The Thomson advertiser. (Thomson, Ga.) 1866-1874, February 11, 1871, Image 2

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$ tnnisnn limrrtkr +*— ♦— Publialiad Weekly by J. W. AM)KR(!ON & CO. ' SATURDAY * FEB, 11 IF7I POPIJt.AU EDUCATION. The erxaiiieation of the County Bonr<Ti of School nfficeTs, in provided in the law enac tod by the Legislature, vrna tbe initiatory action for tho introduction of an entire new ayatein of education throughout theEtute of fleorcia. The people generally Imvn very indeflnfte ideal of the magnitude of tho revolution designed to be recomplinhed by ibis innovation. Re pugnance to social (quality between the children of white people and negroes, at once leada them to reject any syatern which pro pones to inaugurate mixed schools ; and anti cipating this condemnation the framers of the present law incorporated a provision for sep arate echonls wherever the people of the dis trict prefer it. This evil being obviated, the public have overlooked the greater one on which tho whole system i» founded. This system takes away tho whole control of the instruction of youth from its natural and rightful custodians, to whom it is committed by tho Creator, and transfers it ostensibly to a Ilonrd, but in reality to u State Commissioner, who holds his nnthority by appointment and iu not even dependent on the votes of the people for his position. Although the bill establishing this atrocious outrage is so complicated and cumbrous as to require more than ordinary legal skill to fully understand its details, yet it is manifestly the most des potic plan which could bo devised. And as it is borrowed through Massachusetts from Prus sia, it could not ho expected that it should have any features in common with tho liberal principles on which our ancestors founded the groat American Republic. If tho State must onnot a system of public instruction nt all, why could it not Imvo pros vided something accommodated to our system or government f Without assuming to dic tate, tho following suggestions arc submitted to the next legislature, which seem to accom plish nil that is desirable in the present ob jectionable law', without involving its odious provisions: Let tho whole existing school law bo repeal ed at tho earliest practicable moment; and in its stend substitute a simple|nw providing for tho election by the people of one competent man from each county to he entrusted with the duty of electing, from each Congressional District, n member of tho State Board, which Board shall devise a general system of public instruction, to bo submitted to the Legislature for their notion, and nothing to ho obligatory until passed upon by that authority. And while this would meet tho requisition, of the Constitution, It should still school adder Clio control of tho pot''do. K tul t let it bo proyided that tiny county making provision for the payment of tuition foes for al! its indi gent children shall draw its proper portion of State funds to he so applied. Such a law need not bo complicated as the present law is; and tho chief objection to tho Prussian despotic plan in obviated, na the whole control of tin 1 system is left, ns it should he, in the hands of tho peoplo. An Editorial Adieu. J, It. Eggleston gets off a racy farewell in retiring from tho editorial charge of the Mo bile Tribune, from which we tuko the fol lowing na a specimen: 'lt was moro through accident than design that I first became engaged in tho nowspaper business, and a very little experience in it served to convitieo me that there could be neither great profit or plcusuro in following it as a permanent profession. With a contempt for tho notoriety it confers, and a horror of the drudgery inseparable from it, t have awaited impatiently tho opportunity which has at length arrived of throwing i ff the shackles of the sanctum : and having done so, I feel n» Ariel ; did when released from the exacting rulo of! Frospero. I am aware that 1 have often treated tho | newspaper of w hich 1 had control very much as a boy would a blow-gun. 1 have not been ablo to resist the temptation of firing it into any target that presented