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Louisville, G-a:
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1872
Current Sensations.
1. Jim Fisk, deceased, is still the
great sensation in the North cast. Re
ligious papers, and others not so reli
gions, have dissected him and his ras
calities into intolerable hash. Ilia
shanralestf •‘lore-letters” are a sweet
morsel under the tongue of Yankee-do,q
--' die, who is greatly concerned with the
weight of Fisk’s brain and the matrimo
nial destiny of his widow.
2. Baltimore has a first class sensa
tion too, doubtless to the great profit of
the newsboys of the middle cities. Gen.
Ketchum died there suddenly, and his
physician, opening his stomach, found
what he supposed to be antimony and
the cause of Ketcbum’s death. Mrs.
Wharton was indicted for poisoning
him and her trial has kept Baltimore all
agog for a week or two, ladies even
thronging the Court-room. The con
troversy between the lawyers and doc
tori waxed so hot that the defendant
was well-nigh forgot in the melee. The
chief point of interest and issue is,
whether Gen. Ketchum died of antimo
ny, or of cerebro-spinal meningitis ?
Kind reader, we cannot tell you.
3. Away down in South-west, two
factions of Louisiana radical rogues still
strive for the privilege of stealing the
unstoleu balance. Each claims to be
the Legislature of that State, whilst the
people of the State, regarding both as
interloper* aud enemies, arc interested
only as they may gauge the compara
tive thieving capacity of the belligerents.
Grant refuses to take a hand, wherefrom
we infer that the unstolen balance is
infinitessimal. Later reports say that
the Warmouth faction has surrendered
to the Democrats, which betokens a bet
ter future for Louisiana.
4. The Russiau Secretary has writ
ten a “hard saying’’ to Minister Cur
tin, respecting Grant's Government, in
its dealings with Catacazy. But it
aeems not to be hard enough to impress
Iliram’s stolidity. Should some news
paper reader call his attention to it, per
haps he may anticipate a present to
•oothe his wounded honor. A cigar
will suffice, we suspect, or a curry-comb.
5. Mexico still pegs away, cultivating
anarchy; The revolution, that Legun in
1810, has not yet come to a head. Pet
ty factions still strive for the mastery, or
plunder. Dr. Grant may proscribe phle
botomizing and “furnish tbo medicine.”
He doesn’t lack counsellors, who urge
that course, certainly.
6 The Spaniards, in Cuban waters,
fired into the steamer .Florida. Grant
has forwarded some of his Monitors to
Cuba on account of the outrage. War
with Spain may be the result and seems
not to be wholly undesired by the Span
ish Court. Whether they wish to lose
the Island, or are merely moved by the
spirit of La Mancha’s Kuight, deponent
saith not. Qutm Deus vult perderc, jrrius
dement at.
The New Regime.
The Grand Inauguration Ball.at At
lanta was a most well-timed affair. The
rejoicing at the Capital is a true expres
sion of the heart-felt satisfaction, reign
ing through all the borders of this noble
old Commonwealth.. Whilst our sister
Southern States, some of them, through
the wretehed policy of concession aud
compromise, have invited further ag
gression and sunk into a slavery, the
worse from being partially voluntary.
Georgia has submitted, with ever re
newed protest, to the wrongs she could
not escape, aud now at last, her persist
ent fidelity is rewarded with a substan
tial victory. Well may she rejoice, for
her success is her own achievement.
Oppressed with poverty, with the mud
sills of her social fabric still unsettled
from their late upheaval, the sun of
hope, at last, has risen again, upon her
horizon, with clear, effulgent light. Her
Telemonian prayer, at length, is an
swered —
“Dispel this gloom, the light of Heaven re
store, ,
Grant me to see, sad Ajax asks no more.”
Her destinies are in the keeping of
her ehildreD again. Here alone, in all
thia bread South land, is restored the
ancient Constitutional status, in its spir
it. And tbis is but the beginning of
the and. Under the guidance of her
old motto, "Wisdom, Justice, Modera
tion,” a splendid future lies out before
her. May we not hope, that her strick
en Confederates, taking heart from her
suecess, may quickly shake off their fet
ters and achieve a like deliverance ?
Heaven grant it be so. Amen !
Confirmations.
