Surely, then, be used i, , ,, , , . „
, *’ ’ [tails at the same counter and out of
the same glasses used by the whites.
To enforce this right Dick brought
Committee—Did D^-
smoke.
Grandson—That was one of his
most regular habits. He was not of
ten without a pipe in his mouth,
when not engaged professionally.
He did not sntuke in bed.
tobacco in no other way.
Grandson—My grandfather every
Saturday afternoon, gentlemen, pur- ,. .. . , , ,. ...
, ° „ i his act ton betore Justice Hiimnun. a
chased a certain tpiantity ol niutai! , . .
. 1 j i : | scalawag pmicner, whose prejn-
i dices were strongly in Iqvor of the
I prosecutor,
i he iiligauls euclt eiitpto\t*tl two
leading law vers, and the case was
TEMPERATE AND REGULAR.
The Life and Habits of a Gentleman
Who Lived to the Age of 105 Years.
Not long since a gentleman died
iu the neighborhood ol Indianapolis,
Indiana, at the advanced age of 105.
A temperate society whose members
had been reading the New York
llcrald and other “interviewing pa
pers, concluded to send a commit lee
to call upon the old gentleman s sur
viving graudson and put him through
in regular form for the good of the
rising generation : so the commit tec
sought out the young man and enter
ed at once upon its labors:
Committee—Me -understand that
your late lamented Grandfather was
U'o years old at the time of his
death— of conrse he was temperate
and regular in his habits through life.
Grandson—Well, yes, My grand
father was very temperate and very
regular. When he arose in the mor
ning the first thing was just. . half a
glass—no more or no less—of pure
Jamaica rum.
Committee (.evidently disappoint
ed.—This, we suppose, was to give
a sort of fillip to his system after the
'■‘thargy of lengthened repose, made
as at*exceptional case, by Ids very
advanced period jl file, l’lease tell
as what his practice was during the
Test of the day ?
Grandson—My grandfather gen
tlemen, was a person of very regular
habits, and .took nothing else ot this
*° rt until 11 o'clock, and then only a
g:ass of Jamaica rum.
Cotmuittco—Indeed : did he drink
an ything with his meals ?
Grandson—Not exactly with his
; ncals: about half an hour before
dinner he drank a mixture to wide ■
be was very partial, consisting of
“bunt half and hali (f cider and ruin.
Gut after drinking that it was his
-R-'toin to go out lor a short walk
an d return to dinner. When dinner
' as about half through, he would
tobacco, say front twenty-one to
twenty-three niches in length; this
he cut .up into seven different por
tions, oneni which per day, and no j
more, he used lor chqwiiig in the
course of the seven days of the week. |
My grandfather's habits, as I have
observed.
Committee—O. confound your grand
father and his habits, 1 beg your
pardon, sir, blit it is not necessary
for us to pursue this subject auy
further.
And so they left.
The Prosposed Amendment to the
Constitution in teg&id to the
Mode ox Electing President-
Senators Morton, of Indiana, ('ar-
penter, of Wisconsin, Anthony ol
Rhode Island, and ayatd of Dela
ware, members on the Committee on
Privileges and 1 lections <* the Sen
ate of the United States closed their
conference which has been continu
ed from day to day the past week in
this city, in reference to the mode of
electing President. Their delibera
tions .has far involved the Billowing : 1
1. T< abolish electoral colleges, i
2. That the President and V ice J
President be elected by the people
voting directly for the candidates.
3 That each State shall be divi- j
ded into as many districts as the j
State is entitled to Hepicsentatives
in Congress, to be composed of con- j
tiguous territory, compact in form i
and as nearly equal in population as j
may be. The person bavin* the high- j
ost number of votes for President in,
each district, shall receive the vote |
of that district, which shall count one |
Presidential vote ; that qaelt Stale
shall be - ntitled to t wo Presidential
votes at large, which shall be count
ed for the person receiving the high
est- number of votes in the State.
4. The person having the highest
number of such Presidential votes
sha 1 be President.