itself, and calling out to tho crowd to see how the struck victim was rubbing tho sere place. While amusing my self in that manner, I know that I have in dulged in a license and harshness that seemed imoompatihle with dignity and justice. Not for my own sake, hut that of others, I regret having to often given too free a rein to m v pen ; for while 1 am wholly indifferent as to the effect it may have had on people’s opinion* of my ■•lf, I would, were it in my power, hasten to heal every wound I nmy have inflicted on the character, the 'pinions, or even the ridiculous vanity of others. It is too much trouble to bear ill-will against one’s fellow creatures. A Bloody Tragedy. —A farmer, name not given, residing between Spring Grove and Rock Grove; Winnebago county, Illinois, re cently'old liis farm, and received the money on last Tuesday. On Wednesday night he left his home mi 1 went m Rook Run, Returning from there, and as ho i ared his home, he was Confront; J by a man who demanded .his mon ey. The farmer vl.-w revolver and shot the rubber dead. Startle. ; far his home lie en countered two other men, each of whom he dispatched with his revolver. On entering the hou-c he found bis wife and daughter wel tering in their blood, tho latter being dead, and his wife, though badly hurt, was not dead when last hoard from. One of the last men was recognized as the stranger who had re oonly; attempted to purchase the farm from the farmer. If you wish to know a man’s character, wait till some misfortune or disgrace happens to him, ami y u w ill see all his greatness or all his weakness. From the Now York Sun., A Warning. The Peoplo of the North not Likely to be Deceived. Gen. Granb, having thriven the Republican party into confusion by the disgraceful man ner in which he has prcsie 1 his San Domingo jpb upon the United States Congress and the country, seem* to he casting about for some ! other ground on which to rally his broken ! columns. lianas selected for this ptfrposc t! ■ | alleged ami violations of law in i coma portions of the late rebellious States, j and especially in relation to the elections. I We warn the Republican* that this question I will not afford material for restoring the wan ing supremacy of their party in that section of the country. Candid men nt the North, j while ready to admit that society, below the ; Polotnnc and the Ohio may not at all times, and under nil circumstances, and in nil places, he as peaceful and law abiding ns in New Ung land, suspect that tho picture is overdrawn, and that, too, for partisan purposes ; and in view of the events cf the past ten years, they are rather surjwiscd that society in that section of the Ur.ion i“ so quiet and orderly ns it. is. At all events, the great majority of those who firmly (stood with the Government through nil the convulsions, nre decidedly opposed to the passage of any moro reconstruction nets of Congress, and think the time has come when the control of the Southern States should he confided to their own citizens, without any ex | (-optional interference on the part of the Fed ; oral Government. It It now five years and eight months since the rebel armies wore disbanded ; and after vexatious and seemingly needless delay, the last of the Confederate State - is about to he admitted to full representation in Congros*.— Is it tot time that the Southern people were left untrammelled to try their hands nt gov erning themselves? Ought not the results of the election* of the past autumn tu touch the Republicans that a long continued policy of coercion will finally recoil upon rts authors? Do they believe that they can forever pin the people of the South down to the obedience of the law with Federal bayonets? Is it not better to put them upon their good behavior, and, ns in ordinary cases, let pains and penal ties follow rather than precede the ontnraission of offences? Do the Republicans imagine that by any system of legislation, or by any muster ot military forces, they can preserve to themselves tho entire negro vote of the South, and thereby carry the old •hireholuing States for their Presidential tie's tin IS7 V Os course