The Senate nnanimously confirmed
Hon. Hiram Warner, as Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court. S. W. Hitch, of
Pieree county, was confirmed Solicitor
of the Brunswick Circuit, and J. T.
Fiewellcn, Solicitor Pataula Circuit.
The following nominations were also
confirmed : Twiggs, Judge of the Mid
dle Circuit; J. T. Glenn, Solicitor of the
Atlanta Circuit: Davenport Jackson,
Solicitor of the Augusta Circuit; Sam
uel P. Lumpkin, Solicitor of the North
ern Circuit; J. C; Rutherford, Solicitor
of the Albany Circuit; A. C. Pates,
Jijlge of the Oconee Circuit; Rollin
Stanley, Solicitor ol thcPconce Circuit;
C. S. Crisp, Solicitor of tl.o Southwest
ern Circuit.
P. W. Alexander, J. B. Campbell,
and J. W. Warren, have received their
appointments as Secretaries to bis Ex
cellency Governor Smith.
The death of Maj“r.General Hallcck
rcdnccs the number of major generals in
the army to three. This is the number
which the law of 1870, consolidating the
army, requirod that it should be reduced
to before any vacancies should be filled
by mqqi(Biou> The military division ol
tnc South will he abolished in conse
quence of the death of Gcnoral Hallcck,
but the two departments which now con
stitute it—that of the South, under Gen
eral Terry, and that of the Gulf, under
Genera! Emery—will remain as separate
commands.
Salmon P. Chase, as Secretary of the
Treasury, was the author of tbo green
backs, aud through his influence they
were made legal tenders for the payment
of all debts. Salmon P. Chase, Chief
Justice, maintained, in n late decision of
the Supreme Court, that the legal ten
der act was unconstitutional, and that
Congress had no right to pass such a
statute. It is only necessary to say that
the Mr. Chase who occupied the two po
sitions was tho same man, and that as
Chief Justice lie disagrees with himsel
as Secretary of the Treasury.— Cincin
nali Enquirer,
“Protecting American Labor. ” —Last
wcok, in the House of Representatives,
the subject of tha entire ruin of the ship
building interest in the United States
being up, Mr. James Brooks, of New
York charged this as the clear result of
the enormous protective duties levied on
ship-building materials, by which the
cost of ship-building in this country had
been doubled, and ns, under our laws, a
foreign-built ship cannot sail under the
United States flag, it might be said that
the protective tariff had banished ship
building from tho land, and the “old flag”
from the ocean.
Upon this Kelly sot up tho customary
plea that iron had bauislied wooden
ships from use for purposes of either war
or commerce, and it was evident that
competition with the Clyde ship build
ers was impossible unless upon the re
duction of the wages of American labor
to the Scotch standard ; and he then de
manded a categorical answer from Mr.
Brooks, whether lie favored such a reduc
tion 1 Upon this, Mr. Brooks pulled out
documents proving that large numbers
of American ship-wiights had been ship
ped from Now York and Connecticut to
the Clyde, and had found satisfactory
wages as employers in the construction
of those same Clyde built ships. So
that the protective tariff kills the busi
ness iu America and expatriates the
workmen to foreign lands. —Macon Tel
egraph.
The Blackshear Georgian says : Wo
arc informed that a cold blooded mur
der was committed at the Cold Rain
Mills, near Centro Village, in this State,
on the fifth of January upon a man nam
ed Alphcd Forson. An inquest was
held upon tho body of the deceased,
and the verdict of the jury was that lie
came to his death by a ball fired from
an Enfield rifle, discharged by a man
cailiug himself William Prentice. It
appears that the parties were drinking
together the night before tho murder,
during which an altercatiou occurred,
and deceased knocked Prentice down
two or three times, after which Prentice
left the place; hut returned next morn
ing and went into tho house where For
son was lying asleep upon a cot.
He then took up an Enfield rifle, which
was in the house, and discharged it at
Forrou’s head, tho ball entering about
the crown of the head, causing instant
death. Tho murdoier, up to this time,
is still at large, It is supposed he will
try to make his way North. Both par
ties are Northern men.
