The Gainesville eagle. (Gainesville, Ga.) 18??-1947, October 13, 1876, Image 4

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—-TVa o * ===== -V-iJHV 3l.>ring.__ ' ~~~Z,re fruit on the fane. It plant out more ftn abun d- W* better .. t “ t i,e farm is a blessing anceof froit on tL that money cannot . v matter what kind of stock you >0 T ■ cattle, sheep, hogs or *•?£** *-* ,nm T'°’ ,, 0 . relief in inflammatory rheuma , ~iipei,e m< ? asm take iou bathe t- on affected parts; lay on wetted with it. Sour milk or buttermilk have been found an excellent remedy for erysipe , s applied as a wash. Wben applied hot i /allays inflammation better than cold applications If & ny one wishes to be aided in securing an habitual carriage of body • n walking, they should carry their hands behind them, one nand grasp ing the opposite wrist. One of the best applications for rheumatism is to bathe the parts affected in water in which potatoes have been recently boiled, as Lot as cm be borne, just before going to bed. A good remedy for nose bleeding is <<pial parts of burnt alum, white sugar, white of an egg. Mix well, make a BWttb by rolling cloth hard the size of the nostrils, saturate the mixture, and insert in the nostril. A good mixture for strengthening and promoting the growth of the hair may be made as follows: Ono half pint castor oil, one-quarter pint Jamaica rum, one drachm tinctuio cantharides; add a little perfume to taste. An excellent recipe for removing paint or grease spots from garments may he had by mixing four tcaspoon ftils of alcohol with a tablespoonful of salt. Shake the whole, well together, and apply with brush or sponge. If you are made miserable with ciiil'B aud fever, dissolve fifteen grains of citric acid in a cup of hot, coffee, and drink it just before the chill attacks you. It has been known to cure tie worst cases of this disease. Lime, lemon or sour orange juice will have the same effect. The farmer who produces but ore crop, aud buys everything else con sumed, will always be poor. The Western wheat growers are finding it out aud substituting other articles that yield more remunerative returns. Itotation and diversity of crops are necessary in successful agriculture. A pasture with a few hundred sheep is safer than all cotton. They will fur nish wool to sell, and early lambs for spring markets, or they will double the number of their flock every year.— Mutton in healthier than pork, and fresh moat is a better diet than all salt pork. Besides no animal is so good as the sheep for cleaning out weeds, briars and other brush. One pound of green copperas, cost ing seven cents, dissolved in one quart oi water, aud poured down a water closet, will eflectually concentrate and destroy the foulest smells. Simple green copperas, dissolved under the bed in anything that will hold water, will render a hospital, or other place for the sick, free from unpleasant smells. lor butchers’ stalls, slaughter houses, sinks and wherever thero are ottensive putrid gases, dissolve cop peras aud sprinkle it about, aud in a few days the smell will pass away. If a cat, rat or mouse dios about the house and sends forth an offensive gas, place some dissolved copperas in an open vossel near the place where the smell is, and it will purify the atmosphere. CAKE OF THE FEET. Almost every day we see people with troublesome feet. Now with proper care the feet can be kept all the time in good condition. First nev er wear an ill-fitting boot or shoe. A boot too large is just as bad for the eet as one too small, or nearly as If jou are so unfortunate as o purchase a pair of boots or shoes that do not tit, dispose of them at half price, rather than wear them. Again, when the feet become tired au> ache, sit down a few moments and u>B them high upon a table or chair. U ess very bad, that will give imme tl ° rehef ' If lfc not, immerse ’“Y na ailof