Gen. Grant, if I c thong! t by so doing lie could restore his tarnished prestige with the Republican party, and revive his blighted prospects for a re-nomination, would not hesitate to raise false issues in regard to the condition of affairs in the South, and plunge that section of the Union into re newed confusion. But it will not prove a .winning game for him, while it may render it impossible for the party to eh ct any one to the Presidency next year. Intelligent Repub licans had better '.uko the manag -ment of the party into their own hands, and not Isave it any longer to a man whose narrow vision does not al'ow him to contemplate anything be yond tho promotion of his own selfish ends. The Dill to Sim-crvise Elections.— The World expresses the opinion that this bill w ill pass Congress and arouse tho who o counny to rescue the ballot from the manipulations ot the party conspirators. Tho New York Even ing Po-t (Republican) protests against the bill ns follows ; Congress is to bo asked, wo hoar, to pass laws by which the U. S. officers -hall supervi-e the elections in tho Southern States, But will such gross, and hateful, and dangerous interfer ence oure the evils of which these Southern Republicans complain? Wlmt they hope to gain, of course, is political power; how long would they keep it, unless they nvnage much bettor than they have done? Wlmt they need is to allay bitterness and rancor, to let people forget tho w ar ; and to do that, they must stop hostilities. They should he the first to insist on a genera! and immediate removal of polit ical disabilities, and the most vigorous oppo nents of any and every scheme for Congres sional interference in the local Governments of the Southern States, and they must romember that the U. S. government cannot put a cor -1 oral's guard at the door of every Southern member. ‘'Choose Ye.”— A glass of whisky is manu factured from about seventy grains id' corn, the lahie of which is too small to be estima ted. A gins- of this mixture sells for a dime, and if a good brand, is worth the money. It is drank in a minute or two. It fires tho brain and deranges and weakens the physical sys tem. On the same sideboard on which the deleterious beverage is served lies a newspa per: it is covered with half a million of type— it livings intelligence from the four quarters of the globe. The newspaper costs less than the glass of grog, but it is not less true that there is a largo number of people who think corn juice cheap and newspapers dear! The newspaper is a source "f pleasure and enlight enment 'o the home circle as the family gath er around the bright glowing fire on a win ter evening: and the results of newspaper ; reading proves lenefioial through life. | Olive Logan s;ys to the white men of this ! country : ‘Since you have swallowed tho negro, I think it pret'.j hard indeed if you can't go the white woman as far as your lips,’ She ; actually wants u- to kiss those female suffrage shriekers 1 Gocd heavens I —here, waiter, half ! a dozen more negroes on the half-shell 1— j Courier Journal j An Di and Tar Heel. —The Turban ' Caroii | nian says there is a man living in the moan- J tains of North Girol'mt, about forty miles from i Greenville, who has reached the age of one | hundred and forty three years. At the time , of Braddoek's defeat he was twenty years old, ] and had a wife atd three children. Diamond Diggings in Ger-gia. Questioning Dr. Stephens, of HifPfcaAty, ! . <k is notieed in this cditiorif^Bont the diamond diggings in that aiays tho geological formation where these diamonds arc found, is apparent in Gwinnett, Hall,"Banks and Habersham counties, in' which latidl’ it Mink' arid crops out again in North Carolina and Virginia, in all of which valuable diamonds have been discovered. In Hall abouh forty have been found, but the most valuable have b' l *n destroyed or 10-t through ignorance of their character and value. Some noirroe- broke one worth a hundred thousand dollars to so* what it might bo. \ farmer describe! one that was giving to him thirty years ago, and u ied by himself u* a child, and his hoys subse quently, for n middle man in maples; hut it , lost about the place *ix months ago, and th y an; hunting for it now. N thin# was known about it* value until similar .