Illiterates in the United States. —Tho
United States Commission of Education,
General John Eaton, Jr., in his annual
report, has prepared from advance sheets
of the census a variety of statistics of il
literacy. A table giving the nativity of
illiterates in tho United States iu 1870
shows that there is au aggregate of 777,-
SGI foreign illiterates, of whom 665,985
are in the Northern States, 30,490 in the
Pacific States and Territories, and 72,-
383 in the Southern States ; that there
is an aggregate of 4,552,210 native illit
erates, of whom G 91,117 are iu the North
eru States, 74,601 in the Pacific States
and Territories, and 4,117,589 in the
Southern States ; making a grand total
of 5.CC0,074 illiterates in tho entire
country.
A second table shows that of every
10,000 inhabitants in the whole Union
tbero are 8,711 whites, 1,266 colored,
16 Chinese, and 7 Indians, tho colored
race being in excess only in the States
of Louisiana (2,245), South Carolina
(125,147,) and Mississippi (61,305). A
table showing the illiteracy of the white
race and colored race gives a total of
2,579,543 of the former, and 2,768,991
of the latter. The aggreg; te adult illit
eracy of both sexes is 3,637,429, of
whom 2,489, 591 are iu the Southern
States, Tho aggregate of minor illiter
ates between 10 and 15 years is 2,006,
112, of w hom 1,695,144 are in the South
ern States, North Carolina having tho
largest number—222,ls9. Os the North
ern Statea, of minor illiterates Ohio has
the largest number—l7,6s4.
[These illiterates iu tho South are of
course nogrocs principally.J
Gerrit Smith is iu his seventy-fifth
year, and his memory is so perfect that
he can repeat most of the Psalms and
many other pans of the Bible. His do
mestic as well as public life has been of
a felicitous nature, and the bride whom
he wedded a half century ago is-the
companion and helpmeet of his latter
days. His form is still erect, bnt his
once raven locks are silvered, and those
who see him now can form but an im
perfect idea of the great pillar of the
anti slavery cause as he appeared on the
platform about thirty years ago.
It is not perhaps generally known that
what is now a favorite summer resort
for citizens of Now York, was once sold
for a barrel of cider. Yet it is a fact,
that in 1670, tho tract of country, in j
eluding what now are Long Branch,
Shrewbury and Eatcntowu, was in the
possession of tbo Indiana, but was pur*
cb ased of them by one Lewis Morris for
that consideration. Millions could not
purchase the land now.
Kimball and Bullock Running their
programme. —We are informed that a
bout one-half million ol the bonds of the
Bainbridgc and Cuthbert Railroad Com
pany , another of II I. Kimball’s enter
prises, have been issued and received
the State indoricmcnt by Bullock, aud
sold by lvimhall, before a single mile of
the road is completed!
It is no wonder that both these wor
thies are out of reach and out of hear
ing-
Georgia, undoubtedly the most enter
prising of all the Southern States, is
now moving in behalf of a stupendous
project, which, if carried out, will mate
rially affect the commerce of the Missis
sippi River. Tho proposition is to con
struct a canal from St. Louis to Savan
nah, mainly for the transportation of
grain—a route dial would be 300 miles
less to the sea than that of the Mississip
pi iiver. It is estimated that tho cost
of this enterpiisc will not exceed $lO,-
000,000—a mere trifle iu comparison
with the new trade that it would divert
to Georgia.— N. Y. Empress.
Resignation of Governor Vance.—
A special dispatch to the Wilmington
Journal announces that Governor Vance,
of North Carolina, has resigned the Uni
ted States Senatorsliip, to which he was
elected by the Legislature of that State,
but from which he was excluded by tho
reconstruction acts of Congress. ’The
election for his successor will take place
on Tuesday, the 30th instant, the day
preceding the adjournment of the pres
ent Legislature. The Journal says
there are somo complications connected
with this matter, but the editor is of the
opinion that should the Legislature se
lect some gentleman not under disqual
ification, he will be admitted to bis scat.
As the preference of the Radical major
ity in Congress, and not the wishes of
the people represented, are to be con
sulted, would it not be well to ascertain
before going into the mockery of another
election who would he acceptable te the
Washington junta.
The Constitution, of Sunday, says :
Reform. —We learn that the Board of
Commissioners of the village of Stone
Mountain, have placed the tax for li
cense to retail liquors at SIOO per an
num--nn license to he granted for a less
period than six months. Several bar
rooms have closed up in consequence.
The town council of Decatur, have
placed the licence tax at $250, and will
not grant a license for less than twelve
months.
