Newspaper Page Text
San. B. H. Sill -Jutittta o or Pub-
However it may be suppressed
for a time by passion, prejudice,
jealousy, or ignorance, there is an
ultimate serise of justice in the hearts
of the people that will eventually
assert itself and rebuke the wrong
doer. Jp the case of the gentleman
vyhose name heads this article, it has
been tardy, but it will be none the
less sure iu its coming. The man
ner in which this distinguished citi
zen of Georgia has been treated by
a portion of the press and a few of
the leaders of the people—the reck
less aspersions of his motives and
character—the misrepresentations of
his acts and opioions—the fierce
and exterminating fury with which
it has been sought to destroy his in
fluence and keep him down—such
an exhibition, vve say, of malice, in
justice, uncharitableness, and lack
of State pride, is anything but cred
itable to either our heads or hearts
as a people. Georgia should foster
and cherish all her great men. Their
intellects, their achievements, their
triumphs go to make up her own
glory as a State. It is not the part
of a mother to reject and decry even
an erring son. To turn her back
upon one whose genius has illustrat
ed her name, and is a star in her
crown, is both unnatural and cruel.
It is time this war upon Mr. Hill
had ceased. It is both unjust and
senseless. A tew great men, whom
we honor with the rest, and who
have collided intellectually with him
in the past, perhaps to their own
disadvantage, have no right to per
petuate their own prejudices, much
less to infuse them into the minds
of trusting followers. There should
be some end of strife. There is
such a thing as forgiveness, even of
injuries, and it is a god-like attri
bute. And there is no better time
to commence the work of harmony
than now. We are in the midst of
a storm, fierce and fearful. Geor
gians are all in the same ship, and
we have reached a point of common
danger where all should be harmo
ny with the crew. There is, too,
perhaps, less to divide us than at
any previous epoch of our history,
and never before could we, with so
little sacrifice, bury the dead past
and come together as a band of
brothers.
As regards the political career ol
Mr. Hill, all should now be satisfied.
Time has vindicated it. He oppos
ed|secession, and the whole world
is now convinced that it was a ter
rible mistake. The South plunged
into war without his agency and
against his remonstrance, he nobly
laid aside his individual opinions
and stood by her, among the firmest
of her sons, until her flag went down
and darkness closed in over her tra
gic career. Her people subdued,
prostrate and heartless under a mil
itary despotism, with bayonets brist
ling at every door, and Federal
prisons gaping wide for all who
dared dispute the conqueror’s will—
where was he then! Of’all the pub
lic men of our Slate—we make no
exception—he was the only one that
had the courage and the patriotism
to press through the threatening
hosts of the despot, denounce their
outrages and wrongs to their very
teeth, and proclaim to his prostrate
countrymen that they had rights and
must rise and defend them. And if
our people have risen from their
state of hopelessness and despair, if
they have been re inspired with a
love ol liberty and the energy to pre
set ve it, they are this day, more
than to any other living man, indebt
ed to Benjamin H. Hill. We state
but facts, fresh in the memory of
all, and all will testify to their truth.
At a still later day, alter fruitless
struggles at the ballot-box with the
unequal numbers and the fierce ha
tred and prejudice of the North, Mr.
Hill counselled with leading Demo
crats of that section who had breast-
ed the storm in our behalf, and
agreed upon the only resort that
could possibly restore the Demo
cratic party to power, and put an
end to Radical usurpation and op
pression. Upon proclamation of the
result to the Southern people, it was
denounced as a “new departure,”
and Mr. Hill summarily read out of
the Democratic party and into the
ranks of the enemy. A howl went
up from his enemies in every part of
the State, and there was no word in
the vocabulary of invective too bit
ter to be hurled .against him. Yet,
firm in the truth, he quailed not, but
stood manfully by his doctrine. And
what is the result to-day ? The very
policy so denounced is embodied,
letter and spirit, in the Cincinnati
platform, and i3 now accepted as
wise and honorable, and the only
hope of reform, by the Democratic
party in every State of the Union !
And in three days from this time it
will receive the unanimous endorse
ment of all the States convention as
sembled ! Is not this a complete vin
dication of Mr. Hill ? Does it not
show that instead of deserting his
party and section, he only looked
.further ahead than the men who des
cried him, and eighteen months ago
stood on a platform which they have
inarched up to and occupy to-day ?