-ton's were pronounced to be diamonds, and then the far mer knr-v that he and bin boys had been play ing marbles with a diamond, which* from des cription, the Doctor think- must be worth half n million dollars, and be one of the most val liable g'm* in the world. The Doctor says that labor and capital only are needed to prove that these diamond fields in Gw4Mj£ria surpass those of Brazil and nre equal to any in the world. Diamonds have also been found, as the render knows, in Bartow county, in this State. —Macon Telegraph. llov.* Tfu e ruts is. — ls we could only rend each other's hearts, we should l>e kinder to ward each other. If wo knew the woes and bitterness, and physical annuy.kncc* of our neighbors, we should make allowances for them which wo do not now. We go about masked,uttering sterootyped sentlinents.hid ng <>ur heart-pangs and our headache* us carefully as we can; and yet we wonder that others do not discover them by intuition. Wccover our best feelings from the light; we do not conceal our resentments and our dislikes, of which we are prone to be proud. Life is a masquerade at which few unmu-k, even to their dearest friend. An*i though there is need of much ui.inking, would to Heaven we dared to show our teal faces from birth to death, for then lew at least would truly lore each other. A gentleman of Halifax, being at a ladies’ lair not long since, and being solicited to buy something by a fair creature who kept one of the tables, sai l he wanted to buy what he feared was not for sale—u lock of her hair. T • his surprise and delight she promptly cut uff the coveted curl and received the price offered ten dollars. The happy purchaser was exibittng his trophy to one of his friends, who very sud denly blasted his joy by saying, ‘She rather outflanked you, for, to my certain knowledge, she only paid three dollars fur the whole wig 1’ 'They say’ that Logan, recently elected Sen ator fr< m Illinois, has quit drnUtinj*} and joined toe Methodist Church, but the Cincinnati Er s quirer in k p ; ioM. It any* he it** » natural, tine, discriminating and hisVy cultivated taste Jor old Buurbon,and hn« enveloped hogs heads of it iu his time. As for Coliaa, there is no merit in his teetotulism. Some creatures are so despicably organized us to bo beneath suspicion, 11c is so loaded down with outwaid smiles that an inward smile would lay him out.-—Telegraph & Me *l EKsEY MEN IN NORTH C.\R»»MNA. - A Colon number.nguboutthree thousand persons, many of whom are Jersey tnen, has been recently formed in th© western part of North Carolina on the same principle as that of Greeley, in Colorado. It was thr ugh the instumt ntality ol Mr. Greeley that the above toh-ny has like wise been created. The tract of land purchased i.-i valued at $500,000, and M?. Davidson, a lawyer of Elizabeth, is on hia way io North Carolina to investigate the titUtoth© purchase in behalf of the colonists. There is a good chance for scino nice young gentleman of delicate health, who wants some one to love him, someone to tan >s—and to work for him—at Antioch, Cal. Miss Agnes Lewis, of that region, is sixteen years old, and has plowed over a hundred acre*:on her father's rancho near Antioch, driving six horses attach ed to a throe-gang- plow. It is claimed, says the Detm! . ree Press that Grant did not invite Greeley to the White House, with a view to a peace alienee between him and Senator Fcntou. lie wanted a man to sw oar over the Georgia election, and he knew that Greeley" wan adequate to the occasion. CoMi LiMEM AKY.—The Koine Courier says that the Atlanta New Era “ties like a dog'' in a statement made by the latter to the effect that the people ol Georgia are more solicitous to get in the Union than they are for the char acter of the Senators who are to rtpresent them. The right of States to tax insurance compa nies incorporated in other States at higher rates than local companies, has been affirmed by the Lulled States Supreme Court in a re cent case. A similar question, hut involving tho right to tax all companies incorporated in other countries, is new under argument in the samo court. A promising young journal of Cincinnati makes the astounding statement that ‘When Sir \Y alter S< it denied the authorship of the \Y Hverly novels, Dr. Johnson, the most rigid stickler tor truth of all the English moralists forgave the luUstatemout upon the ground tl*'*- *• ;i iinpcrtiueot question was not entitled to a truthful reply.’ Japan is a country of antitheses. Nature in ail her aspects is very beautiful, but earth quakes and typhoons are numerous, Tho ground is covered with the most beautiful flow* ers and the air is filled with birds of richest plumage ; but the former are scentless and the latter voiceless. The people are simple minded and happy, and proudly trace their history into tho dim past far beyond that of the Chinese. Cassius M. Clay has turned Democrat.— Why didn't ho come over when recruits were wanted ? Kentucky, in particular needs none. Negro Suffrage in* Pennsylvania.—Some startling facts were exhibited at a recent exam nation of witnesses at Ch&mbersburg in the contested election case of Cessna vs, Mayers. Almost the whole negro vote of the borough or Chambersburg was attacked by Mr. Meyers, the Democratic mend er, on the ground of non payment of taxes. It appears that the tax*» of these negroes were t»a.’d in the bulk by J *hn McDowell, a leading Radical. The receipt were given to him by the Collector, and dis tribute and by Radical agents with the Radical tickers. The tax was twenty-eight cents on nearly all of them. Colored men w e em ph.yrd to collect, from such negroes as could pi}', twentv five cent-. Thfi-s vruo could not p a y got their receipts gratis, provided they would vote for O-na. Mr. McDowell was pressed upon the point, whether he paid the taxes out of his private funds »r from money given him f*r that ruirp -c. Tliis he refused to tell. Judge Arm rotated to the witness that he though* he oved it, to him-elfand Jtbe community to rr • tfi>- question, but Mr. McDowell po--i»ivfly declined to do so. The Valley Spirit, in noticing this feature of the case says : ‘T 1 ' . i. doubt that this is «'.re a puri of the r • ru; n fund vent. The Mcl.eir.o undoubtedly was to p f! y the taxes of all these colored rne.n b receipts, a -.d, if these men were willing to tot n for Co-ss-na. the receipts were to b* Mir:* ndrr«.d to them, but i. they refused they wore to lose their votes/ Tlic-e ffc'**c show ‘f <• re.onei in which the Rad icals use their n pro n!»i* a . They drive th* m tn tho poll- I’Ve rattle, and the negroes vote with about it*much int ’‘liger.ee. In this case, if a negro would vote for Cessna, he was given a receipt. If not, the receipt wits withheld and the man depriv 1 o the light of suffrage. The whole matter of negro mfTrago is a fraud and a swindle, and the }■• . sos ‘lds assertion is found in the fat el.- al>. »• and A Plea for Protection.— Here is the rea son Grant's friend- are so anxious for a pro tective tariff on ir* n. The Gcru ral is a stock holder, to the amount of -12.900, in the iron works at Lawton, Michigan. Grant v. ell knows hia little game. If the tariff on iron were reduced, Grant would 10-e his snug divi dends from his stock. Os course he is not willing to do this, m and therefore pleads for “Protection,” that the rich may grow richer, and tho poor, p m>r. Mr. Edmunds' bill to h-t nobody vote here after in Pi -identiiil elections but tie so who will vote right, a governmental bureau of reg istration being the tre is 1 »■.:»-».-oy. i- but l re-vßi<i[iiiig of curpi -bag Senator Kellogg * idea that the United Si .Marshal* appoint commi-'s'innfrs, and that ‘no voter -hall be duly qualified to vote for Pre.u lent, or Vice Presi dent, or for u R-pre • otutivo in Congress, uti less his registration shall have been approved by the afor. aid c unmisd •fern.’ TVs is a very good Mpiirm t«.- avert the Com ; defeat, but it will fail. Rad r r v. at-. Hr.vn.s.— Th > Cleveland Herald, a Republican pr f i«* di .rusted with the pumpkin cob dS - o-. if mi,.c 4 As u Senator—•> * u*.- the language of one of his own color; though n r man by three shades—he has not i.s.u.un;. and to‘shucks. 