Tho editor of tha same paper wiites
as follows from Dalton:
The State Road is doing a heavy bus
iness. Jt runs from two to three hun
dred freight cars daily. Very little of
the business is from the North. It is
almost exclusively from the West, and
consists of provisions. One can realize
how largely we draw our supplies from
the West, how dependent woof the
South are. The State Road is in fine
order, and apparently well managed.
Capital and labor have still many uu
oeupied fields in California. The State
has imported in nine-months more than
17,000 packages of cheese; SO.OOO ca
se- of boots; 161,000 boxes of candles;
9,000 firkins of butter; 4,000,000 or
anges ; 45,000,000 pounds of sugar;
thousands of barrels ol whiskey, and even
wine, raisins and hops in largo quanti
ties. Yet all the articles mentioned can
be produced there
in the eruption of Vesuvius, A. I).,
79. the scoria and ashes vomited forth,
far exceeded tho cnliro bulk of the
mountain ; while in 1660, /Etna dis
gorged more than twenty times its own
mass, Vesuvius has sent its ashes ns far
as Constantinople, Syria and Egypt. It
hurled stones, eight pounds weight, to
Pompeii, a distance of six miles, while
simflar masses wore tossed up 2,000 feet
above its summit. Cotopaxi has pro
jeeted a block, 109 cubic yards in vol
ume, a distance of nino miles ; and
Sambawa, ISIS, during tho most terri
ble eruption on record, sent its ashes as
far as Java, a distance of 300 miles of
surface ; and out of a population of 12,-
000 souls, only twenty escaped.
The Freedmen’s Bureau is going at
last to die eut like a tallow candle
with a bad smell. Gen. 0. O. Howard
and his man Friday, Gen. Bulloch,
"Chief Distributing Officer,” havo been
making somo improper dietiibutions, as
per example, distributing into their own
pockets the interest of funds of the
Bureau on hand. 'The World says Gen.
Oily O. Howard “is a snivelling, canting
swindler, and every remaining hour of
his life ought to bo spent at hard labor
in the Albany Penitentiary.” That is
hard on Oily—such a benevolent man,
yon know—so overflowing with a melt
ing tenderness for the suffering negro—
so majestically polite and reverential to
Cornfield Africanus, whom Oily used to
get together in vast crowds, and ad
dress as “Ladies and Gentlemen ! The
first thing you should understand is that
you arc ladies and gentlemen, and be
careful to exact from tho rebel whites
the respect due to your stations,’’— Ma~
on Telegraph.
Mrs. Stokes, says the New York Ex
press, a good and beautiful lady, is on
her way home from Europe, and will he
here in a few days. She lias had no
inkling of the dreadful tidings which
will greet her on landing in her own na
tive city, and the meeting which will
take place between the husband, who
has placed himself under tho ban of the
law, aud the loving, confiding, and be
trayed wife, can be imagined better than
described.
An exceange says; "One of the
prettiest sights the human eye ever
rested upon is gold in its liquid
slate.” Whereupon another sug
gests that “the human eye in this
vicinity would he satisfied if it could
see any of the metal in its solid
state.”
ITEMS.
One society in London issued 389,500
hibles iu 1870.
There arc 1.902 deaf, dumb, bliud and
insane persons iu New Jersey.
The bullion production of the United
States amounts to $90,000,000 a year.
Auburn, Maine, manufactures 2 000,-
000 pairs of shoes per anuui.
A corn cob in the shape of a human
hand is a novelty at Columbia, Teun.
The Batavia, N. Y., Cheese Factory,
now uses about 4,500 pounds of milk per
day.
Forty thousand sheep perished by the
recent sand storm in Los Angeles coun
ty, Cal.
Oranges and lemons are worth from
six to eight cents a bushel in tbs Bra
zilian market.
The German manufacturers now mako
paper table-cloths, which look exactly
like linen ones.
There were manufactured in the Uni
ted States last year over a half million
sewing machines.
Piauo making at present takes the
third rank among the manufacturing in
terests of the United States.
A baker has invented anew kind of
yeast. It makes bread so light that a
pound of it only weighs twelve ounces.
The French Academy of science has
offered a prize of 100,000 francs for an
efficient remedy against cholera.
