The Sandersville herald. (Sandersville, Ga.) 1872-1909, March 07, 1878, Image 1

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- (Tld SiBies—Vol. XXXII. jft'w Sr» m—Vol. VI. SANDEBSVILLE, GEORGIA. MARCH 7. 1878. NO. 34. jj^W i (| cargiMn, WM. 1’AllK, Ed. k Prop*r. , T DFS iV pArF.ll IN THIS SECTION C GEORGIA. F g T a It LIShTd IN 1H42. BUSINESS CARDS. HUM AH *VANH. JAMKH K HIKER. j]VANH & HIN ES, Attorneys at Law. Sandersville, Gebvgia. VKTILh PRACTICE in the Courts of the VV Middle Circuit end the United State* Jourtii. fob 15* 1877—tf B. I\ KVANB „ ft. tiAMOW ADR. "• “ jANGMADE & EVANS, Attorneys at I aw, MnmlerBvillc, ■ ■ ■ Woorglo. deo 7, 18ft- ly /M. HENRY WYLLY, ttorney <fe Counselor at Law, MunArraVtlh*. tin. f TILL prsktiop in the Courts of the Middle /V CiroutWand Bankrupt Courts. .(JirPurticimr attention given to the use of criminal fuses . deo. 7. 187fl**-tf- do- A. ROBSON, vrTORMEY AT LAW, Sandersvilli', Georgia. N1U PRACTICH IN THE COUNTIES OF THE MIDDLE lIHOUIT. ' JOHN W. ROBISON, A ttorney at Law. W ILL prnoti*o in thin, and adjoining counties, oot 11. 1877- tf JOHN C HARMAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ti:\\ii.i 10. <>>A. All 1 usincss promp ly attended to, doc 7, 1870—ly 33- A.TL ,\NE, ATTUttNKY AT LAW, isccUaneous. Religions Denominations in Georgia. The Baptist denomination is more numerous in Goorcia than any J ^ 5 . TE other denomination. There are 114 associations over 2,300 churches, aud 193,662 members, nearly one to ev ery six persons in the State, fli Gibsou, Glasscock Co., G«. W ILL praotioe in O usscock and sur- rounding counties. All butunoa* en- -listed to him will receive prompt attention, march 8, 1877—tf d. W. H. W1 itaker, (DENTIST ——.—, Ga. ton cahii. Office at hie roBidenoeon Harris Street dec. 7,i 1878—tf H Sir; M O. Hatch AS permanently located nt Tennille.— Office in tho Btore of T. M. It J. W. Smith. ■*''May he found at night at the roni fif Vrft. .tf: E. Franklin, june 7, tf. donco I A. W. CALHOUN, M. I). DiNeitsfep of Ilu* Eye ami Ear. . ATLANTA, GA. Office, 88 B., Hroad Street, Cor. Ala. Omen IIocm:'{® A - M ' P. M. j june 14~0m W I U# !/l V 3 r ,! ub,# Rn “ * low#r M>, in*au, Bam EM. S D. M TF RKT * CO., Detroit, Mich. l'alnfc. AMERICAN IUB Cure or ANTIDOTE. • Improved remedy. f Manufactured at Atlanta, ^fla., at reduced prxce*. * Tested In hiTndred* of ca»e«. Guaranteed. Par- ticuliuraP&KE. Address tt. M. Woolley; Alania,*0a. * Notice* All persons indebted to uh for Tuition are •r«by notified that a settlement muBt be hudo. *■ . D ««- G, T877. IVY W. DUGGAN. IV. 11. LAWSON. F. A. GUTTENBERGBR. ,SANDEItSVlLLE Jc TENNILLER. U. ) n Bwndehsville, Fob. 4, 1877. | on and after to-day the Passenger train os bib road will mn an follows: i- I'AV 1‘ABHKNQER TRAIN, . r ave » Sandertvills daily 0:15 a. m. heaves Tennille daily 9:50 a. m. ")»vob Sandomville daily 8:90 r. m.v iSllVoa 'P :n . .. . 1 .. .eaves Tennilhj daily 4:10 i>. m. dii J” bsuro dispatch all article destined in, Point slioul 1 <• marked to Sanders- 1 8 ‘“stead ol :4Jo t before. , „ a J I. IRWIN, Kupt o°v 10, 187G. JfSh «f TraJnsat No. 18, C. R. R. Kx 1 ABHKNolin Train arriveh 3:54 r. II ‘OWN DAY “ ... .. Q-Art . „ J P Night •> 'own Night •• '■ 9:40 a. M 4:41 a. » 10:43 p. M j Somethino; New* ™i rt< l illtro<luo0 0llr Big Seed Spring -siifii ^o Wheat of Taos, in your locality I urnn 6 gr " lnB measuring \ inch in length— if oha° S9 to 80n< * 11 8ftul ple of the wheat free rhn^fni 9 ' to BYer y subscriber to this paper in.1 .TL'i R “ te ^c name of the newspaper Aon*. 8 3 CBnt stamp to pay postage w anted in evorv oountv to set lt _- , w anted in every oounty to sell this j»n 3, 1877 AddreM L L - 0SMENT - Olevaland, Tanu. The first Baptist iu Georgia of which there is any history, was Nicholas Begewood, in 1767. He was employed as au agent of Whit«- fields Orphan Home near Savannah The first Baptist church organized in Georgia was in 1772,Kiokee Meeting House, the B| ot on which Appling, in Columbia county, now Btanas, un der tho ministry of Rev. Daniel Marshall, who was then the only or dained Baptist minister iu Georgia. Thus it will be seen what rapid progress the church has made in the last century. The doctrines of the Methodist Episcopal church South were first introduced in Georgia by John Wes ley iu 1736, when he commenced preaching in /Savannah. He was followed by George