1 lb i- not r» «ucce».•*, i hher, ns a ‘lecturer/ In fact, Ravi is is rath’T p-.or i. :.>!«, as they sly down South, and hi- < lee Vn to the Senate has not Advanced the car.se of the negro iuc* one .-rep. 1 A Kalam o. ’• il -pi tmen write* to a ‘school board’in Ohio that he = c il! take a •ehr-01, us he has Va;V.t 2 terms school k I attended Col ledge 4 yrs at dete. it michig.m and am 2b yrs avago!’ A Boston paper ex -r >es the <1 **ill>or.‘.r. e/ n ▼iction that ‘a man who v ill ; at do n*u ; Vug j himself, imr hd any «»ne cDp do any lh h\ 1 way of public imj raven.- r, ‘, ought 1: ;• tavern after e, \ be 'y . ’ i.< dead. 1 It is mi 1 there is no h-- A fi - 1 <>■■.< fii .fi do-;:*!i vented in larm it .asin the Unite l S’ates. j £ V Qsmmws :-B ? a fp.sitcs! ° FIRST PRIZE ? Paris Exhibition 1867. Pisrrfy the blood and strengthen tho system, eradicating tho effect of dissipation, maintain the human frame In condition of heaithfulness, dispel the Blues and all menial 'Ms- U'- 'pers,and relievo f ,osa whose sedentary habits lay them open to depression. They prevent and curs Bili ous end <■/her Fevers, Fever and . . Chills, Diarrhoea, ‘Dysen tery, Dyspepsia, Sea-Sickness, Colic, Cholera, Cholera Morbus, and every complaint inci dental to diet or atmos phere. Ladies will find them a sovereign boon, as they eradicate all traces cf Debility, Nervousness, inertness, and Diseases peculiar to the sex. £3rThousands of Testimo nials can be seen at the office of M. JACOBSON, Sole Proprietor, (H & <36 Wafer DUtet, if. X. New Adreftifeements. O/r TO SfO PeR DAY. > ST. vv *p JjjD MES, OYS and GIBUS who eortigc in our new bu ine>> make from to ?I0 per day in their ow . I«e€?itiei». Fu 1 pa and in structions >-nt !'*C’» by n ail. in need of Dcrman-'i.t. profitable work, address at once, GF.O ! iGB£TfVS<>N Portland, Me rpHE HEW YORK WEEKLY DAY BOOK JL —THE OH\VMON « T W HITE St P : * KM- A 'V! AO AIX TH : WOBL 1 >.- \ Fir Class E ghr Pa?- DBMOERATIC -YMEKbY, estab -h.d in ‘8..0. per year. ; $1 f<«t*«ix months. S bs.-ribe for it For S; i on copies, address ‘*i»AY ' O K” N w York CMy. ~ I'S'f'LE J(;Sirs" ' T RUiNK FULL OF FUN. A !V>r*f *!> > <<f first r l trs ’’it and ITuiror, con •.d. ing ti e I?i Cotnh-al Stories, Cr e! St-ll?, Side Splitting J"ke-. * 'reus Po. lrv. Qu int Parodies, Bar-Wsque Seim s. rwCoDundroma, ! Miitli Provoking *cch. s ever pu’dished. Intersp-' with euri us '‘uzzlfs, Amusing aid Til ks. TYmls of Pallor M <gie, an ] nearly 200 Fu:.ny Engravir-.irs. illustrated Cover. — Price 15 /ts. -cni by mail, >-tagu paid to any part <»f the United .- sat.--, on r. e-upfc of price. Dick A Fii»6ehaei», Publishers, 18 Ann et., X. Y A. B. FARQUHAH, Proprietor of Pennsylvania Agricultural Works, Msaufactarerof Improved Poliabi.fl St«el [YORK, PENNA. DICKSON SWEEPS. SOI.If> STEEL SWEEPS, F~J sul hCJiAJ’F.ll''. i&f STEEL PL' AVS, i .... 3 SIiO7EL PLOW BLADES, f "'7 /- y CULTIVATORS. gTSsA tJ hor-i: h<»ks. harrows, '• H >R I :• WEBS, TBBEBB ' • INti MACHINES. Ac.. Ac. yes*' ' " Send for illustrated C2tak>ga°* V'• ■ ! - Made by I>.II WhiiteMiore. \\ f orc« -!er. Mass. ILLUSTRATED AND CATALOGUE Os Ft web and Y - ; able 'kkoh, AND SlttlMKU KJ- WK VIXG BULBS, FOR 1871, Wi 1 be ready for r.-aiiing by the middle of Jan uary, j.- twilhstandii'g our ./rent h»ts of type, paper, cn;_-ravin,-, &*.*., by fir . w’ i -h destroyed (fa -Job I rioting office of the Rochester Demo rat k Phronieie, 2 'h December 187 U. it nil: he printed on a most elegant new tinted paper, md illustrated v ith nearly Five Hundred Orioinal Enobavinos, And two finely executed <’«dored Plates—speci mens for all of whie'n were grown by our-elve t e past season from our own stock of Seeds In the originality, execution and extent of the mgr. vi; g*, it in u» Ike and v i; ently superior t- any other rnt.-Jog :»• or *. Krai Guide 1 extant. Th • int ilo. m; w.l! c ■? - st of 112 Pages, ai.J s an is |ubtiehed will be. sent frceio all who Mid. r. and Se*ds from us hy m il the laJ season. To others* a chn gc of 15 cents per py h ill tu ma !