Never did man more signally tri
umph. All may not approve every
plank in that platform—neither did
he, lor he accepted it under the ne
cessities of the case as essential to
victory and the best to be had, as
does the whole South to-day. If Mr.
Hitt is imp Greeley, ha hul re u clung
the sentiment of every leading Bern
<♦
exceptions, froni MaTne lb Texas.
JtLview of all these Tacts, we say
ft is time lo make friends with Mri
Hill. Tbe politicians should cease
to persecute him and poison the
minds of tbe people against him with
out a cause. In the coming strug
gle, which is for no less a prize than
liberty and the life of the Ripublic,
we shall need bis great intellect, his
brave heart, and clarion voice. Then
let all animosities and jealousies
cease, and Georgians, as one united
brotherhood, fight shoulder to shoul
der in the* great battle for deliver
ance and liberty.
And now, just one word to our
brethren of the press. We have
great power for good and evil in our
hands, and a corresponding respon
sibility for its proper use. To vin
dicate the right, to condem the
wrong, and to do strict justice to all,
are among the highest obligations of
the profession. Peace, and not war,
should be our aim. The editor’s
sanctum is sacred to truth, and pas
sion and prejudice should find no
admission there. We scorn injus
tice and unfairness in others—let us
keep our own skirts clear of the
slain. We denounce the law of hate
that perverts the popular sense of
the North—let us not follow their
bad example by the unnatural in
auguration of it at home. But the
other day, when the most outspoken
friend of Mr. Greeley—the Augusta
Constitutionalist —claimed for Messrs.
Toombs and Stephens the rights ol
brotherhood and the respect of all
Georgians for their great endow
ments and sincerity of purpose, we
rejoiced to see that nearly every lead
ing press of the State,though differing
from them in opinion, gave'a hearty
response to the sentiment. Let it
be so toward all, Mr. Hill with the
rest. The press will do itself honor
and lay a graceful offering upon the
altar of Georgia, the elements of
whose fame are the records of her
sons.
From the Savannah News,
* B. H. HILL.
Our neighbor of the Republican
seems to be very anxious to see Mr.
B. H. Hill reinstated in his old place
in the affections of the people, and
to this end a column and more in its
issue of yesterday is devoted to a
defence of the political course of that
gentleman. We can appreciate the
magnanimity that induces our neigh
bor to take up the cudgels for a pol
itician who, in a casual sort of way,
has demonstrated his ability to de
fend himself as far as he cared to be
defended, and whose many shining
virtues do not include an excess of
modesty ; but we cannot appreciate
a defence that meets only a few of
the objections urged against Mr. Hill.
It is well known that Mr. Hill’s
‘new departure’ movement was not
the cause of his great unpopularity
in Georgia—although his advocacy
of that policy was a little surprising
to those who had read his ‘Notes on
the Situation,’ and who had listened
to his eloquent efforts on the stump
in IBGS. His fierce campaign a
gainst the reconstruction measures
and bayonet rule is well remember
ed. For eloquent invective, bitter
denunciation and fiery argument, it
stands unprecedented in our politi
cal history ; and the wind that Mr.
Hill then sowed culminated in the
whirlwind that swept him out of the
affections of the people in IS7O.
The charges against Mr. Hill
which lie has never answered—
which he has never attempted to an
swer—are these : In 186S he advis
ed the social ostracism of scalawags
and carpet-baggers, and advised
Southern women who were so un
fortunate as to have scalawags for
husbands to fly from the disgrace of
their embraces at once. He advised
children to ostracise their fathers,
and so on, and so forth. In 1870 he
was wining and dining with Bullock
and with other Radicals who had
plundered our people and slandered
the good name of Georgia.
In a speech in Forsyth, in ISGB,
Mr. Hill, in response to a query
from one of his audience, ‘what
about Joe Brown ?’ raised his hands
in holy horror, and spat upon the
floor, and subsequently, in the course
of the same speech, he said that
Brown’s name should never pass his
lips. To-day, he is the copartner
of Brown, notwithstanding the latter
has never wavered for one moment
in his persistent scalawogism.