water as hot as you can bear your hand in; let them re uutil the water ceases to feel h! T* *’'**• 11 while. U 6 , tho wate r only deep enough to cover the feet. * ° 10 K the nails are inclined to grow in ?, x c r? sorapewitha^^ and Ltlv li 0m " P “ re linen to 'M “i tuoua m,z" p N. 6 ,rr„T o !' tl,c "time, say twenty feet a lou ° dry, T UteB . ithenwi P e corns and ~ ° IS P ' ck out the cuticle stlrtelT T* tLe IOOSe rub thoroughly 1/ 80l,a; the “ b'se the glycerine lJUfe glycerine, once a wwk II l 6ry day> ftucl aboQ t *■**’*. “—co PL, A 'A* V O It M OF IHE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY. We, ihe Delegates of the Democratic Party of the United States in National Convention assembled, do hereby declare the administra tion of Federal Government to be in urgent need of immediate reform. We do hereby oujoin upon the nominees of this Convention acd of the Democratic Party in each State a zealous effort and co-operation to this end, and do hereby appeal to our fellow-citizens of every former political connection to undertake with us !his first and most pressing patriotic duty of the Democracy of the whole country. We do here affirm our faith in the perma nency of the Federal Union, our devotion to the Constitution of the United States, with its amendments universally accepted as a final settlement of the controversies that engender ed civil war, and do hereby record our stead fast confidence in perpetuity of republican self government; in absolute acquiescence to the will of the majority—the vital principle of republics—in the supremacy of the civil over the military authority; in the total separation of Church and State, for the sake alike of civil and religious freedom; in the equality of all citizens before just laws of their own enact ment; in the liberty of individual conduct un vexed by sumptuary laws in the faithful edu cation of the rising generation, that they may preserve, enjoy and transmit, these best con ditions of human happiness and hope. We behold the noblest products of 100 years of changeful history. But, while upholding the bond of our union and great charter of these our rights, it behooves a free people to prac tice slso that eternal vigilance which is the price of liberty. Keform is necessary to re build and establish in the hearts of the whole people of the Unio -, eleven years ago pappily rescued from the danger of a secession of States, but now to be saved from corrupt cen tralism, which, after inflicting upon ten States the rapacity of carpet bag tyrannies, has honey-combed the offices of the Federal Gov ernment itself with incapacity, waste and fraud, infected States and municipalities with the contagion of misrule, and locked fast the prosperity of an industrious peoplo in the paralysis of Lard timeH. Keform is necessary to establish a sound currency, restore the public credit and main tain the national honor. We denouuce the failure for all these eleven years to make good the promise of the legal tender notes, which are a changing standard of value in the bands of the people, and the nonpayment of which is a disregard of the plighted faith of the nation. We denounce the improvidence which, in eleven years of peace, has taken from the peo plo iu Federal taxes thirteen times the amount i the legal tender notes aud squandered four times this sum iu useless expense without ac cumulating any reserve for their redeinp ion. We denounce the financial imbecility and immorality of that party, which, during elev eu years of peace, has made no advance to ward resumption: that instead, has obstructed resumption by waisting our resources aud ex hausting all our surplus income, and while annually professing to intend a speedy return to specie payments has annually enacted fresh hindrances thereto. As such a hindrance we denounce the re supmtion clause of the act of 1875, aud we hear demand