-, which is not ti.i «;u« of l*t»« Colored i 1 at* s. We i«f»»ure our frier ds that the induce u- nU we off-v Li purclro-ers of >eedis as to <:i;alif an 1 exte t i M k. Db- ounts nd Premiums reun n p i--rt!. please send i rdci s for Cn ttteg-.ies without delay. Ocr U.iLoßr.n • 'iip.ofor 1871 'Viil L, r-' ’ to s<n l in Januaiy. Tin luorn • w i I lv- pri‘S n n t F\r!;,~two Vai ties of showy ’■»•! popultr Fi .w< -f natural dz and .on r b * design to male it th- best, Plate of Flow* r* ver i- J, S*.zo 19x24 inch“*. The ret.oil dne V. ou'-I t l o t T v Do’lars ; h JJ, hdWev I’llrr i h it to enstonr-ra nt 7.» eent? p<r t*"p} , and «-iT r it :>* n PreTnium up.»n ■ r .r- bn S*-» *. > • <’ *t . I*u w en out liRIGGS k :O i ): y N. Y I <Si2 -)i'l ' A ’ .'AM. 1870 The ild frt i ■< r: io , r r t' ... 1S Con -uu.; G >•«. ~ ■■ rft- /,* C.’rri.Ku ? -roa. & a ; 1 -i rrnr Ti-fE i; at r< i!orK.\!«%. EUREKA m.im GOLD WATCH COMPANY, ii ivc ■ p»>/ 1' r::i> | L . . D’-FC , rXI CO., fJewetofs# I ! ’ v. N,.Vork, ; Afl F THE U. S.. { V ■>, HIV? t• T trr.'iiii 'h and every one to j ko..f> <?>.! r, , t time for otic nv. This V.' .tcJi we I jl.d'e r’l . ' r ' .HNe A,J. 2' l' ViV • I ti‘ ■! 'Jt..’ C 3 , jIl it tiiv cU- "i 1 j e ntidu of ill.- it..! ! iio-.v so widely k own in l'ii>•<. .. os In i inn a did i. It hits i n.e .•! .. t 0. ■f6 •: h it.'i>iysr.|..;,,s; jit ii stn-,,3 t 1,.. n.t ~f tho st! ,'j. es' ni-ids; no ; one ",n udi il f-mn 'id nly hv weialit, the i M-n *nhoi fSj’d bei»p l-ls t ‘r. The work i Te hy i: e iiiti tv tt.ro. a tis- we l ! Itnoa ti ! Am- r'em 'Vtdeh. The Al.irt'.innm U « cheap nt ii. o we va aft ■! i • soli ilio i'. ntcii for fS -.fid i■ ’ n small profit. We pvk th- U, ■ . >• ’ : I : : tt; a ; fi V e- |. for ,1 , ~-e ,\d i all or dc ■ t.. l. \ eFiH: SI v ... .? welers. 40 S -Id Broadw v ew V ik. Ail i n o s>Tg3ITT faJlUil IN FOUR X'SON .'Hs, c?ar\ he made in a quiet way by men that are t-ap.ahle of keeping tSu secret. ’ Addr< ss JAa! K> GOODWIN. f*7 i.x hmge Place, New York. HEW $25 |Y^ii“ E . t <7e ihJu MONTH'S lLock S t i t cli. >end 1 SEWTK3 ! for full particu- TRIAL kirsto >» m. 'V. Daniels MACHINE! 1&Co , Savannah Oi. |AT HOME j'TPiI’V"V ! PLY. - y p( -\\7•! R.—Ro' ?'=ovi ?5 supeifluaus hair in five mi-i with-* oirt injury to th- skin. Sent by n.ail for $1,25. Upham’s Cura Ridioves mos- violent paroxysms in five, minutes and eff «'s a«• . v c v,> Price $2 by* mail. T E and \P. X >s TIAi ‘ STAIN Cl rs Ihe whi?kc r - and '-J •.< black lor b”’>wn. It con-'sf s‘s only .*.io pre< at:Mion, :75 cents by mail. A dr -s S. p. UP C\M, No. I 721 Jayne Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Circulars j sgnt fre*». Sold bv ail Druir-ists. iiTOTTTTTI | TO THE 'v ORKTN = CLASS.-We are trJ i prepared to furnish a’l cla.-sos with eonsfant S employment at home, the whole of the time or j tor the spare moment-. Business new, light i in<l profitable. Persons of «ither s<-x easily j tarn from fifty cents to s'» per eveniug. and : 9 proportional s ?m 1 y devoting their whole i time to the business. B >ys and uirls earn near i bas much as men. That all who see this notice j nay send their address, and te.-t the business, : v< make tho unparalleled » ts. r : T * such is are 1 n t .. til satisfied, we will send $1 to pay for ; Ur- trouble of writing. Full particulars, a val i luble sample which will do to commence work ; os, and a copy of The People’s ! it k a ary Com i panion—o i« of the largest and best family ! newspapers ever published—all sent fe e. hy j nail Rea lor, if you want perm .n lit, profi-a --j bile work, address E. C. ALLEN tt CO., Augusta, Maine. 1 i VOID QUACKS- \ victim of early india* -X cretion,causing nervous debility, premature decay, tfcc., having tried in vain every advertised remedy, lias a simple means of self-cure, which h* w II send free t<* his fellow sufferers. Address J H. TUTTLE, 78 Nassau street, New York, Agents ! Read This ! WILL pay agents a salary of S3O per T ▼ week and exp}rses, or aPow alargecom n.’issio , to sell our new and wonderful inven tions Address M. Weoneb <sOo„ Marshall,Mich DU. S. s. Fli : i’.- Fami l\ Physician 90; : n . j h<" nt by mi! free. Teaches how to cure a' diHcas - < f the por.