fortunes by hard work, diligence; that
knew sixteen hours’ toil 'ey personal at
tention; that were their own bookkeep
ers. salesmen, cashiers, and often porters
are followed by sons who d i as little as
possible; who delegate to others all the
I work they can. and who kn->w more of
j the road thin the ledger. Famous ho-
' tel men were gentlemen, men of intcHi-
| gence. men wh > Were the equals of the
I best in the land, and who never sank
1 the gentleman in their trade. Young
tried by a jury as black us the ten of i men who fling the example of their sires
clubs. Four of the jurors were bap
tists and so was “brother” Jaruigan,
one of Toby’s la wers, a tact which
was supposed to litivedeterminod the
cast*. Tlu* defence maintained that
their client having provided two
rooms precisely alike for the accom
modation of his patrons, had fully
complied wit It the requirements ol
the civil tights law .of the Male,
which was denied by tlte opposing
to the winds, find it easier to squander
a valu tble name, run through a fortune
quicker than it was earned, and find
themselves, while young, at a point from
which their fathers started One thing
is quite marked in New York It is the
fact that the heavy business is getting
into the hands of foreigners r i he heavy
imp rters, the great bankers, ami much
of the trade of value is slipping out of
the hands of .Americans, as the trade ol
England got into the power of the Doui-
nu/
counsel. Afu'Ulong,;wid fierce dis
cussion the fuse went it; the jury, j bards. Bo,tun J<>
who after mature deliberation, i'0- J
turned the following verdict : “We ! Negro Duello-A Son_of Fred Do’J2f-
juRoars fiue tie lent lit Guitry, Den
Ol course lawyers
puzzled w licit l lie |
Aileii, et til.-,
a ini court wer
written verdict was presented, but
Taylor, the lore - an oi the jury, ex
plained tha t 1 ‘lit” was a contraction
of “not,” and that Toby Poindexter
was winner an., Dick Gray must pay
costs.
it would have been a nice ques
tion to determine, without the inter
pretation of the toremau, “'wlict liet
the “’nt" was intended as tlte final
syllable of the preceding word “tie
tent,” or lor the word not. It! case
of life and death such ambiguous
loositess would be anything but agree
able to the* party whose neck was in
volved in the decision. However,
the jury in this ease exhibited a bet
ter understailing of the principles ol
hw and justice 1 haunt or'Iiography.
lass on his Muscle.
Washington, Oct. 9.—One of tin
irn-qticnccs of the unfriendly feel
- between some of the prominent ^ aromi
i colored men of this district, grqwhitr
j out of their disagreements on the
j question of mixed schools, is a tight
i which occurred to-day, the partici
pants being Louis Douglas, mating,
iug editor of the New Era, the col
ored organ in the city, and one
Greener a colored graduate !*t Har
vard College. Tlte latter a short
time ago. dismissed from the position
The Revenge of the Balings.
Servant girls and men get from $T 50
to $10. a-year.
Punishment of Disturbers.
Buys who disturb camp-meetings by
crying "Amen” in the wrong place, aud
remarking “Glory” with more sval than
judgment, should read and ponder (he
fate of thirteen small boys in Kansas
Those thirteen ill-advised boys were
guilty so the story goes, of disturbing
a Kansas camp-meeting by insisting
upon shouting “Amen,” when a very
muscular preachy, who prided himself
on his voice, was singing a hymn.*' The
-preacher bore it fitr same time, but final
ly hecwudag'tjlled with righteous wrath
he descended fmm the pulpit, and nev
er once interrupted his hymn, succes
sively reversed and sp inked the thirteen
small buys. As lfis avengiug hand de
scended. and the dust of the small buys
filled the air. the rest of the congaega
tion shouted in rapture and encouraged
him with brad cries df "Go on, brother,
go on.” Then he returned to the pul
pit. s ill singing, aud thoes boys went
half a mile away, behind a haystack,
and laid down with their faces to to the
ground, weeping bitterly.
A Danbury Woman.
A hot tempered Danbury woman, who
finds con.-iderable trouble in persuading
her husband to furnish kindlings, and
then is obliged to do it herself, read iu
a religious p iper, Monday of how a wife
induced a wicked husband to become
one of the most Affectionate and hope
ful ofmetiby being invariably calm and
loving with him. The story made a
a deep impression upon her, and wheu
she made the fire that noon she p.ut a'
par of rubbers among the wood. Then
she tied a handkerchief across her nose,
ind went on with her work. Wheu the
husband reached the gate lie paused,
fetched a sniff that made a hole in the at-
iii 'sphere, and then weui around to the
back of the house and fetched another
enilf that hadun equally damaging effect
on the atmosphere; he stared into the
next yard and op at his his own house,
uid Jolt in his pockets, and w,qg
to the front
again, when his wife—rtinrm
out of the window and said, "M by don’t
you come into the house, you old fool?
Como in and get your dinner, and let
me read an article to you from the
Christian Secretary you old rip Come
iu and see how nice it is to get dinner
with n thiua to burn but rubbers, you
whited s -pulchro Come in here. I tell
y 'U. before I lose my temper and say
what I oughn't to.” At this invitation
York to New Orleans carry passougers
and goods at half'-rate. The city is
making ample preparations toaccoiutno
date visitor. Many distinguished men
from all parts ot the country will be
here.
f teacher in the preparatory high
school, anti has ve.uted hi# spleen i Lewentrin. going upon the stoop a ud t<
the door very slowly, but ou opening
the door, disappeared inside with rnarv-
he was cutting wood all that afternoon
and thinking of the religious press.