its repeal. We demand a judi cious syste n of preparation by public econo mies, by official retrenchments and by wise finance, which shall enable the nation soon to assure the whole world of its perfect ability and its perfect readiness to meet any of its promises at tbe call of the credit entitled to payment. We believe such a system well de vised and above all entrusted to competent hands for execution, creating at no time an artificial scarcity of currency, and at no time alarming the public mind iutou withdrawal of that vast machinery of credit by which ninety five per cent of all business transactions are reformed A system open, public and inspiring general oontidence, would, from the day of its adoD tion bring healing on its wings to all our harrassed industry and set in motion the wheels of commerce, manufactures and the mechanical arts, restore employment to labor, and renew, in all its national source, the pros perity of the people. Reform is necessary in the sum and mode of Federal taxation to the end that " ' .""iv be sot free from distrust and 1.-'— not Cu dened. - ff-'f We denounce the present Ah . , nearly 4,000 articles, as a vftasterp.9 received 1 tioe, inequality and false pretence. .d.a dwindling not a yearly rising revenue. It has impoverished many industries to subsidies a few. It prohibits imports that might purchase the products of American labor. It has de graded American commerce from the first, to an inferior rank on the high seas. It has cut down the sale of American manufacturers at home and abroad, aud depleted the re: urns 0 f American agriculture, an industry followed by half our people. It costs the people five timos more than it produces to the Treasury, obstructs the processes ol production, and wastes the fruits of labor. It promotes fraud and fosters smuggling, enriches dishonest offi cials and bankrupts honest merchants. We demand that all Custom House taxation shall he for revenue only. Iteform is necessary in the scalo of public expenses, Federal, State or Municipal. Our Federal taxation has swollen from $60,000,- 000, gold, in 18G0, to $140,000,000, currency, in 1870; or, in a decade, from less than $5 per head to more than $lB per head. Since the peace, the people have paid to their tax gatherers more than thrice the sum of the national debt, and more than twice that sum lor the Federal Government aloue. We demand a vigorous frugality in every department and from every officer of the Gov ernment. Iteform is necessary to put a stop to the profligate waste of public lands and their de version from actual settlors, by the party in power, which has squandered 200,000,000 of acres upon railroads alone, and out of more than thrice that aggregate has disposed of less than a sixth directly to the tillers of the soil. Reform is necessary to correct the omissions of the Republican Congress, and the errors of our treaties, and our diplomacy, which have stripped our fellow citizens of foreign birth and kindred race recrossing the Atlantic of the shield of American citizenship, and have exposed our brethron of the Pacific coast to the incursions of a race not sprung from the same great parent stock, and in fact, now by law denied citizen ship through naturalization, as bciug neither accustomed to the traditions of a progressive civilization nor exercised in liberty uuder equal laws. We deuonnee the policy which thus discards the lib erty levins' German, aud tolerates the revival ol the coolie trade iu Mongolian womeu imported for Im moral purposes, aud Mongolian men hired to perform si-r.ile labor coutr.