A citizen of Connecticut was lately
canght with thirteen umbrellas which lie
had stolen and laid away for a rainy
day.
Gen. Gorluff ,of the Russian army, has
invented a mitrailleuse, which fires 300
to 400 rounds per minute, the range ex
tending to 4,000 acres.
Georgia increased more last year in
the valuo of its property, than iD any
previous year in its history. The in
crease is estimated at $20,000,00(3.
Coats of arms came iu vogue in the
reign of Richard 1. of England, and be
came hereditary iu families about the
year 1192. They took their rise from
tho knights painting their banners with
different figures, tu distinguish them in
the crusade.
'J he Sultau of Turkey is said to re
ceive $48,000,000 a year; his Grand Vi
zier gets $65,000 annually, and his
Ministers from $41,006 to $50,000 each
a year.
Does it pay to keep hens? Mr, Gran
ville Barnard, of Woburn, answers the
question by stating that his profit on
100 heus aud 75 chickena, was $413.23;
the best statement of tho kind we hare
ever sccu.
Wiliam A. Johnson, of Austin, Cali
fornia, insane from grief, shot himself
dead when his wife was placed in her
coffin.
Margaret Sanders gets $5,000 for the
loss of her husband by the Westfield
disaster from the Staten Island Ferry
Company. The jury regrettod their le
gal inability to give her more.
Mrs. Wharton, tried for the charge of
poisoning Geu. Ketchum, has been ac
quitted.
A mineralogist of San Francisco,
claims to have discovered a process for
combining iron and copper, producing
a compound harder than iron, and a
compauy is forming to test tho process.
Resolutions offered by Mr. Hall, of
Merriwether, requesting Congress to
pass general amnesty, wero passed with
but a single dissenting voice, that of
Peter O’Neal, colored.
Peter O’Neal offered a resolution that
when tho General Assembly adjourn it
adjourn to meet at Millcdgeville.
A Scotchman named Hay, has paten
ted a process for making paper out of
oak-husks.
It is said that Governor Scott, of South
Carolina, who was once a cooper and af
terwards a quack doctor, is now worth
$6,000,000 all of which he has made
since the war by au honest, energetic
straightforward prosecution of the exal
ted profession of carpet-baggery.—Lou
isville Courier.
A horse-thief residing in Limestone
county, Ala., named Geo. Carpenter, was
arrested a few days since. He confess
es that he is a member of a clan of horse
j thieves which exist in Kentucky, and
'extends its operations into Tennessee,
Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi.—
William Campbell Mclntosh, of the
same clan, has also been captured.
Southern Musical Journal. —The
January number of this valuable month
ly is filled to the brim with good things,
and is oven better than preceding num
bers. We must congratulate the go
ahead publishers of the Journal, upon
their deserved success, and extend our
best wishes for its future prosperity and
long life. Elegantly gotten up : taste
fully printed ; and most ably edited, it
rauks among the-few really, valuable
musical periodicals published, and must
rapidly win its way into every household.
It is thoroughly identified with the mu
sical interests of the South, and we trust
every Southern lady or gentleman inter
ested in music, will show their apprecia
tion of the enterprise by subscribing at
once. The cost is so small, (only one
dollar a year,) that every one can easily
afford it, and it ia richly worth four times
that money. Over ten dollars worth of
beautiful new music is given during the
year. No family interested in music
can afford to bo without it. Sample
copies sent free to any address. Splen
did premiums for clubs. rpn It.
To those who art Bowed Down by ner
vous Debility, and despair of ever re
covering the vigor aud mien of manhood
we earnestly recommend Dr. Walker’s
California Vinegar Bitters. Before
they have finished tho first bottle, they
will feel the restorative principle at work
in every portion of their brokcn«down
systems and hope will spring up in their
hearts. No case of Dyspepsia Bilious
ness, Intermittent Fever, Rheumatism,
Gout or kidney disease, can resist this
unequalled vegetable touic which is un
polluted by auy distilled or fermented
liquor, Jan 2 4t rpn
SPECIAL NOTICES.
A BODY AND HIND DISEASE.
Such is dyspepsia. The stomach and the
brain are too intimately allied for the one to
suffer without the other, so that dyspepsia and
despondency are inseparable. It may be addt
ed, too, that irritation ot the stomach is almost
invariably accompanied by irritation of the
temper.