The editor of the Philadelphia
Press, who is behind the scenes and
ought lo know,-says that the name
of Cameron is the synonim of cor
ruption. And yet this man Came
ron is a copartner of Mr. Hill. These
are the points that Mr. Hill’s de
fenders should touch upon. If he
desires the people of Georgia to look
upon him with the respect and con
fidence which were once his due, he
should make these things clear
Thus lar, however, neither he nor
his friends have made a satisfactory
defense.
Mr. Hill is the intellectual peer of
any in this land, but in his present
position he is playing the role sim
ply of a most eloquent demagogue,
a most brilliant sophist. Some bright
sunshiny day, let us hope, Mr. Hill
will descend into the pool of repent
ance and wash himself clear of the
stains that now rest upon bis politi
cal garments, and shake himself free
of those unhappy connections that
are now a reproach to his good name.
' rL ‘ T - J y y rft-
Whitt House,— ld viqw of ffie |»ssi
bility of her becoming next year
“the lady of the White Haute,” the
New York Herald- gives the folldw
iog sketch of Miss Ida Greeley,
the daughter of the sage of Cbappa«
qua.
Miss Greeley’s mother has for
many years been an invalid, and is
now so unwell that Mr. Greeley hes
itates about removing her from the
St. Cloud Hotel, where she is stay
ing in this city, to the homestead at
Chappaqua, and in the event of his
election the most arduous duties of
hostess of the Executive Mansion
would devolve upon his eldest
daughter. Miss Ida Greeley is a
young lady of about eighteen, of
medium height, handsome, with the
soft dark eye, shapely features and
fine complexion of her father. A
mass of dark brown hair is done up
in becoming folds about her head.
Her manners are affable and cordial,
her conversation ready and spright
ly, and from the success with which
assisted by Mrs. Stuart, she presi
ded at the first state dinner of the
coming administration under the
evergreen shades on the farm at
Chappaqua Saturday, it was made
evident that her domestic accom
plishments are thorough. She may
be epigrammatically described as
the philosopher refined out of his
angularities and eccentricities and
feminized. She heard of her father’s
nomination first in London. Mr.
Smalley, of the Tribune, having tel
egraphed her mother at once on re
ceiving notice of it, and, as she ad
mits naively, “was glad to hear it,”
She endorses his proposed nomina
tion at the Baltimore Convention,
and, in the event of it, believes he
will be elected. She does not ad
vocate woman suffrage, but if she
could vote would vote for Mr. Gree
ley, which she thinks the woman
suffragists as a parly would not be
likely to do.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS."
COLLEGEGIATEANUCOMMERCIAL
INSTITUTE, New Haveu, Conn. Pre
paratory to College, Business, Scientific
Schools, U. S. Military and Naval Academies,
Fall session, 30th year, begins Sept. 13. For
Catalogue, address Gon. Wm. H. RUSSELL,
Principal.
Virginia Female Institute,
STAUNTON, VA.
Buildings contain over 80 rooms. Grounds,
nine acres. Pupils from 37 States. The Course
is comprised in eight Schools, under twenty
Professors and Officers. Location beautiful
and salubrious. Terms moderate. Apply for
Circulars to R. 11. PHILLIPS. Principal, or
W. H. TAMS, See’y, Staunton, Va.
A. Wellington Hart & Cos.
ADJUSTERS DE cLa llllis"**""
For Insolvent and Bankrupts
IK) LEONARD St'., MW Volfe**""
KelereuceiMnhigllo-^llaraete^Tseucl
for Uircu ar.
KENTUCKY
Military Institute
SIX MILES FROM FRANKFORT, KY,
Besides working Faculty and course of study
not excelled, presents peculiar advaptages not
to be found together elsewhere.
1. Entire exemption from the manifold temp
tations attending college life in the city...
2. Division of classes into small sections, so
that every student recites daily in all his class
es.
3. All at the Institute constitute one family,
under strict military government.
tySend for Catalogue, containing full in
formation, to Col. R. T. P. ALLEN,
(Farindale, Franklin Cos., Ky.
Fraud! Fraud! Fraud*!