-cts, aud demand such modifica tion of the treaty with the Chinese Empire, or such legislation by Congress within a coustitutioual limita tion os shall prevent the further importation or im migration of the Mongoli n race. Reform is necessary and can never be effected bet by making it the controlling Isbuo of the elections aud lifting it above the two false issues with which the oflioe-holdtug class ana the party in power seek to smother it—the false Issue with w hich they would eukindlo sectional strife iu respect to the public schools, of which the establishment aud support be longs exclusively to the several Statos, and which the Democratic party has cherished f>'om their founda tion, aud resolved to maintain without partiality or preference for any clans, sect or creed, and without comributiou from tko Treasury to any of them; and the false issue by which thev seek to light anew toe dying embers of sectioual hate betwoen kindred pro pies once estranged hut now reunited in cue indivis ible Republic aud a common doctrine. Reform is necessary in the civil service. Experi ence proves that efficient, economical conduct of the Governmental business is not possible if its civil ser vice be subject to change at every election, be . prize tought for at the ballot box, boa brief reward or party zeal, instead of posts of honor assigned for proved competency and held for fidelity iu the public employ; that the dispensing of patronage should neither be a tax upon the time of all our public men nor the instru nient of their ambition. Here, again, professions— falsified in the performance—attest that the party iu power can work out no practical or salutary reform. Reform is necessary even more in the higher grades of the public service. President, Vice President, Judges, Senators, Representatives, Cabinet 1 dicers, these and ad others in authority arc the people’s serv ants. Their offices are uot a private perquisite, they are a public trust. When the annals of the Republic shew the disgrace aud censure of a Vice President a late Speaker of the House of Representatives market lng his rulings as a presiding offler; three Senators profiting secretly by their votes as law-makers; five cfcairmo of the leading committees of the late House of Representatives exposed in jobbery; • late Secre tary of the Treasury foreing balances in the public accounts; a late Attorney General misappropriating tuU(^8 * a Secretary of the Navy enriched or en riching friends by percentages levied off the profits of , contractors with his department; an ambassador to England censured in a dishonorable speculation; the President’s private Secretary barely escaping convic tion upon trial for guilty complicity iu frauds upon the revenue; a Secretary of War impeached for high crimes and confessed misdemeanors, the demonstra tion Is complete, that, the first step in reform must be the people's choice of honest men from another party lost the disease on one political organization infest the body politic, and lest by making no change of men or e 0411 get no change of me sure aud no reform. All these abuses, wrongs and crim s, the product of sixteen years’ ascendency of tho Republic*n party create a necessity for reform confessed by Republi cans themselves, but their refor eers are • oted down in convention and displaced from the Cabinet. The P* rt y’ B tease of honest voters are powerless to resist the 80,uoo officeholders, its leaders and guides. Relorrn cm only be had by a peace-ul civil revolu ”9n * demand a change of system, a change of administration, a chauge of parties, that we may have a change of measures and ot men. SUEIUI 51 FOREIGN PATESSTG GILMORE & CO., fcucceesors to Chipznsn, Hosmer ic Cos., solicitors. Patents procured in all coun tries. No ftes in advance. No charge unless the patent is granted. No fees for making preliminary examina tion*. No additional fees frr obtaining and conduct ing a rehearing. By a recent decision of the Commis sioner a f l rejected applications may be revived. Spe cial attention given to Interference Cases before the Patent Cilice, Extensions before Congress, Infringe ment Suits iu different States, and all liiigation