The Jefferson news & farmer. (Louisville, Jefferson County, Ga.) 1871-1875, July 21, 1871, Image 4

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0 OBBIOK2, noBE± : •• L —;s=r=- /Mienikvi i&tik&'ii The Steam Wages AN IRQN GIANT HOW IT GOES THE MASTERPIECE OF LOCOMOTION. From the Corrinne Importer. > Col. Hyde’s grand triumph, the steam wagon or rood locomotive, was all around town to-day. At 11 o’clock it started across the track, bounding over hedges and ditches, then the north-side, wfiere *ir was guided over toward the waler works to drink. Several hundred gallons of Hiram’s tank sufficed to slake the monster's thirst, and away it went again. Wc have described this consolidation of mule, horse and ox teams before but did,not see its capering movements until this morn ing. Why, k appears to- swing around in the road at command of the steering apparatus, easier than a man could turn a wheelbarrow on a matched floor ! This great engine will draw its thirty or forty tons of freight in trailed vans or wagons as readily as it moves unloaded. Mr. Hanscom, builder of the car, acted as pilot to-day, anil surely iiis pride as a mechanic must have been fully satisfied in the wonderful work of the Overland Steamer. It is the king of the road in every way. In twenty feet it turn3 completely a round, going at its speed, stops with the touch of a valve, anti when tie sired to move on, take up its march with a step that ordinary obstruc tions cannot retard. On the next trip of the steamer, this steam wag on is to be taken across the lake by Colonel Hyde, and there put to work hauling ores and freights to urn! from the mines to the landing. We rejoice greatly at its success to day, am! while seated on its steady front, close by Mr. Hanscom, wished the glory of inventing and manufac* luring so useful a machine would sometime be ours. We learn that a company of gen tlemen in this city arc maturing plans for the introduction of one ot theso Thomson Road Engines, to be run between this place and the Sand Hills. We have seen a letter from the agent for the Thomas Company, in New York, stating that Mr. Wad- ley had ordered ten of these extraor dinary engines to be run as auxilia ries to the Central Road, in bringing from the adjacent county cotton and other produce to the main line of his road. One of theso steamers, we also learn, is now in use near the Central Hoad, about 90 miles from Savannah, fTi hauling logs to large saw mills, owned by the Wadley Brothers, of President Wadley. It is also contemplated to pul one of these steamers on the Southwes tern Plank Road, to ply between this place and Louisville. Negotiations are now pending between the parties mid the Southwestern Plank Road Company for the use of their fran chise for this purpose. Monarch Retired ffcmtEnslr.ecs. The following is a list of sover eigns still living who have been de prived of their thrones: Prince Gustave Wasa, of Sweden, ISO 9 ; Count do Chambord, August 12, IS -30 ; Duke Charles, of Brunswick, September 17, IS3O ; Count de Par is, February 24, IS4S ; Duke Rob ert de Parma, 1852; Grand Duke Ferdinand, of Tuscany, ISGO ; Duke Francis, of Modena, 1860 ; Francis 11., ot Naples, February," 18G1 ; the widow of King Olho, ot Greece, October 24 ISG2 ; Duke Adolf, of Nassau, 18G6; King George, of Hanover, 18GG ; the Elector of Hes-e, ISGG ; Empress Charlotte, of Mexico, 1867 ; Isabel la, of Spain, ISG9 ; Emperor Napo leon, 1870. Ice Cream. —This is a luxury ve ry much indulged in, especially in large cities, and has n very injurious influence upon the functions of the stomach. Taken in a frozen condi tion, it lowers the temperature of the stomach and debilitates its ves sels. As soon as it becomes melted and digested, it is a powerful healing material, rapidly increasing the tem perature, not only of the stomach, but the entire body, producing a vi olent reagiion, and heaving the mu cous membrane in a loaded or con gested condition. A New Motor. —Dr. Lamm, of New Orleans is driving stieet ears by anew motor in the shape of liquor ammonia, which a heat of six ty degrees Fahrenheit converts into vapor which is applied like steam to an engine, and afterwards condens ed by being passed into cold water. A French paper published a start ling report that although the Mount Cenis tunnel has been pierced, and locomotives have passed through it, there is still some doubt as to its be ing opened to travel for some time to coine. The trouble is in the ventil ation of the tunnel. The smoke evolved from the locomotive is not driven out. Out of the three en gine-drivers who were employed on the trip through the tunnel, two died of suffocation, and the third was restored to life vritii great difficulty. ' The Age. i»*3ee, the tree is pointed out from J which Andre wa» hung. It is rath er a