Whitefield in 1738. The first Methodist church organized in Georgia was about 1736. The Rev. Thomas Humph ries and John Majors preached on a circuit extendiug from Savannah to Wilkes county. They reported 460 members in Georgia in 1786. In 1866 tbo Georgia Confer ence was divided into the North aud tho South Georgia conferences. At the time of the division there were in Georgia 216 itinerant ministers and 61,219 white members. Iu 1875tho North Georgia Confer- hud 643 church buildings capable of seating 171,000 persons ; itinerant preachers, 168 ; local preachers, 426; number of members, 63,764. The South Georgia Conference had 406 church buildings capable of seating 98,167 persons ; itinerant preachers 123 ; local preachers,221 ; number of members 29,304, The first Presbyterian church was organized in Georgia as early as 1736, The Synod embraces five Presbyterians, and extends all over the State. There are 74 ministers, 8 licentiates, 8 candidates, 143 churches, 136 church edifices, 61,610 sittings, 8,103 members.— Qriffin News. The Farmerriiu his Moitoy. King Frederick, of Prussia, when he was out riding one day, saw an >1< old farmer who was plowing his field and singing cheerfully over his work. “You must be well off, old man,” cried the King. “Does this acre belong to you, on which you so industriously labor?’’ “No sir replied the man, who of course had no idea that he was speaking to tk.) king; “1 am not so rich as that. I plow for wages.” “How much do you earn each day?’’ asked the king. “Eight groschen,’’ returned the That would b e about twenty cents of our money. “That is very little said tho king. “Can you get along with it?” “Get along yes, indeed, audjl have something left.” ' ‘ -* v “How ever do you manage?’’ “Well, said the farmer smiling, “I will tell you. Two groschen are fot-tnyself and wife with twoil pay my old debts, two I give away for the Lord’s sake.” “This is a mystery which I can not solve,” said the king. “Then I must solve it for you,” said the farmer. “I have two old parents, at home who kept me and cared for mo when I was young and weak, and needed caro. Now that they are old and weak I am glad to keep and care for them. This is my debt, and in takes two groschen a day to pay it. d< Two more I spend on my children’s schooling. If they are living when their moth er and I are old, they will keep us and pay back what I lend. Then with my l»st two groschen I support themselves Of course 1 am not compelled to give them the money, but 1 do it for tho Lord’s sake.” “Well done, old man,” cried the king as he finished; “now I am going to giveyou something to guess. Have you ever seen me before?” “No,’, said the farmer. “In less than five minutes you Bhall see me fifty times, and carry in your pocket fifty of my likeness es. “This is indeed a riddle which I cannot solve,” said the farmer, “Then I will solve it for you,” that he put said the king; and with his hand in his pocket, and pulling out fifty gold pieces, placed them in the hand of the faamer. “The coin is genuine,” said the king, “for it alas comes from our Lord God, and I am his paymaster. I bid you good-bye.” And he rode off, leaving the good man overwhelmed with surprise and delight at the singular interview.— Cm. Statesman Justice to True Heroiem. It should always be a matter of pride to overv patriotic Georgian— and that pride should be made man ifest in a substantial manner—that this State gave to the country one of the bravest and most chivalrous soldiers that ever drew a sword on any battle-field or poured out his blood freely iu defence of his flag. That officer was tho lamented Ma jor Geueral William Henry Talbot Walker, who fell iutlie bloody “Bat tle of Atlanta," July 22d, 1864, as he was gallautly leading his Confeder ate troops agaiusttlie enemy’s forc es. From the time ho graduated at the West Point Military Academx (1837) his life was freely oflered in the service of his country. He graduated in July, aud in December girl what is to be her employment, what she is preparing for. The days of her pleasant school life glide by one after another; frequently no ac curate scholarship has been requir ed of her; and when tho routine stops, she is without rudder or aim.