apper taining to Inventions or Patents. .Send stamp to GILMORE k CO., for pamphlet of sixty pages. • Land Cases, Land Warrants and Scrip. Contested Land Cases prosecuted before the United States General Land Office and department of the In terior. Private Land Claims, Mining and Pre-emption Claims, and Homestead Cases attended to. Land Scrip in 40, 80 and 100 acre pieces ‘or sale. This Scrip is assignable, and can be located in the name of the pur chaser upon any Government Land subject to private entry, at $1.25 per acre. It is of equal value with Bounty Land Warrants. Send stamp to GILMORE a: CO. for pamphlet of instruction. Arrears of Pay and Bounty. OFFICERS, SOLDIERS anil SAILORS of the '.ate war, or their heirs, are in many cases entitled to money from the Government of which they have no knowledge. Write full history of service, and state amount of pay and bounty received. Enclose stamp to GILMORE k CO., and a full reply, after examination will be given you free. . Pensions. All Officers, Soldiers and Sailors wounded, ruptured or injured iu the late war, however slightly, can ob tain a pension by addressing GILMORE & CO. Cases prosecuted by GILMORE k CO. before th* Supreme Court of the United States, the Court ot Claims, and the Southern Claims Commission. Each department of our business is conducted iu a separate bureau, under charge of the same experi enced parties employed by the old firm. Prompt attention to all business entrusted to GILMORE & CO. is thus secured. We desire to win success by deserving it. GILMORE k CO., No. 629 F Street, near Patent and Post Off ceo, jan2l-tf Washington, D.S?. A. J. COMER Has on Rand aud is constantly receiving a large as sortment of DRYGOODS, Groceries, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, And Notions, Which he will sell cheap lor cash or country produce, deo 17-if. USE NO OTHER! The Cheapest, The Best! LADD’S ALKALINE FERTILIZER ONLY $35,00 PER TON, and one composted, ac cording to directions finnished with each lot, will make FIVE! Read tho following certificate from one of GeorgiaV best and wisest farmers: Palmetto, a., February 4, i’6 ri e A. C. Ladii, Esq., Atlanta, Ga. Dear Sir: I net in pounds of Ladd’s Alkaline Fertilizer last season B teat; was well please,! w.th tbe result, and am : TJ ' oua of using one or two tona thia aeasou, if I cj if tain It at reasonable ratea, aud will take tho .11 , tor it at thia place if I can obtain it upon the -gput terms. Write me your rates, cash aud crodit, Tut oblige youra, very respectfully, Jr ’ THOMAS J. BULLAUJise For further particulars, apply to A. C. Ladd. i son, or by latter, or call rn Mr. At. Van F- ' g: Eagle office, Ga uesville, Ga., wlio will oral formation desired. ® , p gailop- ‘ established in “ ur 1 „uon the l s aud the 1 The Paper for tlm*; t ““; WYOMING WEHttfSjSSt? Published at Cheyenne, lightly bur- Westeru people and v Republican in politics, * levied upon news, progessive in idea. 1 ‘ Now in the litl. year of masterpiece ot n jUb The oldest and leading uCTrenoe. It yields it May justly be regarded as the ;yeuue. It lias Local newspaper and a most e.. . subsidies a terests and growth of this young tory. Cheyenne being the Hills, the Leader furnishes th.ilack It has do news in relation to that new i, ’ vno first, to Subscription to the daily ediWt- It has cut $2.50 per year. Address, H. mar24-tf Cheyenne, VYYomir'“? a '- lb 1 v -ohirus of Ho ! Real Estate Heitg^ THE UNDERSIGNED, in connection witltsury, and Claim Agency, puiposea to open ; n and the sale or exchange ol Mineral Lauda, Mi; erty, etc. Coi respondent solicited. lieferc J aud required. Commissions small. Oul- Address (with stamp for reply) M. W. RIDEN, Attorney at Z* T. mayl2-3m P. O. Drawer 76. Gainesville' A BARGAIN. * TWO ACRE LOT IN CULTIVATION. Good water. Nico orchard of selected fruits. House has seven rooms and five fire-places. Two