nopUaeih-aturaiflifu- landscape, «nd“a? YrSfcM memorial helps to break the.monotonous refrain of the “house in which Washington slept." A traveler was under escort of a farmer thereabouts who pointed out die tree. “That’s a famous tree, there." “What is it famous for?" “Idon’t remember exactly, but I be lieve a general was- hang there once.” “What general—-Gen. Washington?" “Yes, that was his name." _ ‘«WJiat did they bang him for ?” “Well, he captured some body, 1 believe; 1 don’t remember exactly.” “Wasn’t it Andre?” "Ay, that was it; they hung him for cap turing Andre. I remember now. Both General Von Moltke and Prince Frederic Charles, the two great commanders t cf the Prussian armies in France, are among the best chess-players in Germany, while Bismark is not only a very in different player, but also gets easily impatient when defeated. A short time ago a very strict young lady in society gave her pho tograph to a devotee! admirer for his locket. Two days afterward her brother found it on the floor of a billiard-room decorated with a pair of mustaches and an immense ci gar, artistically done with a pin. In view of the yatching season all the girls are becoming nauticle to a dogtee unprecedented. Sailor hats and sailor jackets occupy their entire attention ; all sorts of phrases of the ocean, which no sailor outside of a novel ever heard of, are sedulously conned with a view to the astonish ment of the natives; sea songs are being practiced, and general good times anticipatedly talked over.— And by-tlie-bye, ladies’ brandy and red pepper is splendid for sea sick ness. The Viaduct Railroad Company in New York have one hundred and fifty engineers engaged on the sur vey. The road is to run about twenty-five feet above the ground, on brick arches, between traverse iron ribs, supported by heavy iron lateral columns artistically designed, themselves supported on inverted arches of solid masonry built into the ground. All available spaces under the road will be converted in to stores and markets. The only three cities on the globe positively known to contain over 1,000,000 inhabitants are London, Paris, and New York (including Brooklyn), the reported population of Yeddo, Pekin, and other heathen centers having been proved to have been wildly exaggerated. Berlin, St. Petersburg, Naples and Vienna do not differ very widely in popula tion, though the Prussian capital is growing more rapidly than any of the other cities, and is probably the largest by 40,000 to 50,000, 'Flic fence is an American institu tion and habit, and a costly one it is. Illinois is said to have ten limes the fences of Germany, and Duchess county, New York, more than all France. A narrow path serves to divide farms in France, Germany and Holland. In South Carolina the improved land is estimated to be worth $20,000,000, and the fences have cost $ 10,000,000. The annual repair is a tenth of this. A recent calculation places the cost of fences in the. United Stales at $1,300,000,- 000. Nicholas Biddle, thirty years ago, said the Pennsylvania fences had cost $100,000,000. In Ohio they are put at $115,000,000, and in New YorK, at $144,000,000. Some of these days, under the careful til lage of the old world, fences will disappear and boundaries will be marked with fruit and shade trees, or neat hedge rows, and the country will present a much improved ap pearance. Machine for Writing Music. An ingenious French invention is a machine for writing music.— The inventor passes over a metal cylinder, turning regularly by means of a clock movement and communi cating with a battery, a band of pa per impregnated with a solution that will decompose under the influence of an electric current, as in tele graph apparatus according to Cas sell'S and other systems. The clock movement may be put in motion or stopped at will by an electric or mechanical stop or detent. The hand of paper being placed on the cylinder, the inventor places above it a series of metal wires of plates isolated from each other in such a way that as they rest at one point on the paper in a parallel direction to the axis of the cylinder, they each communicate by means of a separate metallic wire w ith a con tact apparatus placed under each of the keys of the keyboard of the in strument. These contact appara tuses are worked by the motion of the key, either by bringing together two wires or metallic plates, or by plunging one point into a jar of mercury communicating with the battery. The circuit is thus closed for each of the wires only when the key corresponding to it is lowered. Patents, keep your word sacred to your children; they will notice a broken promise sooner than any one else, and its effect will be as lasting as life. AH i p One thousand emigrants a-month are pouring into Oregon. j , Gilkxt, the pen-man, began life as