—Harper's Magazine. of the same j’ear was terribly ded in tho heice battle witl woun- with the Seminole Indians at Okeecholee, Florida. Aguiu in the Mexican war, he fought with unsurpassed daring, and at one time left for dead on the battle field. Z/ut finally, through his immenso will power, he recover ed to such an extent as to be able to re-enter (in full health) the army which he left Dec. 29,1860,(as Major of the 10th Infantry) to join his for tunes with those of his native State, by whom he had been presented with a "sword of honor” for his “galluutry iu Florida and Mexico.” General Walker was “every inch a soldier,” and to the science and art of war his entire life wus devoted and all his best energies consecra ted. One of his children, Cadet Freeman V. Walker, of Virginia Military Institute, Lexington, Va., is a candidate for one of tne vacan cies nt the West Point Military Academy, and we are glad to learn that the worthy young gentleman is being endorsed tor that appointment by Senator Gordon aud Hon Alex ander H. Stephens.—Atlanta Trib- Employment for Women. The subject of the employment of women is ub vital to the rich as to the poor Mr. Emerson’s remark with regard to the regulation of the body holds equally for the soul—he who is rich, and would be well, let him live as if ho were poor. We tulk of the lazy poor because they to the community ; are are a burden not the lazy rich, aftor all, the rot tenness at the core ? Every woman from the Queon on the throne to the little Pippa who passes every day to the filature, has her work to do, aud is responsible for the due perform ance of it. All service ranks the same with God. All are servants equally in His sight. What a picture would the life of averuge woman of Fifth Avenue or Boacon street present to us if we ghould lay it down without exugger- ratiou on paper? over, it is her ha Her Bchool days habit to walk into tii breakfast room at uiue o’clock, just from her bed, her front hair twisted over pins or bits of silk. She loun ges, reading the newspaper, chatting lurposelt with others ss purposeless ns her self,warming her feet or gazing out of window , until eleven; then she retires to arrange her toilet for the evening, perhaps to examine clean clothes from the wash, or perform some other household duty—duties not to be omitted, but which the economical woman (oue who has learned tho value of time) would have completed before the day be- gau; then she dresses for afternoon calls, and, list in hand, descends to the lunch table. Here nearly an other hour fades away before she begins her uftomoou round, flitting from bouse to house, cheerfully chatting of the Shaughraun, Nilsson Kellogg—of everything, in short, which concerns the shows of life, b it A Strange Tradition. Among the Seminole Indian there is a singular tradition regarding the white man’s origin and superiority. They say when the Great Spirit made the earth he also made three men, all of whom were fair complexioned, and that after making them he led them to the margin of a small lake, and bade them leap in and wash. One obeyed, and came out purer and fairer than before, tbo second hesita ted a momeut, during which time the water agitated by the first, had become maadied, and when he bath ed, he came up copper-colored ; the third did not leap until the water be came black with mud, and he came out with his own color. Then the Great Spirit laid before them three packages, and out of pity for his misfortunes in color, gave the black man the first choice. He took hold of tho three packages, and having felt the weight chose the heaviest, the copper-colored man chose the next heaviest, leaving tho white man the lightest. When the packages were opened the first was found to contain spades, hoeB and all the im plements of labor, the second un wrapped hunting, fishing, and war like apparatus, the thirefgavoto the white man pens, inks, and paper, the engine of the mind—the means of natural, mental improvement, the social link of humanity, the founda tion of the white mams superiority. Tragedy in North Georgia. The Dalton Citizen relates the following: “Quite a startling tragedy we hear, occurred in the neighbor hood of Tryon factory one night lust week A man went there with a load of cotton, which he sold for money, several hundred dollars. Ou his return home he camped for the night within a mile or two of the factory, and just before retiring to his impromptu bed in the wagon, a large, coarse looking woman came up and asked if she could warm