The Bravest of the Brave,
The Barings, unless men of very supe
rior mould must have taken grim satis
faction in the failure of the two bankers
to which our government recently com
mitted the business which their own
house had d me for eighty years. The
5. These provisions to Do applies- ' American community, however, cannot
ble to election of Vice president.
6. Congtess shall have power to
provide for conducting the el etion
of President and to establish tribu
nals lor the decision of contests as to
tlte vote in any
make regulations guvernin
ceedings td' these tribunals.
By the adoption ot the district
system of voting by the people di
rectly for candidates, with two Pres
idential votes in each State, and plu
rality rule for determining the result
of the election, it is brought ns near
ly to the people as can be, not to
make it an flection by the uatio
as one coniiuoiitty, aud it still recog
nizes the States as such, while
it enables the people of each dis
trict in a State to express their
will ; so hereafter, a State need not
east a solid vote, ns under the pres
ent svstetn. It tends t disiH-nse
through the columns of tlte Era,
but some dissatisfaction arose, and
Greener decided to sever his con
nection with the organ. He wrote
his own valedictory, and finding that
it had been omitted and merely a four
line item about him substituted for
it. lie in a rage called at the Era
office and demanded an explanation. Governor Letcher the other day re
In the heat ot the argument which Lited.a very interesting incident of the
ensued Greener called Douglass a war while in Kemper » room at the ho-
liar, prefacing it with an adjective tel. He said that in one of the buttle.-
not it* consonance with the require below Richmond four flag-bearers bad
mentsof tli rd commandment There- been shot down and a call was made for
upon Douglass knocked Greener off a volunteer to carry the colors. A strip-
Itis pins. Other parties interfered ! ling t mk the torn standard. In a few
and took Greener away, and thu the miuutos the the staff was snapped by a
m tter stands. The grand finale it shut. The buy sat down unloosed a
Rad for the Bar.
The patrons of husbandry hare adop
ted one practice, as rule of their order,
worthy of imitation by the unregenerate,
which is, never to go to law, and to have
all disputes settled by arbitration. This
is eminently wise, and has many advan
tages. First, the ease comes on with
out delay, and oafh man, telling his
story, a jury of picked neighbors and
mutual friends decide what is right.
Law suits arise in most cases in misun
derstanding. not, in willfulness. Only
think of difficulties being settled in this
Way, and the dismay of lawyers aud
constables, aud sheriffs.
Two sigular movements have occur
red in France. The police of Paris
have soieed twenty-two thousand photo
graphs of the son of the ex-Etnperior
Napoleon au arbitary proceeding, and
one which looks as though the authori
ties have resolved to rule rigorously,
and crush any budding opposition. The
Count de Chautbord, who suddenly and
mysteriously disappeared some days ago,
is now reported to have taken up his
residence on the neighboring soil of
Switzerland. Small signs though these
be. they may mean a great deaj ul the
preseut juncture.
H J. SWEARINGEN 4 CO.. (City
• Drug Store) have K,
l'5T received a large and varied J
S TOi’K of *t>rujp and Medicines, fn
Paints, Oils, Perfumery, Garden
Seeds, etc.,
•TfyELL selected and in almost Ny
JJNDLESS variety, purv, yeoaioy !J^
full strength
ARKAB1.L in quality;
J.N prices reasonable. ^
THJWTE other than pure Liquora d
will besold —
Y Whisky and Brandy un-
VERYTfllNO in our '.inojof busi-
J^EEDED by the people in town
& [Don’t forget the placo, Taa T|
City I)buu Stobk,] JCi
^jOUSTRg can be obtained here,
by spocial order through tia. *
M, Robert de Massy, a member of
the Left Centro in the French Assem
bly, who has hitherto been deemed an
Orieanist, and who was the reporter of
the hill for the restitution to the Orleans
princess of the property confiscated by
Louis Napleon, has written a letter to
the Avenir <7n Lijret, in which he pro
nounces decidedly for tlte Republic, and
expresses the belief that the majority of
two centres will be of his opinion.
The Minnesota law compelling saloou
keepers to pay ten dollars annually to
the support of the State Inebriate Asy-
lias yielded twelve thousand dollars this
year.
Tlte South Carolina legislatives meet
in extra session on the 21st instant. The
‘Iiv.mi qnrstiuu
juice to be extracted from a dry lemon.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
I'OTHE PLANTERS AND MER
CHANTS QjP M [TCHELL. MIL
LER AND DECATUR
COUNTIES.