a scissors gri nder. " -»*'};■ Beet-root brandy is attracting at tention in England. St. Louis has forty-eight school houses, valued at $1,730,000. Illinois has newspapers called Turkey Wing and QwVs Call. The inventor of the metallic bag gage-check made a fortune of $250,- 000. An enterprising daily paper in Florida pays $1.25 a month for its telegrams. A postmaster by the name of Goodale, when he is in a hurry, signs himself XX. One California grape grower has a vineyard valued at $250,000. It yields annually from $30,000 to 35,- 000 vyorth of grapes. What does a giocei do with near ly all histhings before he sells them ? Gives them a weigh. lowa stands at the foot of the list of whisky manufacturing States, having but one distillery. There were manufactured in the United States last year over half a million sewing machines. The Cincinnati Commercial has about a column a day of betrothals, elopements, marriages divorces and deaths. The University of Kentucky has purchased Ashland, the home of Henry Clay, for ninety thousand dollars. About one hundred passports a day are issued from the State De partment for Americans going to Europe. A Chinaman, in London, owned up to five hundred pipefuls of opi um daily. When a pickpocket pulls at your watch, tell him plainly that you have no time to spare. A Missouri panther, hunted down by a brave party, proved to be a large yellow dog which had got lost. According to the articles of war, it is sure death to stop a cannon-ball. If you would lay in a supply of old wine, be sure to make it out of elderberries. A railroad conductor being asked why they locked the stove, replied that it was “to prevent the fire from going out.” He would be a firsts class man for a New York murder jury. The King of Bavaria has had a garden laid out on the top of the palace at Munich. In the centre of it is a lake, upon which swans are seen swimming. Mr. Stewart’s new hotel for women, at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Thiny-second Street, New York, is rapidly progressing toward comple tion, Two million dollars have been appropriated for it, and anoth er million will be required to com plete it. This is the largest sum ev er given by any one man for any one edifice for benevolent purposes. The editor of a journal published in Antwerp sent a reporter to Brus sels for the King’s speech, and with him a couple of carrier pigeons to takn back the news speedily. At Brussels he gave the pigeons in charge to a waiter and called for breakfast. He was kept waiting some time, but a very delicate fri cassee atoned for the delay. After breakfast he paid his bill and called for his carrier pigeons. “Pigeons!” exclaimed the waiter; “why, you have eaten them.” Niagara is suffering from a cata ract of brides. They are said to arrive by the dozen every day, and add no little to the natural attrac tion of that watering place. Letter writers are trying in vain to account for the anomaly, but agree in as signing it to one of two reasons.— Either Fashion has dictated anew necessity, or else the matrimonial fever is raging without precedent. They speak of the air of “newness” worn by the cooing wanderers as “rapurously bewitching.” Persons contemplating a Northern trip will doubtless note the information. A story is going the rounds of the press that an Alabama planter, sev eral years ago, becoming satisfied that the vitality of the cotton plant was destroyed only by frost, tried an experiment with a single plant.— The second year he picked 800 pounds from it; last year it yielded 1,293 pounds of best cotton, and now it is twenty-five feet high and promises to yield not less than three bales of the staple. There is noth ing incredible about this, any more than there i$ about the true and vo racious history of Jack and the bean stalk. The “Declaration of Independ ence,” one of the finest specimens of literary composition on record, was written by Thomas Jefferson. Immediately after writing it, that original rebel went home and lar rupped one of his niggers because his bools had not been properly blacked. * ■*•»} ' Ume Go4«Bd serve bitifc r;w 1 ..." more“S^Sw!dbe n So«Swe e^ Keep good principles, and they will keep He who spends all his lime in sports, is like one who wears noth ing hut fringes, and eats nothing but success-; - V s Sin, all sio, is fruitless; it blos soms fair but always deceives. “What fruit held ye in those things' whereof ye are now ashamed ?’