Dontbay BOGUS Fertilizers! Fertilizers!
Fertilizers! Liberal inducements to AGENTS
for the popular aud useful book.
AMERICAN MANURES,
And Farmers' 1 and Planters’ Guide.
(Second edition.) The book has already saved
Thousands of dollars. For terms, circulars
and copy of book. Price $1.50. Address
WILLIAM 11. BRUCKNER, Monroe, Mich.
CURE that COLD!
Do not suffer your Lungs to become diseas
ed by allowing a COLD to become seated.
Thousands have died Premature Deaths The
Victims ot Consumption, by neglecting a Cold.
Dr. Wm, Hall’s
BALSAM forlhe LUNGS
Will Cure Coughs, Colds and Consumption
surer and quicker than any other remedy. It
acts like magic. For sale by all Druggists
and Medicine Dealers everywhere.
Reject all Violent Purgatives. They ruin
the tone of the bowels aud weaken the diges
tion. “Tarrant’s Effervescent Seltzer Ape
rient” is used by rational people as a means of
relieving all derangemonts of the stomach,
liver and intestines; because it removes ob
structions without pain and imparts vigor to
the organs which it purities and regulates.
Sold by all Druggists.
S3OO to SSOO £"“52
Address ERIE Sewing Machine Cos., Buffalo,
N. i., or Chicago, 111.
A GENTS WANTED. — Agents make more
r\ money at work for us than at anything
else. Business light and permanent. Par
ticulars free. G„ Stinson & Cos., Fine Art
Publishers. Portland, Maine.
IT S Piano Cos., N. Y* Price, GJOQA
G. O. No Agents, Circulars
free. *
ORGANIC LAW OF TIIK SEXES—Cou
oitions which impair vitality—positive
and negative electricity— proof that life I*
eveloped without union— effect of tobacco—
influence of fish and phosphoric diet— modern
treatment of pelvic diseases, stricture and
varicocele; and arrest of development ten
lectures to his private su-gical class, by Ed
ward H. Dixon, M. D., 42 Fifth Avenue N
V,; lit pages, 2o cents. “Every line from the
pen of Dr. Dixon is of great value to the
whole human race.”—HORACE GREELEY
July 10th 4w.
*4, WHHUD , gbohgia
MANUFACTURERS OF AND
WHOLESALE AND! RETAIL DEALERS IN
LADIES MEN’S AND BOYS’ SADDLES OF ALL KlfaDS.
CARRIAGE, BAROUCHE, PHAETON and SINGLE and DOUBLE
buggy Harness, wagon harness, single &
DOUBLE, for four, six, and so on, STAGE AND
CART HARNESS, WOOL FACED COLLARS.
Wemuuiactare the above extensively, and are therefore prepared to fill orders at short notice
Also keep constantly on hand a complete stock of
Saddlers’, Harness, Shoemaker’s Hardware & Tools.
Harniwa Leather, Skirting; Oak and Hemlock Sole Leather-
KIP, CALF AND LINING SKINS, LACE AND PATENT LEATHER OF ALL ;KINDS
ENAMELFD MUSLIN, DRILL AND DUCK, PLAIN AND FIGURED.
Carriage, Wagon, Riding and Drovers’ Whips.
Linen and Woolen Covers for horses, Fly Nets, Linen and Woolen Buggy Rohes, etc
tt?*Merchants, Planters and all, will find it is their interest to purchase
our goods. Do not fail to call or order from us.
We pay cash for all kinds of Furs and Skins, Hides, Leather in the
rough, Tallow, Wax and Wool.
Macon, Qa., May 28. 1871. - r n 6m
~^TV. Walton.
DOZIER & WALTON,
Wholesale Grocers,
AND
Dealers in. Wines, Liquors, Etc.,
269 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA.
LIBERAL Terms to Wholesale buyers, and usual time rates allowed. A large stock
kept on hand constantly. Purchasers visiting Augusta will please call and examine,
apnl ZJ 3m n r DOZIER Sf WALTON
Planters, Read This!
BURDICK BROTHERS’
IS THE HEADQUARTERS FOR
drain & J^rovisions
63 THIRD STREET, MACON, GA.,
SIGN OF THE GOLDEN HOG.