THE SAVANNAH ADVERTISER
AND REPUBLICAN
elous suddenness. The neighbor sayTNow combined iu one, Daily and Wxeeklt,
p.itilisliod at Savannah, Ga., our great sea-
is said, is yet to come. ahoe string. «jid tied it. He started in
front again. Another bullet splintered
Wages in Europe- t * ie stil ^ was t ^ en lastene< ^ the
We see the fold ing iu an ex- ,,ther ^oe-sfcting. He had hardly shook
, . i the folds out a second time when down
change, but we suspect that wage. | ^ ^ ^ ^ fcy # WL Th „
better since the plunder of shue string8 had g| vei out Ho uubut
I t-med his jacket, ripped his shirt to rib-
i. lews ::pp .r
er my n.u_-
be expected to see anything very enter
taining in the spectacle. It not only
does not help the national credit, but it
does tend to bring the national mode of
doitnr business iuto repute, to see the
listriet «>r State, ami | houses ch tsen deliberately ty the ad-
tlie pro-' ministration for the transaction lor its
, fureigu business go rattling down among
the very foremost m a stock panic. As : ‘
we p ilited out at the time it Was made. Franee .
in terms wh,oh many people thought | "Sixty cents a day is considered j bins and rapped the broken rod, and
t >o severe, the change was. certainly as 1 go. d wages for a working man in any j carried the tittered ensign through the
regards .nr. (_ lews, a p Jitical j b ->ir | of the i nropean countries, except fight.
oJ ai tii.- sunaee as a batik- ; Great Britain, where-Hie \vagt*s are Govern >r Letcher said: - When they
, i-tcu years ago. aud he somewhat higher. In the Tyrol silk brought the b-.y with the shattered
has always bean as much-.I a -worker ’ j region an*l in Italy, they often do staff patched up with shoe strings and
as a banter 'jjotget more than ten Cents. In the shirLtail. I made him an officer and
it was to reward him for his political j country in Germany ten cents is the
services that the goverumenf business common pay. Women ofteu get bu'
_.veu hiai. or. <» iber words, in- : five cents. lit Swedes, men often
stead oj the bankers credit draw ing the work trouiiiHtr o'clock in the morning
■ o eruuieut balance, the batauee was tiii nine in the evening, ami do not
° va u , p <e jp t he credit, and the uatu- get any more. During the iate war
- result h s toll -wed. it was curious ' many poor women in Berlin were
wtffi .conventions, " j iuustrativethat Tom Murphy shouId hired to knit stockings for the sold- 1 -Macon, Ga,
1 1 h ,ve appeared ou the scene t aimed late j iers lor five cents The profits of the Georgia State Fair convenes on the 27tl
i fit- r the iasiure, and announced that jKKir who kept petty shops. Sell trin- j a .id e- >n ti’iues six days. The grounds
would nat have had it happened sets : in ltie streets, or act as sat-; are the fibest on the Continent, and art
I r ~5 00 ' and ting Sen.tar Morton i iers, do Hut average til on* three in perfect order. Fifty head of fise
ih .fid have declared that-Henry's fall- or four cents. Barbers in Berlin, i stock are already on the grounds. Many
uie was th hardest bl- w the President since the raising of their prices, get ; entries have been already made, and
h 1 bad \-.t. ’ We trust it was very five cents for hair catting and two- others are being daily There are pros-
uid that it mKht eonfine every ( aud-half-cenls lor shaving. Servants pects of the largest attendance ever seen
prat,
B"ARD & KIMBALL, Proprietors,
offers great in.lnceniciits to its readers.
!le]iiete with uw latest Telegrams from all
fiarts of the world, and ffeoerat news, also,
the latest and most reliable Quotations of tho
Principal Markets constantly presented in its
.-■•lumns, with au eye to your Every Interest,
uakes it a desiranle paper. 'J’he Weekly is
pecially valuable as a faintly paper.
Dailv, 7 dollars a y-ear.
Weekly lj “
Sub-cription books at my store, where 1
would lie pleased to see any in want of a
good paper.
THEODORE R WARDELL
Agern, Advertiser & Republican.
gave him the best sw.ird Virginia ia.'d. ’
The gallant fellow was .from > onroe
county. He was killed in battle.—Mex-
■ nyfon G'lze'f*.
Tha fietirgu * air.