* The pebbles in our path weary us, and make us foot sore, more than the rocks, which only require a'bold effort to surmount. The road ambition travels is too narrow for friendship, too crooked for love, too rugged for honesty, and too dark for conscience. Any one can drift. But it takes prayer, religious principle, earnest ness of purpose, constant watching to resist the evil of this world—4o druggie.against the tide. If you wish succcess in life, make perseverance your bosom friend, ex perience your elder brother, and hope your guardian genius. It is the great joy of the Gospel— indeed, it is that which "makes it Gospel, that it is for any and every poor sinner who will believe. Enjoy the blessings of this day, if God sends them; and the evils bear patiently and sweetly. For this day only is ours; we are dead to yes terday, and are not born to to-mor row. Few parents like to be told of the faults of a child. The reason is ob vious. All faults are hereditary or educational, and in either case to point the finger at the child, is, indi rectly to reprove the parent. The approaches of sin are like the conduct of Jael; it brings butler in a lordly dish; it bids high for the soul. But when it has been fascin ated, and lulled the victim, the nail and the hammer are behind. You have only a day to spend up on earth; act in such a way that you may spend it in peace. Peace is the fruit of love; for to live in peace, it is necessary to put up with many things. He that lives in perpetual suspi cion, lives the life of a sentinel never relieved, whose business it is to look out for and expect an enemy, which is an evil not very far short of per ishing by him. In the depths of the sea the waters are still; the heaviest grief is that borne in silence; the deepest love flows through the eye and touch; the purest joy is unspeakable; the most impressive preacher at a fu neral is the silent one whose lips are cold. A man who will stab at another’s reputation, by insinuation or inuen do, is far worse than a thief. Goods you may replace, but character once lost is all but irredeemable, and as a great writer has said, a word is enough to ruin a man. True joy is a serene and somber motion; and they are miserably de ceived that take laughing for re joicing; the seat of it is within, and there is no cheerfulness like the res olutions of a brave mind that has fortune under its feet. Let us accept different forms of religion among men, as we acceDt different languages, wherein there is still but one human nature expressed. Every genius has most power in his own language, and every heart in its own religion. It is not always in the most dis tinguished exploits that men’s vir tues or vices may be discerned ; but frequently an action of small note, a short saying or a jest, distinguishes a person’s real character more than fields of carnage, or the greatest bat tles. You cannot repent too soon.— There is no day like to-day. Yes terday is gone; to-morrow is God’s, not your own. And think how sad it will be to have your evidences to seek, when your cause is to be tried; to have your oii to buy, when you should have it to burn. A man who is allowed to grow up with his mind entirely neglected, has inflicted upon him a griev ous wrong. He is cut off from the sweetest and noblest sources of happiness; and even if he is regard ed simply as an agent for the pro duction of wealth, he is made by ig norance comparatively useless and inefficient. When Hannah Moore visited Mrs. Garrick, after the death of her hus band, and expressed surprise at her great composure, the widow an swered, “Groans and complaints are very well for those who are to mourn for a little while ; but a sor row that is to last for life will be neither violent nor romantic. Life in itself is neither good nor evil; it is the scene of good or evil, as you make it; and if you have lived a day, you have seen all; one day is equal, and like to all other days; there is no other light, no oth er shade; this very sun, this moon, these very stars, this very order and revolution tit things is the same your ancestors enjoyed, and that shall al so entertain your posterity. impertfnt gyxgiqio «**<JS***W& ter the day theleVihoSd the stom ach be loaded with either food or drink. A little observation will show the rate to be a good one'both in respect of comfort and health. Let any one who doubts ihia, try the following experiments, each for the six working days of a week of hot weather: ' 1. Every other day eatlargely and drink moderately, and on the alter nate days eat and drink sparingly. 2. Every other day drink largely and eat moderately, and on alter nate days, as before; eat and drink sparingly. 3. Every other day eat and drink largely, and on the alternate days do both sparingly. The result of the experiments Will show that in each case the alternate days when the stomaeh is least burdened the comfort is greatest, and the days when the stomach is loaded with the full meal and the largest amount of drink, the greatest discomfort is ex perienced. “But what shall be done to qnench the thirst in the hot days?” Drink only a Utile at a time. If the water is cold a swallow or two will gener ally prove sufficient. When the sense of thirst returns take another swallow, and so on. Bits of ice kept in the mouth or chewed until they melt are much better than co pious draughts of water. When the sensation of thirst is felt, delay quenching it as long as may be con* veniently done. Try all this and test it for yourselves. A Frbnch Dwarf.