at the fire. Permission was given, and soon after the man went to bed in the wagon; but before going to sleep his little son and a negro Doy, who were left sitting around the * camp fire, discovered that the supposed woman had on a man’s boots and E rnnts, and the son went and told lis father of the fact,which aroused his suspicions and put him on the alert. After some little time had expired, the booted woman, suppos- the man and little boy were asleep, blow a whistle, when two other men with their faces blacked and their porsons otherwise disguised, imme diately made their appearance from the adjoining wood aud instantly cut tho throat of the uegro boy who was sitting by the fire, killing him on the spot. They then started for the wagon, when the owner, who lmd been watching their movements, opened fire on them with a shot gun, killing two of them in their trucks. The one dressed in woman’s clothes made bis escape. Upon examina tion of the dead men, it was discov ered thut they were white, who had evidently seen the man receive tho money at the factory for his cotton, aud whose object was the murder of the whole party and robbery." careful as oue wulking over pitfalls " If to avoid every subject of vital inter- If est either to herself or others. Then the visits or drive ended, she hur ries home in season to dress for din ner, and go somewhere afterward, as if to exhaust to the last drop of her own vital strength and the hours of the day. This little record is not overdrawn. With certain modifica tions, this is the substance of the life of wives and daughters of well-to-do merchants in our cities. These days are varied by certain mornings giv en to music and others to painting. But how small the average of those who achieve anything worth doing! A man to be a painter must not f iaint with half his mind. The same aw holds good of the woman. Let every woman apply to her own life the doctrine of selection. The man is bred to thU. What is your son going to be? parents are asked, and boys in the public school h confide to each other the profession oi their ohoioe. No one asks the Here are a couple items worthy of being told. Farmers who have test- ted them say they are effectual as scarecrows: The best scareci ow is a suspended looking-glass. Take two small cheap mirrors fasten them buck to back, attach a cord to one angle and hang them to an elastic pole. When the glass swings in the wind, the sun’s rays are reflected all over the fields, even if it be u large one, und even the oldest and bravest of cows will depart precipitately should one of its lightening flashes fall On him. The second plan, although a ter ror to cows, is well situated to fields subjected to the inroads of small birds, and even chickens. It involves ves an artificial hawk made from a big potato and long goose and tur key feathers. The maker can exer cise his imitative skill in sticking the feathers into the potato so that they resomble the spread wings and tail of a hawk. It is astonishing what a ferocious bird of prey can be con structed from the above Bimple ma terial. It only retaains to hang the object from a tall bent pole, ana the wind will do the rest. The bird will make swoops and daBhes in a most headlong and threatening manner. Even the most inquisitive of venerable hens have been known to hurry rapidly from its dangerous vicinity, while to small birds it car ries unmixed dismay.—Scientific American. Hayes’ Veto. Washington,February 28—In the house the president’s message veto ing the silver bill was laid before the house b^ the speaker. The president says it has been his earnest deBire to concur with congress in the adop tion of a measure to inoreaso the silver coinage of the oountry, but so as not to impair the obligation of pi contracts either public or private, or ibli injuriously affect the public credit. It was only on the conviction that this bill did not meet that ossen tial requirement that he felt in his duty to withhold from it his appro val. The message further stateBthat the capital defect of the bill is that it contains no provision protecting oration pre existing debts in case coinage whicb it creates shall con tinue of les value than|that whicb was of the Jordan is an uninhabite.. waste ; many of the streams have dried up in consequence of the cat ting down of the forests ; most of the reservoirs constructed