The invigorating and tranquilizing opera
tion of llostetter’s Bitters is most powerfully
developed in cases of indigestion. The first
effect of this agreeable tonic is comforting and
encouraging. A mild glow pervades the sys
tem, the chronic'uneasiness in the region of
the stomach is lessened, and the nervous rest
lessness which characterises the disease is
abated. This improvement is not transient. —
It is not succeeded by the return of the old
symptoms with superadded force, as is always
the case when unraedieated stimulants are giv
en for the complaint. Each dose seems to
impart a permanent accession of healthful in
vigorntio.n But this is not all. The aparient
and anti-billious properties of the preparation
are scarcely secondary in importance to its ton
ic virtues. If there is an overflow of bile, the
secretion is soon brought wiihin proper limits,
and it tho bilary organ is inert and torpid it is
toned and regulated. The effect upon the d:s
chaiging organs is equally salutary, and in ca
ses of constipation the cathartic action is just
sufficient to produce the desired result gradu
al ly and without pain. The Bitters also pro
mote healthy evaporation from the surface,
which is particularly desirable at this season
when sudden spells of raw, unpleasant weath
er aro apt to check the natural perspiration and
produce congestion of the liver, coughs, and
colds. The test safeguard against all disease s
is bodily rigor, and this the great Vegetable
Restorative especially promotes. rpn lm.
PENETRATING to thesource of the disease
In i he secretions and the circulation regulating
every orgau and bracing every nerve and fibre
of the body, Dr. IValker's Vegetable Vinegar
Bitters, are effecting the most astonishing
cu res of indigestion, biliousness, nervous weak
ness, rliematism, scrofulous disorders, and
ahronic consumption, that the world has ever
witnessed.
MAGIC OF THE MOUTll—Odiferons Boz
odont, renders the mouth enchanting, com
posed of rare antiseptic herbs, it imparts white
ness to the teeth, a delicious flower like aroma
to thebroath, audprosorves intact, from youth
to age, the teeth.
“WHO WILL SUFFER?”—It is now
twenty lour years since DR. TOBIAS’
Venetian Liniment was put before the
public, warranting it to cure chronic rhema»
tism, headache, cuts, burns, bruises, old sores,
pains in the limbs, back and ebest; and it has
never failed. Sold by Druggists. Depot 10
Park Place, New York.
THE HUMAN HAIR —Burnett’s Cocoaine,
a compound of Cocoa-nut Oil, etc., is nurival
ed as a dressing for the hair. For sale by all
Druggis’s.
PRATT’S ASTRAL OIL—Not the Cheap
est, bot Safest and Best Illuminating Oil for
family use ever made. Burns in the ordinary
kerosene lamp. Does not take fire, nor explode
if the lamp is upset and broken. Send for
Circular, Oil House of Charles Pratt establish
ed 1770, Now York.
lIISLEY S LINIMENT—Of Armies, Hops,
Carbolie Acid, acts as a universal exteraal cure
all, acting on the nerves connected with the
skin. It promptly relieves Neuralgia Pains
C.eanses and cures old sores and ulcers, flesh,
wounds, burns, bruises, sprains, tc. Sold eve
rywhere at 50 cents. Morgan & Risley, Whole
s do Druggists,New York, General Agents.
LAIRDS’BLOOM OF YOUTH —A most
delightful toilet prepared for beautifying the
skin, has been established over ten years : du
ring that timo over oie million ladies have
used it; in every instance it has given entire
satisfaction; it removes all imperfections, tans,
freckles and sunburns, giving the skin a youth
ful appearance. Sold at all Druggists and Fan
cy Goods Stores, Depot 5 Gold Street, New
York.
THANKS TO THE TIMELY DISCOVERY
of Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup, the hearts
of many parents have been made glad by wit
nessing the beneficial effects, which this reme
dy nver fails to produce during the critical
period of teething.
CARBOLIC SALVE—Nothing like it ever
known before. Cures cuts, burns, sores,
wounds, Ac., like magic. Physicians speak
of it in terms of the highest praise. Price 25
cents per box. John F. Henry, Sole Proprietor
8 College place New York.
PHYSICIANS who have prescribed Srap>.
nia or Pnritied Opium use no other form of
Opium in their practiee.