— Among the exiles from France which the late disastrous war has driven to our shores, not the least remarkable is a graceful little lady who is now hold ing daily levees in the Burlington Gallery. The Princess Felicie, as her exhibitors have christened her, is a genuine dwarf, a real living Liliputain. She is, perhaps, the smallest female yet exhibited in London, one beside whom Miss Min nie Warren would be almost a giant ess. Like Miss Minnie, the Princess Felicie, is the child of parents of the ordinary statue, who have accom panied her over to England from her native Provence. She is now in her ninth year, measures scarcely nineteen inches in hight and weighs just six pounds. She is of perfect symmetry in limb aud feature, and altogether a pleasing and gentle child. The princess was presented to, and most graciously noticed by the Emperor and Impress of the French a very short time before the commencement of the war.—Lon don News. T3m fatal Honey-Order SyrUm. The value of the money-order system of the Post Office is becoming better ap preciated as the facilities afforded by it become better nnderatood by the people of the country, and its growth has been very rapid since its introduction. On the 8h of November, 1864 the system went into operation, and three cleiks in the Sixth Auditor’s officers were assign ed to duty in the money-order division, to examine and audit the money-order accounts of the Postmaster of offices whioh have been designated money-or der offices. Those three clerks, with out little to do at the beginning, have now increased to forty-seven, and an additional number will soon have to be put on, if the business increases in the ratio of the past, which there is every reason to anticipate will be the case. The number of offices at first desig nated as money-order offices waa 130 : Now there are about 2,700. During the fiscal year ending June £O, 1870 there were 334,000,000 money orders sold. Daring the fiscal year just closed the amount will be shown to have been in excess of fifty million dol lars. For the last two years, under arrange ments with the government of Switzer land, money orders have passed between the two countries, and the system has been found to work so admirably that an agent of the Department has been Sent to London to lay the subject before the British government, and to invite it to consider on additional article to the pos tal treaty now existing between that country and onr own. Should the mission of this agent (Dr. G. P. McDonald, chief of the money order system,) to England be successful, he will proceed to Germany and invite the attention of that government to the subject.— Washington Patriot. Posture of the Head in Sleeping. ft is often a question among peo ple who are not acquainted with anatomy and physiology, whether ly ing with head exalted or on a level with the body is the more unwhole some. Most, consulting their own case on this point, argue] in fa vor of that which they prefer. Now, although many delight in bol stering up their heads at night, and sleep soundly without injury, yet we declare it to be a dangerous habit. The vessels in which the blood pass es from the heart to the bead are al ways lessened in their cavities when the bead is resting in bed higher than the body; therefore, in all dis eases attended with fever the bead should be pretty nearly on a level with the body; and people ought to accustom themselves to sleep thus and avoid danger. Home $ Health. An Indian in Oregon hanged him self for love—that’s civilization, AdYCrtisel>eßlß, .. wary Krises ”«>» «*• .G**** 5 yanfftSin flftiiiiT'?’? ten of minuter* of aU denomination* wilt be might in the literary department without charge For circulars, Ac., addrea* BtV- J. M. CALDWELL, Home, Georgia. Agents WANTED for the a XKANSMISSION OF LIFE. Cornual* on and Hygiene of the Masculine Function. By Dr, Napheys, au thor-ef “The Fhyateal Life of Woman.’ 9 It relate* te the male sexy J* fall of new feet*; delicate but onUpoken; practical and popu lar ; highly endorsed; sell* rapidly. Sold by subscription only. Exclusive territory. Terms liberal. Price f2. Address for contents, Ac., J. G- FERGUS A CO., Publishers, Phila delphia, Pa. Bays and sells improved and unimproved lends anywhere in the United State*. 