minutes walk of street cars. Will be sold LOW DOWN, or exchanged for a small farm. A. M. COCHRAN, julyli-tf Real Estate Agent. " A. M. COGHRAStT G-ainoax7-ille, Gra., REAL ESTATE AND— GENERAL LAID AGENT FOR THE PURCHASE AND SALE OF MINERAL & FARMING LANDS in Hall and other counties of North-east Georgia, Mineral Ores Tested, and Titles Fully Investigated. Special Attention Given to Purchase, Sale anti Kcntiug of CITY PROPERTY. Those who wish to sell property would do well to come and register llio same. Samples of Ores of all Kinds Wanted at my Office. A. 91. COCHRAN. J.IV.DOIISEY, Attorney. mayld HENRY WRIGHT Has opened a First-class Eating- Saloon, IN GAINKBVILLE, ON THE NORTHEAST CORNER . of Lawreneeville aud Main streets, to which place he cordially invites all his white friends, wuen he will politely serve them with Refresh (rente, consist ing of Pouud Cake. Tea Cakes, Lemonade, Ice Cream, Boiled Custard and numerous other dainties, ri tJ *a sonable rates. Cal! and satisfy the inner man. may 5-if J. R. BOONE. A. RUDOLPH, BOONE & RUDOLPH Public Square, Gainesville, G., GENERAL DEALERS IN Staple Dry Goods, GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, HARDWARE, Etc. Uly2li-tf Slimmer Boarders WILL FIND IT TO THEIR ADVANTAGE TO call at the BROWN HOUSE before making permanent arrangements. Rooms large and well ventilated. Table supplied with the best the market affords, and prices reason able. For parfciculaj* address J, C. S. TIMBEKLAKE, Proprietor, julyl*-lm Gainesville, Ga. FR I DAI, OCTOBER 2©t h, ANNOUNCING THE ADVENT OF "The Old Reliable!” „ GAINESVILLE ONE DAY ONLY. ' Armr , ocvxt. 20. THE CENTENNIAL WONDER! “O LD” JOHN R O IM .\S ON’S HOltl.lls IWOMII.V Friday, Ol THERE IS ALSO A GRAND AND STRICTIY MORAL CIRCUS, In which the talent employed is,unequaled, and comprises the highest order of Performers in the land The Pnbhc, and particularly ladiesjchildren and families, are assured that this Department is without a blemish, and nothing is said or done that can offend the most fastidious taste of a retlned or hi'-h-toued community. Among the Illustrious and World-famed Artists in this department are: * Mil. ROBERT STICKNEY, the most daring, finished and graceful Equestrian now living, and the Chamniou Double Somersault Leapcr ol tke World. v MISS EMMA LAKE, the most charming and dashing young Horsewoman in the profession. Her challenge menage act has never been equaled. “ vi J 'Xnn\v , w ,) i , ! Cet J> ed ¥ th sublic, the press and the profession to be the greatest (Mown living. FRAMi DOBBINS, the Peerless Killer, whose reputation is world wide. ” EL NINO EDDIE, the unrivaled aui remarkable Tight-Ropo Performer. HERBERT BROTHERS, the Acrostic Wonders. HAZELLK \ FRANKLIN, the thßOing Trapeze Performers. MISS JENNIE TOURNOCR, the Adel Queen. MISS ROSALINE STICKNEY, MIBK CHRISTINE and six other ladv Riders. JOHN WILSON, the Four-Horse Bare Back Rider. GEORGE SLOMAN, the great English (Robe Performer. NONPAREIL LEWIS, the wondertijl negro boy Bare Back Rider, and twenty other equally well and favor ably known artists. ( 1 * OF l nsurpassed as a Moving Panorama oi Brilliant Chariots, Wagons, Cars. Carriages, Lens, Animals, Haereil Cattle, I wo Bands ol Music, trained Horses, Wild Beasts, Fifty Ponies, Waving Banners, Gorgeous Costumes and A Team of .PonrforoM* Ulephants, Driven m Harness Drawing a Golden Chariot; a team of Egyptian Dromedaries, forty Ponies Drawing the FAIRY CHARIOT, forming a Picture of Bewildering Beauty. TWO PERFORM ANCBB DAIITST. Doors Open ul 1 ami 7 p. in. PeitoiTiiauces an Hour Eater. ADMISSION TO THE BIG SHOW REDUCED TO 50 CENTS ! A few Reserved Cushion Otfe a Chairs can ho secured at the small additional charge of 25 etuis. ja?- Cheap Excursion Kates on ftir Line Railroad from all Stations to Gainesville and Return. See Special Excursion Bills. \ sept22-td V-o;i f '* . JT a ■ rf . ||| ’’Ski *\ J.