Macon, Ga.. October 15.—The
ueceessaty to form an
et l<»r each Stat<. uod it enlarges
j he liberty ot the individual voter,
who can vote for any citizen for Presi-
ilt ut and Vice he may seiect. The
election will always be final atul there
can be m> necessity for an electiou
by the U m.se of Representatives,
which is so objected to. The plural- b->d- '
itv has been adopted successfully in i poiiucian in
FOR SALE
My Plantation, 11 miles west of Bainbridg
containing
500 Acres of Land,
of which 150 acres are cleared. Good build
ings, Gin House and .Screw.
Everything on the place will be sold with
it if desired. 1 will sell cheap. Now is your
time,
T. J. DENNARD.
Aug. 7, 1873—3m
DR. TUTTS PILLS
Increase the pow-ers of digestion, and excit*
the absorbents to action, whereby all impuri
ties of the system are carried off. Th* old
stereotyped opinion that calomel must be used
to “carry off tho bile,” hog given away be
fore the light of science. The vegetable king
dom furnishes a remedy, free from all dele
terious effects.
They act as kindly on the tender infant,
the mu«i delicate female, and infirm old age,
as upon the most vigorous system, eradicat
ing every morbific agent, invigorating th*
debilitated orgnns, building up the flagging
nervous energies.
■ PnicE 26cts. a Bowl*.
Sold by all druggists,
DR. TUTTS IMPROVED HAIR DTK
This olegant preparation is warranted the
best in the Wprjd. JSL&t/'
the bad effects of inferior dyes; is perfti
harmless; it contains no sugar of lead; ithaa
no unpleasant odor; it imparts a natural
glossy color.
Piu,ck O.ve Dollar a Bottle.
Sold by all druggists.
L. J. OLILXAETIK.
JOBS FLASSKBY
L. J. GUILMART.'N & CO.
COTTON vaCTOBS
—A>I>—
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
(Kelly's Block.)
BAY STB Birr. SAVANNAH, GA.
Agents for Bradley's Phosphate,
Jewell s Mills Tarn and Domestics, etc.
BAGGIKG, ROPE & IB0H TIES
ALWAYS OS LAND,
Usual facilities extended to Customers,
the country to his bed for ‘ at hotels get from three to eight dol- ■ j D the South. Railroads frota New 1 Au ? 2S— lm
DR. TUTT S EXTRACT OF SARSAPARIL
LA AND QUEEN'S DELIGHT which con
sists of the curative elements implanted by
the Great Physician in these hygean roots,
fully developed and concentrated, ig known
far and wide by the effects it has produced.
Tiie unfortunate prey of Scrofula, pjtpee
body was once honey-combed by that foul
disease testifies to its value; the Rheumatic
patient who has cast aside his ciaitphcs .ac
knowledges its benefits with gratituq*; Ah*
victim of Syphilitic taint and mercurial pod-
son resounds its praise ; and the cicatrice* <ljf
unnumbered ulcers of every type, bad they
each h tongue, would bear witness to its tff-
ficienpy.
Loss of Appetite, Indigestion, Dytpepaia,
Heartburn. Female Irregularities, Whites,
Sallow Complexion, Eruptions and Blotches
in the Skin, White Swellings, Sore Eyes, Dis
charges from the Bears, Scald Heed, Cancer
in the Womb, .\ight Sweats, Nocturnal xjpHfi-
sions, Rheumatism, all proceed from th*
same cause, vn.
IMPURE BLOOD AND UNHEALTHY AC
CRETIONS.
For those and kindred diseases a xen;edy
has dawned upon the world haring (qr iU
object the relief of suffering humanity.
Dr. Tutt’* Sariaparilla.
and Qneen’i Delight,
an entirely vegetable compound, is in He opr
eration j-eculiar, entering into the circulation,
thus coming in contact with the gern er
cause of disease, and displacing .unhealthy
secretions by extending its influence to ev
ery part of the body, and causing a general
reaction whereby health succeeds debility
and disease.
Under the influence of this valpytye Med
icine the eye grows sparkling, the complex
ion clear and roseate, unsightly Blotches,
Pock Marks. W’orras in the Flesh, Pimple#
and Roughness of tne Skin disappear, and
the entire organization grows redolent with
health. It gi ves tone to the boby, and erase*
it to gain in flesh and increase in weifkt.*
Price. $1,00 per bottle, or 6 bottle* for
Sold by Druggists generally tbrovghml the
United States. **
Prepared by Wx. H. TUTT, M. D.,
20 Platt Street. New York. ’
!• ft
RICHARD SIMS
ATTORNEY AT LAW
JhjpbriAge, Ga.
Office ii; the Court House. All hnrineee
intrusud to his care wifi be promptly at;
tended to.
July 31. 1873—ly
One Thousand Printed Hgte
Heads for $8.