WE HAVE NOW IN STOLE AND TO ARRIVE,
50,000 pounds BACON C. R. SIDES and SHOULDERS,
30,000 pounds BULK C. R. SIDES and SHOULDERS,
For sale at Lowest Market Price by
BUXU>ICK BROTHERS.
5,000 bushels prime WHITE CORN.
2,000 bushels prime MIXED CORN,
Which we will sell as low as anybody.
BUjEUDIOK brothers.
o
RECEIVING THIS DAY 100 BARRELS
Relle of Georgia Flour.
This is our favorite brand, and cannot be excelled in this market.
One car load “Kenesaw” Mills EXTRA FAMILY FLOUR.
One car load “Marietta” Mills FAMILY FLOUR,
One car load GOOD SUPERFINE, in barrels and sacks.
For sale low by
BURDICK BROTHERS
Three car loads PRIME WESTERN HAY.
One car load CHOICE FEED OATS.
Just received by
BURDICK BROTHERS.
MAGNOLIA HAMS, FRESH MEAL,
WHEAT BRAN, SHORTS,
PREPARED COW FOOD,
LIVERPOOL and VIRGINIA SALT,.
SUGAR, COFFEE, etc., now in Store.
CHOICE LEAF LARDTn - TIERCES AND CANS.
We offer the above on as reasonable terms as any house in this market,
for Cash or approved City Acceptance.
Give us your orders, and we will try to please you. ,
BURDICK BROTHERS.
april 6th 1872 rpn 3m.
A. M. JACKSON,
COTTON FACTOR A Tvri~>
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
19 Mclntosh street, aegusta. Georgia.
april 20-3 m LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON CONSIGNMENTS. rn.
D. QUINN,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN
BOOKS, STATIONERY, MUSIC and PERIODICALS,
183 RROAD STREET, Angnsta, Ga.,
Manufacturers’ Agent and Wholesale Dealer in all kinds of Blank
Books, for Mercantile use, including Ledgers, Journals, Day Books, Re
cords, Pass Books, Memorandum Books, Time Books, Drawing’ and
Scrap Books, Autograph Books, Copy, Cyphering and Exercise Books,
for school use, &c., &c. The Writing Papers include Cap, Letter and
Note, American, English and French Ruled and Plain, Stamped and
Unstamped. The stock of Envelopes embraces Letter, Note and Offi
cial sizes, of all colors and qualities, beside a full line of General Station
ery, including all the innumerable minor items for use in the Counting
Room. Also many articles that would be appropriately desigraed as
Fancy Stationery. In the Book Department, will be found tbe Stand
ard Text Books for Schools and Colleges, Dictionaries, Bibles and
Prp.yer Books, Music Books, and a large assortment of Juvenile and
Toy Books, and a well selected stock in General Literature. In the
Miscellaneous Stock, in which we deal, we can offer to buyers as favor
able terms as any establishment in the trade. Anew price list will
soon be issued, which will enable purchasers to make selections and or
der by mail, if desired. Such orders will receive prompt and carefnl
attention, since the most thorough system marks the mode of doing busi
ness in this establishment. april 16 rn 3m.
■ ---MW AP¥BM»IOMMMMTOi
' " book AtiKNTS ~
Now at work, or looking for some new boot
wilt miss it if they do Hot at once write for
circulars of the best selling book published.
Extraordinary inducements offered. Profits
more than double the money. Outfit free. Ad
dress,F . M BRED, 189 Eighth St, NewYork.
AGENTS WANTED
For GOODS?EED’g
Presidential Campaign Book.
Tirr work of the year. Prospectus)
post paid, 75 cts Immense sale guaranteed.
Also for my Campaign Charts and Haps.
J W Goodspoed N. Orleans, Cincinnati, {St Louis
AGENTS WANTED— for the Lives of
Grant! Greeley!
WILSON! BROWN!
And the leading men of all parties. Over 40
Steel Portraits. Just the book wanted by the
masses everywhere. Agents meet with won
derful success. Send for Circular and secure
territory at once. Address, ZIEGLER Sc
McCURDY, 503 North Sixth Street, St. Louis 1
Mo.