by Solo mon annd Hebrew kings have from neglect become useless, and this in a country whioh without irrigation, becomes dry and withers up. Sir Moses Monteflore has made au ap peal to his fellow-countrymen iu be- lalf of his suffering race in Pales tine. Christian governments should hIbo use their influence with the Sul tan to check the increasing depopu lation and ruining of a land whicb ought to be dear to all Christians and Hebrews, and even Moslems, from its sacred associations. the sole legal tender when they were created. Ii n the judgment of man- kiud it would be an act of bad faith. The standard of value should not bo changed without the consent of both parties to the contract. The na tional promise should be kept with. UNFLINCHING FIDELITY. He could not Hign a bill which would Authorize the violation of sa cred obligatious. Tho obligation of the public fuith transcended all ques tions of profit or public advantage. Its unquestionable maintenance was the dictate of honesty as wall as of expediency and should ever be care- lully guarded by the executive, by congress and the people. Before proceeding to vote on the question,w ill the house on reconsider ation, pass the bill?—Cox of New York, made the remark that the message was a "CHARGE OF FRAUD BY A FRAUD,” on which his colleague, McCook, made a point of order. The speaker decided that the re mark was made out of order and it should not be printed in the Rec ord. The house then proceded to vote and the result was yoas 196, nays 73 The speaker declared the bill as pas sed, aDd the announcement was re ceived with general applause. In the senate the silver bill passed the president’s vote notwithstanding by a vote of 49 to 16; Mr. Hill, of Georgia, voting with the majority. nuts have been round near Colora do Springs, Col., many of them be longing to a class which aro now found in the tropics. A Nashville lady deposited $100 in a Philadelphia bank 27 years ago. and lust week received there from $327. There are ten men to one woman in Southern California. Female servants receive there $40 per month. Go fFest, young girl. Sixty thousand commercial trav elers are employed by the whole sale merchants of tlieL nited States, at an average annual expense of Once More. We reiterate, if southern farmers are wise, they will not sacrifice their interests, nud jeopardize their safe ty, by straiuing their resoarees to raise cotton. It is true that corn and meat are now comparatively low, but so is cotton. Besides, if a general Euro pean war, which now seems immi nent should occur, a Inigo cotton crop will be to the South a severe disaster, instead of a benefit. The price i -f cotton will go lo iver than it has gono for thirty years; while a great and active foreign de mand for American moat and bread stuffs, will raise the prices corres pondingly. Calculate your chances, with cot ton at four cents, meat at twenty, corn at one dollar and fifty cents and flour at fifteen dollars Plant corn, and then plant more corn. ‘While the Lamp Holds Out to Burn,” etc.—Our brilliant and ver satile Senator, Hon. B. H. Hill, nt the eleventh hour under the spur of a united home press, the “handwri ting on the wall” in his future career J perhaps the convictions of con science, helped to vote down the Hayes veto of the Silver bill, and now we cull for a cessation of hostil ities and amnesty on the part of the people for the delinquencies of their gifted Senator. “Oui Ben” will doubtless be taught a lesson hereafter, as to the proprie ty and necessity of consulting the unmistakable will of his constituents. There is no grander intellect in the Senate of the United States, and if he will bnt curb his ambition and follow up and defend that policy which will inure best to Southern in terests, even at the sacrifice of per sonal aggrandizement, what a power for good could he be to our State. May we not bope that the Sena tor will consent to set his sails here after in sympathy with the popular breeze.— Tel. & Mes. Suffering in Palestine.