%% IfciS jp £m M?' V s *™ 01, l 'i ty wSM • i \ |g|E?: r ' ,:E" M r r w f r ■MONG ITS MOST i NRIYALLED s T H b . f CIRCUS, . September n to „ are at ourbltlE, DlllOllg its contributions . office. ' Asia, Africa and J 1 “Remarkable and Friday, October 20,1876. RABUN GAP HIGH SCHOOL, Located iu the Beautiful Valley oi Head of Tennessee, RABUN COUNTY, GEORGIA. W. A. CCTRTIS, Principal. TWO SESSIONS ■A.N’N’TT.ALLY Open on the Third Monday in January and July, -A-3ST 33 CONTINUE TWENTY WEEKS. 0 RATES OF TUITION, PER TERM: BFELLING, READING, \VKITING, and PRIMARY ARITHMETIC $ 6.00 ANALYSIS, PRIMARY GEOGRAPHY, and INTERMEDIATE ARITHMETIC 8.00 ENGLISH GRAMMAR, COMPOSITION, LOGIC and ARITHMETIC.. 10.00 RHETORIC, ADVANCED ARITHMETIC, ADVANCED GEOGRAPHY, ELE MENTARY ALGEBRA and PHYSICAL SCIENCES 12.00 ADVANCED ALGEBRA, GEOMETRY and LANGUAGES 15.00 Contingent Fee, each Student, 50 cbnte. Contingent Feo and ono-lhird of Tuition required in advance, aud balance promptly at close of Session. No Student will be admitted for a less time than tho balance of t’ e Session, from date of entering. No deduction will be made for absence except in cases of protracted sickness, of the student, of not less than two weeks duration. The course of instruction will be thorough and practical, and discipline firm but mild, and such that any student of pure and elevated motives cannot object to. Healthful location, pure salubrious atmosphere, mild climate, and attentive aud devoted teachers, render the school attractive, pleasant and instructive. O Board in Good Families at $5 to $6 per Month. The Board ol Education iu each county of North-east Georgia is respectfully requested'to appoint a deserving young gentleman or lady, over fifteen years of age, of industrious habits ami good moral character who will be received for not less than one year in this school, free of tuition charges, if furnished with a cor. tificate signed by the President aud Secretary of the Board. Address W. A. CURTIS, IIKA OFTKMVESSEE P.(l„ UA. BRAND PRIZE W£/V/YA, /873. WARRANTED F!¥E YEARS! It roquiros e.o Instructions to run it. It oun not rrct cut of order. It will &o every class and kind o£ ■work. It ■will ssy fros** Tissue Paper to Harness Leather. I made fey lAvaaco oi ; ether Sewing Machines in the jnagnitudo cl odTreturned to me. ’royemeats, as a Steam-Car, escolls in achievemeruv; n j at the sum* the old fashioned Stage Coach, ' made'to suit'tit© Hither for Cash or Credit. of I aqents wanted. Address : WILSON SEWING MACHINE CO. SAVEI'TWBNTY-F'IVE DOLLARS. OLBVELAITD, OHIO, CHICAGO, ILL., L’SW TOSH, ST. TANARUS., N2-W OP.LBANS, LA., ST. LCTIS, MO, •J. K. GrAItUINON, TRAVELING AGENT FOR NORTHEAST GEORGIA jan2B-tf I’ostoffice: Jefferson, Ga., or Gainesville, Ga. W. F. HOOKER, GENERAL INSURANCE AGENCY At Gainesville, Ga. EEFRESENTB the following reliable Insurance Companies, aud will take good risks anywhere in Northeast Georgia: Liverpool London and Globe, capita1....528,000,000 Home of New York 6,000,000 Georgia Home 624,000 AUanta 200*000 marj4-ly THE .8 AS. S.EFi'-ESi Double Turbine Water Wheel, # POOLE &KU JTT. Balthiadrc, Sad. HR 7,000 Sow J N VS HI sjjL ji Simple, Strong, Durable, reliable and satis- Portable & fstationaiy Saw & Grist Kills, Kin’ iftg 1 Kachinery, Gearing ah win tw v* I ‘-Ji* Vfhito Toad snd Oil Mill Machinery, Hvoraulic ard other Tresses,&c. Sh-'fl'nir, TuUeys '-nd K-nrre s a specialty. Machi - a made Gcarinsr : accu rate aud of very best finish. Send for Cncciars. The UNEQUALLED JAS. IEFFEL DOUBLE | I sait V/A a a-dfcVj; m iji ii srffadTT^^ Address, POOLE & HUNT. I apr"-ly Hygienic Institute. PI T\ l TVT r\ If y° u would enjoy the most de- I U A \ I lightfal luxury; if you would be I T I I H I V I I B P efldll y cheaply, pleasantly and V-4 X 11111 LJ permanently cured of all Inflamma torj, Nervous, Constitutional and Blood Disorders; if