Rockbridge Alum Springs, Va.
OPEN JUNE 15tb, 1872.
The proprietor offers additional attractions
this season. New, elegant and spacious Draw
ing and Ball Rooms, beautiful lawns, exquisite
air and scenery, while, the waters of these spe
cial springs invariably relieve Consumption,
Scrofula, Bronchitis, Dyspepsia, & Diarrhoea
and are for sale by leading Druggist every
where, Readily accessible via Chesapeake
and Ohio R. R. Slop at Goshen Depot, where
coaches will be in waiting. Pamphlets on ap
plication, JAMES A. FRAZIER, Prop,
July 2 lm.
do notfail:“*“rr.u"'
North to secure one of the celebrated improved
Stewart Cook Stoves,
With its special attachments, Roaster, Baker &.
Broiler. The Stove and Furniture carefully
packed for shipment. Books sent on applica
tion,
FULLER WARREN k CO., 236 WATER St., N. Y.
Burnham’s w
New Turbine is in gener- JKHJ
al use throughout the U.
S. A six inch, is used
the Government iu
Patent Office,
ton, D.C. Its
of construction and
WATER
power it transmits renders it the best water
wheel ever invented. Pamphlet free. N. F.
BURNHAM, York, Pa.
Mifrf
II BLOOD PURIFIEH I
Is a Powerful Tonic, specially for
use in Spring, when the lauguid and debilita
ted system needs strength and vitality, it will
give vigor to tho feeble, strength to the weak,
animation to the dejected, activity to the slug
gish, rest to the weary, quiet to the nervous,
and health to tho infirm.
It is a South American plant, which acco
ing to the medical and scientific periodicals
London and Paris, possesses the most powerfn
tonic properties known io the Materia Medica'
and is w ell known in its native country as hav
ing wonderful curative qualities, and has been
long used as a specific in all cases of Impurities
of the Blood, Derangement of the Liver and
Spleen, Poverty of the Blood,
Debility, Weakness of the Intestines, Uuterine
or Urinary Organs.
DR. WELL S EXTRACT OF JURUBEBA
Is strengthening and nourishing; like nutri
ciens food, taken into the stomach, it assimi
lates and diffuses itself through the circulation,
giving vigor and health.*
It regulates the Bowels, quiets the Nerves
acts directly on the secretive organs, and, by
its powerful Tonic and restoring effec's, pro
duces healthy and vigorous action of the whole
system.
JOHN Q.KELLOGG, Platt St., New York
Sole Agent for the United States.
Price One Dollar per bottle. Send for Circu
lar june 4 r p n lm.
TXT orcester 1 q
* * DICTIONARIES !0
Have been aiopted by the State Board of
Education of
VIRGINIA.,
NORTH CAROLINA,
ALABAMA, and
ARKANSAS.
In use in the cities of
RICHMOND, VA.,
NORFOLK, VA.
MOBILE, ALABAMA.
SAVANNAH, GA
ATLANTA, GA.,
1 lie Standard in Orthography and
Pronunciation in
Washington and Lee University,
The University of Virginia,
The College of William and Mary,
The University of Georgia, '
The Wesleyan University, Alabama Sec
BREWER & TILESTON.
XT’ TVCillc Street,
BOSTON.
may 7 1872 rp 3m.
DARBY'S
PROPHYLACTIC
FLUID
invaluable Family Medicine, foi
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it—is for sale by all Diuggists and
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PARRY UKUPHYLAUTIC CO. "
WillianH-itreet^N. Y~
p Deeli4’7o ly. rMay2 uJune3 iy “
paMals
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that
Every day an Increase in Flesh
and Weight is Seen and Felt.
Ttlti GIIIMr BMjOOMt J*rgfFlifK
Every drop of the Sarsaparilian Resolvent
communicates through tho Blood, Sweat,
Urine, and other fluids and juices of the sys
tem the vigor of life, for it repairs the wastes
of the body with new and soud material. Scrof.*
ula, Syphilis, Consumption, Glandularl dis
ease, Ulcers in the throat. Mouth, Tumors,
Nodes in the Glands and other parts of the
system, Sore Eyes, Strumorous discharges
from the Ears, and the worst forms of Skin
diseases, Eruptions, Fever Sores, Scald Head,
Ring Worm, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas. Acne
Black Spots. Worms in the Flesh, Tumors,
Cancers iu the Womb, and all weakening and
painful discharges, Night Sweats, Loss of
Sperm and all wastes of the life -principle
are within the curative range of this wonder
of Modern Chemistry, and a few days use
will prove to any person using it for either of
hese forms of disease its potent power to
cure them.