CRISTADORO’S HAIR DYE.—If all his
hairs were lives, Othello said, “my great re
venge hath stomach for thorn nil.’’ But hair
that’s gray or sandy, white or red, the ladies
have no stomach for at all. Use Cristadoro’s
Dye and tho evil is remedied- Manufactory, (18
Maiden Lane, New York.
THE PUREST and Sweetest Cod Liver Oil
in the world is Hazard & Caswell’s made on
the Seashore, from fresh, selected livers, by
Caswell, Hazard A Cos., New York. It is abso
iutely pure and swept. Patients who hare
once taken prefer it to all others. Physicians
have decided it superior to any of the other
oils in the market,
JOUVINS Indorous Kid Glove Cleaner re
stores soiled gloves equal to new. For sale by
Druggists and Faney Goods Dealers. Price 25
cents per bottle. F. C. Wells & Cos., New York.
Dee Isti pan lm.
We know that for cleaning paint, windows
china and glassware,; for polishing knives,
tin, iron brass and copper wares, and for re
moving stains from marble and porcelain, and
rust from machinery, Enoch Morgan’s Sons
Nil If ADVBR TISEHENT.
A. G-r©a,t Offer.
Only S3 for sll in Value!
Or, For $4 00, SIS 00 in Value !!
Or, for $5 00, $26 00 in Value ! !!
The beautiful and artistic Chromo/’lsn’t She
Pretty f" highly finished, mounted, and var
nished. Size, 13x17 (after Lillie M. Spencer,
retail price. SB, will be sent by mail, securely
done up, post-free, as a premium to every $3
yearly subscriber to Dimorest’s Monthly,
acknowledged the most beautiful and useful
Parlor Magazine in America, “Isn’t She Pre
tty ?” is a beautiful Chromo and splendid Par
lor Picture, and a valuable work of art.—
Worth more than Double theeo.t of Subscrip
tion, and, together with Demorest’s Monthly
affords an opportunity for the investment of
$3 such as may never occur again; or, in
place of “Isn’t She Pretty 7” for $1 additional.
Hiawatha’s Wooing (after Jerome Thompson)
size 15x25, price, sls, will be sent post-free ;
or both Chromos and Demoresl’s Monthly, for
$5. Hiawatha's Wooing is an equally splen
did work of art, a large and beautiful Chromo,
and worth four times the price charged. Hus
bands, fathers, brothers, and lovers, do not
fail to subscribe for Demorest's Magazine, and
present it with a beautiful Chromo. It will
make eyes sparkle with delight snd satisfae
and prove a monthly reminder of your good
taste and kind feelings. Addross W. Jennings
Demorest, 838 Broadway, New York. Copies
of the latest nnmbers of the Msgazine2s cents,
post-free. jan23-lw r p n r
? I A HE fiirst edition of two hundred thousand
l copies, just published. It is elegantly
printed on tine tinted paper, in two colors,
and illustrated with over ThreeJHnndred En
gravings of Flowers, Plants and Vegetables,
and
Two Colored Plates.
The most beautiful and instructive Catalogue
and Floral Guide in the world; 112 pages,
giving thorough directions for the culture of
flowers and vegetables, ornamenting grounds,
making walks, Ac.
A Christmas present for my customers, but
forwarded to any who apply by mail for Ten
Cents, only one quarter the cost Address,
JAMES VICK,
janiJMt r P & » Rochi (Ur, N, If,
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
JSTew Goods for IST®
AT
The One Price House !
H. L. A. BALK,
172 Broad Slreet, AUGUSTA, GA.
Great Bargains in Dress Goods !
Great Bargains in Jeans and Woolens !
Great Bargains in Cassuneres and Flannels !
Great Bargains in Linsey Woolsey, Bed Tick, t^o.!
Great Bargains in Ladies Trimmed Hats !
H. L. A. BALK Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
DRY GOODS , 172 Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia.
The One [Price House!
1 ** the latest styles of DRESS GOODS, which were carefully selected by
me, tor this Market, at prices so low as to enable ine to defy competition.'
Beginning with ; Plaids at 15 cents ; DeLaines at 20 cents; Poplin at only 25 cents ; hand
some Colored Silks at ouly 7o cems.