you have Rheu matism, Scrofula, Dyspej sia, Bron chitis, Catarrh,Diarrhoea, Dysentery, ; Piles, Neuralgia, Paralysis, Diseases , of the Kidneys, Genitals or Skin, , Chill and Fever, or other Malar.al Affections; if you would be purified from all Poisons, whether from I Drugs or Disease; if you would have ! Beauty, Hcaith and Long Life, go to Til ! • I ; the Hygienic Institute, and use I lirklS I Na ' u ‘ ,,, ‘ THE TU -KISH BATH, Tta> Water Cure Processes, *’ The ‘’Movement Cure,” I Electricity and other Hygienic | Agents. Womßvfnl AH Utiruble ( ix** *. It flot ablo to go and take Board,: send full account of your case, ami j get directions for TREATMEN ' AT HOME. Terms Reasonable. ml Location,corner Lloyd and Walt Hts , Opposite PaHsenger Depot, Atlanta, Ga. ! .7NO. BTAINBACK WII SON, nov6-3m: Physician in Charge. A MONTH—Agents wanted ev.n where. FhiMlm-bs holioratib; :ui*l tii .-t Claw. Particulars sent free. A.1.1n J ■ WORTH A CO., St. Louis,Mo. j niyfily Caskets and Burial Cases. THE undersigned will keep constantly on hand a supply of CABKETB and liURTAi, CASKS, and will alao supply COFFINS of all ei/.es and descrip tions, at uhort aotlcfc. H. W. RICH, may 187S-tf] Davis su-eet, Gainesville, Ga. THE MORNING NEWS SAVANNAH. GA. i ~ ‘ " rpHE POLITICAL CAMPAIGN of 1870, which iu ; JL eludes National, State and county elections, aud | which will uudobtedly be the most active and hotly j contested of any since the memorable canvass of 1860, |is now fairly opened. The National Democratic party will this year make a bold, vigorous, and doubtless successful struggle for the maintenance and suprem acy of those principles which are vital to the prosper ; ity of the Republic and essential to the well-being of ; the people. j 111 addition to the Presidential election, the people in ; Georgia and Florida will elect new Slate governments. • Iu Florida the campaign promises to be unusually ! vigorous, and there is a probability that for the first ; since the war the people of that Radical-ridden State will electa Democratic State government. In i these campaigns the people of the South are deeply interested; and every intelligent citizen, who has tho welfare of his country *ud his section at heart, should j acquaint himself with every detail of the great work ! of redemption and reform t’.at is now going on. To this end he should subscribe to and assist in circulating the Savannah Morning News, an independaut Democratic newspaper, of pronounced opinions and fearless in their expression; a paper that is recognized everywhere as the best daily in tho South. Its editorial department is vigorous, thought ful, and consistent, while its news and local depart ments are marvels of industry and completeness. Its department of Georgia and Florida affairs i.s uot con fined to a mere barren summary of events transpiring in those States, but is enlivened by comment at ouc apt. timely, aud racy. Tho ample resources of the establishment will be devoted to furnishing the readers of THE MORNING NEWS with the latest intelligence from all parts of the world, through the press dispatches, special tele- Liams, and by means of special correspondence; aud through i hese agencies the paper will be the earliest chronicler of every noteworthy incident of the politi cal campaign of 1876. Subscription. Daily, 3 year *]o <>p “ 6 months 5(0 “ 3 months 260 Tri-Weekly, 1 year “ 6 months 300 “ o months 1 50 Weekly, 1 year 2 00 ** 6 months j 00 “ 3 months 50 Specimen copies sent free on receipt of 6 conts. iiv~ Money can be sent by Pott Office Older, Regis tered Letter, or Express, at our risk. •J. 11. ESTILL, Savannah, Ga. GEORGE PACE & CO., Manufacturers <f PATENT PORTABLE CIRCULAR SAW MILLS, STEAM KX€!IM:S, / No.sN.Schroeder Grist Mills, Leflel’u Turbiue Water Wheels Su r uudLl 4<l ‘"‘ try ° f a " klmlB ' “ nd MENU iOK CATALOGUES, W .V V JB TWENTY-FIVE DOLLARS,