Not only does 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 Kiduey and Bladder Complaints, Urinary
Bad Womb diseases, Gravel. Diabetes, Dropsy
Stoppage of Water, Incontinence of Urine
tright’s Disease, Albuminuria, and in all ca
ses where there are brick dust- deposits, or the
water is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances
like the white ol au egg, or threads like white
silk, or there is a morbid, dark biilious ap
pearance. and white bona-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.
DR. RADWAY’S
PERFECT FCRUATIVE PILLS,
perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet
guns, purge, regulate, purify, cleanse, and
strengthen. Radway’s Pills, fertile cure of
all disorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels,
Kidneys, Bladder, Nervous Diseases, Head
ache, Constipation, Costivenesß, Indigestion,
Dyspepsia, Biliiousness, Bilious Fever, In*
flammation of the Bowels, Piles*, and all De
raugements of the Internal Viscera. War
ranted to effect a positive cure. Purely Veg
etable, containing no mercury, minerals, or
deleterious drags.
Observes the following symptoms resulting
from Disorders of the Digestive Organs:
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.
Read “False and True.” Send one letter
stamp to Badway & Cos., No 32 Warren 8t„
Cor. of Church Street, New York. Informa
tion worth thousands will be sent you.
rJnly4 1871. 26 ly
M, Neblett. Wm. M. Goodrich
AUGUSTA
COTTON GINS.
WE the undersigned, respectfully inform
the planting community that we con
tinue to manufacture COTTON GINS. We
were awarded the Premium, open to the
world, for the Gin at the Cotton States Me
chanics’ and Agricultural Fair, held at Au
gusta last season. Also, received the First
Premium at the State Fair of South Carolina.
We feel warranted in saying that a trial of
our Gins isall that is necessary to guaranteo
satisfaction. Orders solicited early in the
season to prevent delay.
Old Gins repaired on reasonable terms.
NEBLETT & GOODRICH,
m april 236 m.
Grover and Baker Sewing Ma
chine.
For Simplicity, Ease of Operation, and Du
rabihty the GROVER & BAKER SEWING
MACHINE is unrivalled. Responsible Agents
wanted in every town in the State.
Address,
GROVER & BAKER 8. M. CO„
21 j Bull St., Savannah, Ga.—
april 23 3m rn.
A LECTURE
Just Published, in a
Sealed Envelope,
Price, six cents.
A Leetnra en tha Nature, Treatment, ani
Radical Cure of Spermatorrhoea, or Sem
inal Weakness, Involuntary Emmissions, Sex
ual Debility; and Impediments to Marriage,
generally; Nervousness; Consumption, Epilep
sy, and Fits, Mental and Physical Incapacity,
resulting from Self-Abuse, etc., By ROBERT
J. CULVER WELL M. D.; author of the
“Green Book,” etc:
The World renowned author, in this admir
able Lecture, clearly proves from his own
experience that the awfhl consequences of self
abuse may be effectually removed without
medicine, and without the dangerous surgical
operations, bougies, instruments, rings, or
cordials, pointing out a mode of cure at once
simple, certain, and effectual, by means o
wbich every sufferer, no matter what his con
dition may be, may cure himself cheaply;
privately, and radically.
gy This Lecturewill prove a BOON to
Thousanps and Thousands.
Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any
address, postpaid On receiptof six cents, or two
post stamps.
Also, DR. CULVERWELL’S “Marriage
Guide,” price 25 cents.
Address the publishers,
CHAB.J. C. KLINE Sc CO.,
127 Bowery ,N. Y„ Post Office Box 4,580.
mayl p r 23 ts
PLANTERS’ .HOTEL.
Augusta, Ca.
The only Hotel in the City where Gas is used
throughout
JOHN A. GOLDSTEIN.