—It is said that the Jews in the Holy Land are reduced to a state border ing on starvation. Under the most favorable circumstances tbe Jews of Palestine can only make a precari ous living. Intense misery now ex ists in Jerusalem, Tiberius, Safed and other localities, owing to vari ous causes, prominent among which is the drain whioh the war has made in money, men and provisions on every portion of the Ottoman domin ions. The war has produced a stag nation of trade,and the long contin ued drought has raised the necessa ries of life to famine prices. Turk ish rule has reduced Palestine to a wretched condition. The southern part of it is desolated.by marauding bands of Arabs ; there is no safety ostside the large towns ; the valley ' “ * * ‘ • ' ‘ ' id Over 300 Chinese have been re ceived as inemj^Dfs of the Protestant churches of Calttornia, and in addi tion tbere are 700 Chinamen in Christian associations for learning Christian doctrine 760 Chinese at tended the mission schools of Sau Francisco and over one thousand go to Sunday school. Agustin Edwards, the millionaire banker of Chili, who recently died de serves a place among the world's foremost money makers. A Chilian newspaper says thut “although he might have well enjoyed the pleas ures his immense fortune could have procured him, he was a voluntary slave to labor, and often passed en tire nights forming financial com- oinations which were ever success ful." In this way he accumulated over twenty-five millions of dollars. All great millionaires seem to have been hard workers. TIub sentiment of Governor Hen dricks deserves a wide dissemina tion : “He who now, without cause, shall sow discord and excite jealousies in our ranks is not a true Democrat. The poplar forests in the region of country north of Lewiston. Me,, have been cut down for timber for the manufacture of paper. France offers $300,000 in premi ums at her exposition next year. Of Mr. Lincoln’s War Cabinet, Montgomery Blair is the only survi- Old Ben Wade left the Unite! States Senate a poor man after eigh teen years of service. His colleague Mr Suerman, entered the Senate a poor man, and left it a millionaire, after fifteen years of service. Th * trouble with Wade was that he nev er studied domestic economy; ba lived up to his income; whereas Sher man saved $100,000 a year out of a salary of $6,000 a year. Mrs. Fletcher Webster owned Marshfield, the former Home of Dan iel IFebster, lately destroyed by fire. Mrs. Webster anil her son, the sole More than fifty kinds of petrified to and a few priceless mementoes. Th# id b library had been removed before the The loss is put at $60,000 ; iusu- $3,000 at least, making the aggregate “ ‘ ‘"',000,000. the enormous sum of $180, Virginia has thirty-nine living ex members of Congress. She ex-Confeilerate general, S. B Buckner, is about to ta'te up his residence in Texas. One hundred and twenty-three men and twenty-five women com mitted suioide in New York Gity last year, ten more than the preceediug year. There were 48 homicides and not a hanging, against 49 murders and one execution the year previous. Of tho various means of self- destruction shooting was principally resorted to, forty-eight men and ol« woman having chosen this method. Thirty-six men and eleven women, or nearly half the whole number of female suicides, took poison. Six teen men and fosr women huDg them selves, aud fifteen men and one wo man used the knife or razor. FUli are caught in Puget Sound, Oregon, which, when dried aud lighted, will burn like a candle, and afford excellent and abundant light. Cork is coming into use in Germa ny as a filling for winter bed cover lets, in place of feathers. It is said to be not only lighter and cheaper, but decidedly warmer. Printers’ ink is 1 ie best grease for the wheels of be jiness. Texas now has over a thousand convicts. A St. Louis artesian well has reach ed the depth of thirty eight hundred feet. She is bound to have water if she has to go to China for it. There is a wild plant growing in California called the soap plant which produces a ball of natural soap inside its stem superior to the common soap of the manufactu rers. A definition is given of politeness in which it is likened to an air cushion there may be nothing solid in it but it eases the olts of tbe world won derfully. Of forty one Colonels who draw their pay in the regular army it is said that only three have been in actual command of regiments since the war, and that nearly all of them have failed to render any service for years. The elegant and costly swords which were once presented to Gen. Twiggs for gallant service in the Mexican war which were stolen by Beast Butler at New Orleans are still preserved in tbo treasury at