75 4t. riIHE FREAK COMPOSITION stom£; JL For boose fronts, dock*, piers onlverts. walls, fountains and sill bnitding purposes, harder, more durable, and 100 per eent. cheap er than natural stone. For supply of same, or right of manufacture, for counties or States, apply te OHAS. W. DARLING, Secretary N. Y\ Frear Stone Co-, J,238 Broadway, N. Y. MERCHANTS GARGLING OIL 18 GOOD FOB Burns end Scalds, Rheumatism , Chilblains, Hemorrhoids or Pilot, Sprains and Braises, Sore Hippies, Chapped Hands, Caked Breasts, Flesh Wounds, Fistula, Mange, Frost Bites, Spavins, Sweeney, External Poisons, Scratches, or Grease, Sand Cracks, Btringkalt, Hind galls, Galls of AU Kinds, Foundered Feet, Sitfast, Ringtone, Cracked Heels, PoU evil, Foot Rot in Sheep, Bites of Animate Sfc., Reap in Poultry, Toothache, ifc., I(C., Lame Back, tft., Large Size, $1,00; Medina, BOeq Small, 36c Tbe Gargling Oil has been in use as a Lin iment for thirty eight years. AU we ask is a fair trial, but be sue and follow directions. Ask yonr nearest druggist or dealer in patent medicines, for one of our Almanacs and Vade-Mecums, and read what tbe people say about the Oil. Tbe Gargling Oil is for sale by all respec table dealers thronghont the United Slates end other countries. Onr testimonials date from 1833 to tbe present, and are unsolicited. Use the Gar gling OH, *nd tell your neighbors what good it has dolre. We deal fur and;liberal with all, and defy contradiction. Write for au Almanac oi Cook Book. Kam&ctnnd at Lockport, N, 7. —BY— GARGLING OIL COMPANY, JOHN HODGE, See’v. Ensure an imcome —PermanentTeaay, competent and without risk by an Agen cy for onr Sewing Machines and other useful inventions. Circulars free to respectable par ties, male or female, everywhere. WM. W. DANIELS A CO., Savannah, Georgia. SCHOFIELD’S PATENT COTTON PRESS. Is the simplest and best made. It will suit you. Send for Circular and Prices to SCHO FIELD’S Iron Works, Macon, Georgia. „ Confederate Local Stamps. GP A Four Dollars a piece paid for the local stamps issued by the Confederate Postmasters, excepting the New Orleans and Memphis 2 and 5 cents, New York City. AGENTS! BEAD TOISI WE WILL PAV AGENTS A SAL*. BV OF THIRTY DOLLARS PBS WEEK AND EXPENSES, or allow a large commission to sell onr new and wonderful in ventions. Address M. WAGNER A CO., Marshall, Mich. . 75 4t. dboo/rA MONTH. Horae and Oarriage furnish- Expenses paid. H, Shaw, Alfred, Me. A MILLION DOLLARS. Shrewd but quiet men can make a fortune by revealing the secret of the business to no one. Address WM. WRAY, 688 Broadway, New York. 75 4t. Look to Your Interest! I. A. EVANS & GO. Bartow, Ga*, No. 11, C. JR, R, Keep on hand the LARGEST AND BEST Assortment of Goods, to be found in this Section of Coun*, try. Which will be sold LOW FOB CASH- Ifjsmall Profits and Correct Dealings are properly estimated, This is the Place to Trade. Liberal Prices Given for COTTON, WOOL, HIDES, EGGS AND POULTRY, &c. f & c . Don’t forget to Call on M. A. EVANS & CO* Bartow, Ga. n. May 5,1871. l 3m. Agents Wanted. IN Middle and Southwestern Georgia for Mortimer s ‘Acme Linen Marker,” and Card Printer, a neat and ingenions little instrument for marking all article* of wearing apparel, and for the printing of Business Card* and Envelopes neatly and quickly. Liberal terms given to good canvassers. No hnmbng. Ad dress with (tamp, H.W.J. HAM, 8 General Agent, n May 19, 1871. Lonisvilte, Ga. To Gin Owners! Undersigned Repairs Cotton Gina at srafc"’-*- tst n May 19, 1871 R. R. ft. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF CI«M mb worst pains Xr from ona to Twenty Minutes. MOT ©HE HOUR after reading this advertisement need any one SOFTER WITH PAIN. RMtw*y’s R««4r *«»ef »* • «we f«r every ’ > , rim. - I*was Hie first and is THE ONLY PAIN KEJHEDY that instantly stepa the meat excruciating pains, allays Inflimatioc, and cares Conges tions, whether of the Langs, Stomach, Bow els, or other glands or organa, by one appli cation. In from one to twenty minutes, no matter how violent or excruciating the- pain the Rheumatic, Bed-ridden, lufirm. Crippled, Nervous,Neuralgic, or prostrated with dis asm mat suffer. BADWAV'B BRADY BELIEF Will afford instant ease, Inflammation of the kidneys. Inflammation of the bladder, In flammation of the bowels, Congestion Os the lungs, Bore throat, dificult breathing, Palpi tation of the heart, hysterics, croup, diphtheria catarrh, influenza, headache, toothache, neu ralgia, rheumatism, cold chills, ague chills. The application of the Ready Belief to the part or parte where the pain or difficulty exists will afford ease and comfort. Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will in a few moments enre Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Sick Headache, Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Colic, Wind in the Bowels, and all Internal Pains. Travelers should always carry a bottle of Radway’s Ready Relief with them. A fen drops in water will prevent sickness or pains from change of water. It is better than French Brandy or Bitters a* a stimulant. FEYBB AND AGEE. Fever and Agne cored for fifty cents. There is not a remedial agent in this World that will core Fever and Agne, and all other Malarious, Bilious, Scarlet, Typhoid, Yellow, and other Fevers (aided by Sadway’s Pills) so quick ns Radway’s Ready Relief. Fifty cents a bottle. HEALTH! BEAUTY!! Strong and pnreifch blood—increase of flesh and weight—clear skin and beautiful complexion seonred to ail. DR RAD WAY'S 'SABSAPAMUIAiI RESOLVENT Has made the most astonishing cores so quick so rapid are the changes the body un dergoes, under the influence of this truly wonderful Medicine, that Every day an Increase in Flesh and Weight is Seen and Felt. MB SBB4T BXjOOB M* VltlFlßle Every drop of the Sareaparilian Resolvent communicates through the Blood, Sweat, Urine, and other fluids and jnices of the sys tem the vigor of life, for It repairs the wastes of the body with new and Bond material. Scrof ula, Syphilis, Consumption, Glandular dis ease, Ulcers in the throat. Mouth, Tumors, Nodes in the Glands and other parts of the system, Sore Eyes, Strumorons discharges from the Ears, and tbe worst forms of Skin diseases, Eruptions, Fever Sores, Scald Head, Ring Worm, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas. Acne, Blade Spots. Worms in the Flesh, Tumors, Cancers in tbe Womb, and all weakening and painfnl discharges. Night Sweats, Loss of Sperm and all wastes of the life principle, are within the curative range of this wonder of Modern Chemistry, ana a few days use will prove to any person using it for either of these forma of disease its potent power to care them. If the patient, daily becoming reduced by the wastes and decompositions that is continu ally progressing, succeeds in arresting these wastes, and repairs the same with new mate rial made from healthy blood—and this the Sarsaparillian will and does secure—a cure is certain; for when ones this remedy commen ces its work of (purification, and succeeds in diminishing the loss of wastes, its repairs will be rapid, and every day the patient will feel himself growing better and stronger, the food and gesting better, appetite improving, aud flesh and weight increasing. Hot only dops the Sarsaparillian Resolvent excels all known remedial agents in the cure of Chronic, Scrofulous, Constitutional, and Skin diseases; but it is the only positive cure for Kidney and Bladder Complaints, Urinary, and Womb diseases, Gravel. Diabetes, Dropsy, Stoppage of Water, Incontinence of Urine, Bright’s Disease, Albuminuria, and in all ca ses where there are brick-dn9t deposits, or the water is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances like the white of an egg, or threads like white silk, or there is a morbid, dark billious ap pearance. and white bone-dust deposits, and when there is a pricking, burning sensation when passing water, and pain in the Small of the Back and along the Loins. perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet gum, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse, and strengthen. Radway’a Pills, for the cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous' Diseases, Head ache, Constipation, Oostiveneas, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Biliiousness, Bilious Fever, In flammation of the Bowels, Piles, and all De rangement* of the Internal Viscera. War ranted to effect a positive cure. Purely Veg etable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs. Observe* the following symptoms resulting from Disorders of the Digestive Organs: Constipation, Inward Piles, Fullness of the Blood in the Head, Acidity cf the .Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullness or Weight in the fltomache, Soar Eructations, Sinking or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stom a<*. Swimming of the Head, Hurried and Difficult Breathing. A few doses of Radway’s Pills will free the system from all the above named disorders. Price, 25 cents per Box. Sold by Druggists. Bead “False and True.” Send one letter stamp to Rad way & Cos., No 87 Maiden Lane, New York. Information worth thousands will be sent yon. r Jnly 4 1671. 2 61 y. Carriage Manufactory. riIHE UNDERSIGNED takes pleasure in informing the citizens of Jefferson and adjoining counties, that I have opened a Buggy, Wagon —AND PLOW MANUFACTORY, where work of all descriptions, both new and repairing, will be done with neatness and dis patch. the celebrated ***”* manufacturer of Ham Universal Plow, a specimen of which may be seen at the shop at all times. Plows of all descriptions made and repaired upon short notice. The celebrated DICKSON SWEEP fhrmshed on demand. • vv* SHOEING done in the neatest and most substantial manner. Ooflas rnrnisied at Short notice. GIVE ME A CALL. O. H. HARRELL, ' H»r s. 1871.