Also, a large and full assortment of Cassimeres, Jeans, Woolens, Ac.: Beginning with
Jeans at 2U cents ; Jeans, extra heavy, at 25 cents ; All Wool Cassimeres at 60 cents; Linsey
** 5 W,ltsi Heflvy Mattress Tick at 15 cents, up to the best heayy Tick for holding
Together with a full lino of Prints, Flannels, Sheetings, Shirtings, Shawls, Cloaks, Boots,
Shoes, and Ladies Inmmed lists, Atprices that will pleasothe most fastidious.
BT Cut out this card, and be sure to find the ONE PRICE HOUSE, and you will save
time and money. H. L. A. BALK,
jan l ts p n 172 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
Kean, Landrani, & Cos.,
BEG leave to inform the citizens of Augusta and vicinity that they are now in posses
sion of the Store No. 209 BROAD STREET, lately occupied by Messrs. H. F. Russell &
Cos., and have ready for sale a general assortment of seasonable
DRY G O OX> S .
We will enumerate a few articles in the different departments. In our
DOMESTIC DEP AR T MEN T ANARUS,
may be found full lines of Bleached and Brown Sheetings and Shirtings, Osnaburgs, Plaid and
Striped, Heavy Cotton Plaids, Dome-tie Ginghams, Cotton Flannels. Ac.
WOOLEN DEPARTMENT.
A splendid assortment of Bed Blankets ; a splendid assortment of Brown and Gray Blan
kets ; Georgia Plains, Kersoys, Kentucky Jeans, Colored and Black Satinets, Fancy Cassi
mers, English Tweeds, Black Doeskins, Liu.seys, Ac.
DRESS GOODS
of every description, from tho lowest to the finest. Our stock of Shawls, Cloaks, Opera Jack
ets and Furs cannot be surpassed. In the
NOTION DEPARTMENT
we intend to keep everything called for.
We cordially invite our old friends (vvitlnvliom we have had such pleasant Intercourse for
the last fifteen years ; also those we have never had the ploasure of serving before) to an ex
amination of our stock. We will do all in our power to render “shopping” both pleas ant and
profitable to our customers. We open regularly next Monday Morning. Come and see us,
one and all. Agents for R. J. Roberts’ celebrated Parabola Needles and Scissors.
Jan. 14, 2m
G. H. REMSHART,
DEALER IN
DOORS,
SASHES, BLIHDS, tfi®!lLß!9ias,
NH WBkl POSTS 810.,
Nos. 182 and 184, north side Bay st, foot of Barnard,
SAVANNAH GEORGIA.
Selling as reasonable as any house South. Satisfaction guaranteed.
rKsv. 1, 44 Su n 4, 27 3m
S. S. MIL.GER,
—DEALER IN —
Mahogany, Walnut, and Pine
FURNITURE,
French! and Cottage Chamber Sets and LooUng Classes 1 Mattresses made to Order.
188 k 171 EBOCOHTON STREET, I QAVAAT AT ATJ PA
Next to Wkeb A Cornwell. ) V AillNilll, ixiv,
7 oet. 9ra n3m
C. J. T. BALK,
Has opened a First-Class Dry Goods House,
NO. 136 BROAD ST., Half Block above Lower Market,
* AUGUSTA , GA.
I ask only ONE PRICE. Prices being marked in PLAIN
FIGURES.
My expences beinglbut small, and having facilities for buying my Goods as Cheap as any
one, I will guarantee tojsell as low as the lowest; and assure all those who favor me with their
patronage that they will meet perfectly fair treatment in my Establishment. Call on, or
address.
C. J. T. BALK, 136 Broad St., Augusta, Ga
Nov. 18 pn ly.
W. H. GOODRICH. WITH G. E. GOODRICH.
W. H. Goodrich & Son,
265 Broad-St., Augusta, Ga.
HENRY CLAY. §EBBi^miiStewart
Stove.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN
Stoves, Grates, and House
Furnishing Goods,
and Mannfacturers of all kinds of Tin Ware.
Special attention given to Roofing, Sfc.
We have Stewart Cook Stove. It took the Gold Medal at the Cotton
States Fair at Augusta. Also the Favorite Cook Stove “HENRY CLAY.** Also the Cotton
Plant and Premium Stoves in great variety. . ....
if parties are not able to pay cash, a Cotton Factors acceptance for 30 or 60 days is all tha{
we require. pu Not. IS 3m.