Washington. Governor Holliday of Virginia, being a childless widower, with ne fora " use for a fine house finds it more comfortable to live at a hotel than at the Governor’s Mansion. Kansas is a young State, less than twenty years old, and now has a population of 700,000. She has property valued at $229,000,000 sue raised last yoar $66,000,000 ' m farm produots; she has 2,310 miles * 111 * • is of railroad, 233,000 school children, 4,000 school-houses ; her territory not yet one-fourth developed. Mobile Register : “The German element on the line of the South and North Alabama Railroad is becom ing quite an important one. Ihe new county of Ci " 'ullman is now so thickly populated with this people occupants, made great exertions to -—Ji *■ save the historical relios, and suc ceeded in gottingoutthe silver plate fire ranee, $16,000. VEGETINE ■IK IK OWN WO It ON. Bartimore, Md., Feb. 13, 1877 Mb. H. R. Stevknh. Dear Sir,— Hincn nevernl year* I hnvp got « -ore anil very painful foot. I hail Home phy- licianH, but they couldu't cure me. Nowjil have hoard ol your Vegetino from a Indy who was sick for a long time, and heoamo all well from your Vegotine, and 1 went and bought mo one bottle of Vogetiue; and after I bad used one bottle, the pains left me, and it began to heal, and then I bought one bottle and so I take it yet. I thank God for this remedy and yourself; nnd wishing every suf ferer may pay attention to it. It is i blessing for health. Mrs. C. KUABE.BH (138 West Baltimore Street^™ VEGETINE SAFE A All! SLUE. Mr. H. R. Ktkvknh. In 1872 your Vegutino was recommended to me, and, yielding to tho persuasiouB of a friend, I consented to try it. At tho time I was suffering from general nebilitj und nerv- ous prostration, superiuduoed by overwork ind irregular habits. Its wonderful strength, eiiing and curative properties seemed to af fect my debilitated system from tho first dose- J — '.jnvvuj SAW AAA mu 111 Mb tiud under it« per«latent uao I rapidly reoov- “““i " oi " i ' ealtl ' - * iiipuiiy recov ered, Raining more than usual health and good feeling, .-ince then I huve not hesitated to give Vegetine my most unqualified indone« meut, as being a sate, sure, and powerlul agent in promoting health and restoring tho UiaUfAll Ul'ullllll In IIUUI lifa J If wasted system to new life and energy. 'Vog etiue is the only medicine I use; and as long us 1 live I never expect to find a hotter. ° Yount truly, W. H. CLARK, 120 Mouterey Street, Alleghany, Feun VEGETINE Tbe Uest Npriug Ulediciue. Charlestown. II. R. Stevens. Dear .Sir,—This is to certify that I have used your "Blood Preparation" iu my family for several years, and thiuk that for Scrofula or Cankerous Humors or Rheumatic nffectiors it ounnot be excelled; aud as a blood purifief aud spring medicine it is the best thing I have ever usod, and I have used almost eve rything. I can cheerfully recommend it to any one in need of such a luediaine. Yours respeetfHlly, Mrs. A. A. Dins* orb, 19 Russell Street. that in triveling through it one al- ! ■' if most imagines himself transported into some province ol Germany.” VE GETINE. W lmt is Needed, Boston, Feb. 13, 1871. H. R. Stevens, Esq. Dear Sir,—About one yenr since I found myself in n feeble coudition from geueral de bility. Vegetiuo was strongly recommended to me by a triend who had been much bene- fitted by its use. I procured the article, and after using several bottles, was restored to health, and discontinued its use. I feel quit* confident that there is no medicine superior to it for those complaints for which it is es pecially prepared, und would oheorfully ro commend it to those who feel thut thoy need something to restore them to perfect health Respectfully yours, U. L. Pettinoill, Firm of 8. M. Pettengill & Co., No. 10 State 8t., Boston. VEGETINE. All huve Obtuined Keliel. „ „ South Berwick, Me., Jan. 17, 1872. H. 11 Stevens, Esq. Dear Sir,- I have had dyspepsia in its worst form for the last ten years, and have taken hundreds of dollars’ worth of medicines with out obtaining any relief. In September loot I commenced taking the Vegetine,since whioh time my health has steudily improved. My lood digests well, and I have gained fifteen pounds of flesh. There are several others in this place taking Vegetine, and all huve oh* tamed relief. Yours truly Thus. E. Moore, [Overseer ot Card Room, Portsmouth Co.’e Mill*.