-on ; skin, hair, eyes,’ • oadway, N. Y. curioU3, H Micl \\ Ti. '--IK Lai Its Private Companion ‘ '’ and - r, ‘ ' iu r - rmatit. Sent fr.*e for t v.m st a p . r - drs. I. METZ TER, nan over. Pen*'. SPUnAL NOTICE^ iBiE ifevienn. E- Y fi * f -At re silent arguments which Ticirfi r ; - tor.cnc can sliake, and it is upon O'* . fi.'Y ' f- ! :th reputation of Hostettcr’s St> :ii eh Lfi:- a- : . health-prcs rving cliklf, and ar- ;•••:•- •: ’ rful remedy, is based. When witn- ' 'J in crowds, year after year, and rei rat'- th• - statements in relation to the hi' d< ■ ff. fa r cdlcine upon themselves !<*. The credent!.d- of :mqnr,lied tonic and alterative, tx: ir.hr.'; <1 <*f arly twenty years, in clr. h? : ii : rry class, and residents of ev<T rho most prevalent among the e ' ■ wifi' id . and harrass the hitman family. ' irficr a i:Tf if ud f people, strangers to each other, h innualiy been seized withan insane u ; • sire to deceive the public, or Ho#* tetter's Bitter*, for no less than a fifth of a century have been iff -rdiitg such relief to sufferers from in* di- - stjon, fev<.r and ague, biliousness, general de bid.y, uti i !>• rvfii- dfi- >rders, as no other prepara tion 1 1 • • 1 er in.; rt and. To day, while the eyes of th : 1 • ar-.- upon th -u lines, tens of thousands 1 • t • . x • r relying upon the Bitters as sure ‘’.efence ag-inst the ailments which the i >ent n e»> is, and their confidlft&fe is not r.T ; . , 1 The local potions which interested -.h- Yer> , tiu; se- > vor t<> foi-t upon the sick in it.- - t I fi . everywhere meeting the fate that fi and ; u: • fij o—ture, while the demand for tin- at v_ . ’u- -- ; dtie is constantly in cv -Y;lmlS V Cure for Diphtheria. .Ml int rested, please rend the. following extract r ! * h.'tt* v ; Mrs. Ellen B. Mason, wife of Hcv. Franc!Mason, T unghoo, Birmah : My -n n i l iken violently sick with diph in i sore throat. i counted one morning ion little vesicles in his th ‘.-it, v* ry ut<‘, 1 I:is ton,ue, towards the root, just hk< a w;itern>e:<ui, full of seeds; the re- So many ‘ fid fi en hey fi, ] an-ohd here, I was afraid to call a i»Ly -: iun, and thought I would try your Pain Ko « r for r< g iri !■ with small doses inwardly. I did so, arid h and tin -a•••;!•• invariably cut off' the vesicles, »r? ! he rni.-cd th'-m up, often covered with ldo(‘d. I!o m ; t k'n on Sunday ;on Wednesday his throat was ch ar, and his tongue rapidly clearing I•' 1 '' •• ’ nirvicnt, with castor oil and r ho n, It seemed to me a won ■u’rf,-1l iIP -fi wish it could he known | ,f v- hers in our land who are lo * ; - f ' and üby this dreadful disease. ] ’■ ! Kilfir one of the most v - i]u ' ■ Yi <-v. r used in Bunnah. Once I r : : • hlark scorpion; the pain " ' • Ii- r < ;,t<lv applied the Pain Killer, (f-T I ■ r tr. v. 1 without it), again and 02 -in, a-. •• foot wis well. Dr, V • n vrrfiw from *« * hoefon :•• Four Killer cu'K-j t iii . m w !'.■ Diphtheria, or Sort Throit— I 'h:i» b Tx'n/fi' T' -evjlent here; and if Tint licrn kn v. to f-fi in nnv instance when used inti' ._ 'i /- " ' v<.-. Miould make known t° tin "i in this diseaseasa gargle and hui**'.*. * ?•*»;•? and stimulant.) L' '' 1 ;'m ailed for many ■ .fi; use of Perry trended with I he ' ’ it was used ere -re-H to preclude ■■■t. lmlS v 4; fi. H. TUTT, ~ HtUGGIST, ■'! ' .A, 11 KORiJIA. ra al Kxtrkiiclt I 1 I.OH- 1';,:. . _ l-o . ». p. --on a ! me.-- '■ in ~:iokni! . «. inooutH” 9 • :'H• \ 10iR) Oiincos Or!\l\f -5 Pailim -V l ) : > X'lTlin l'>o CHl.nlioroitM 5 HW-. i; r m . \ vtpnou 1 11'..\ V OP! I'M 1" ear! v ■:•!*■'. VMMOXIA 20 bi>!s. a i/'oaor, w lbs. !’0 r ASH !••• :;;s bitters It'Xl P:. I". \ \ V “ SOOPa- OOJ.HKV F-: \'SLE « 1000 i-all. Ins: :;n oil 25 «!,N. TPRPI’XTIXE 40.00, ;t,9, win rK u:.\d ■:!0 B WIVOO’.V <iL\s.S 10.1 Chs.'S W.iLV'M'S SCHNAPPS 1000 Gallons CASTOR OIL + 5 Ccrt ons NTTMEO 3 Ot,9P< SPANISH INDIGO of DRUG and FANCY GOODS, t i «!.: . ’■ a-tetit! ", if tlie Trade 8i inrited.—o“u,\ 4: 1 Fi nit Trees. large 7 v k <>f ae\ i : sand Fruit, Trees, ■; ! w•> .hem ta i .er price than any Nur-vryme in tin St. th. We are anxious to Be l our )' 3- t -to.-k he room for others ; arid will, by 1. all in want of Grape \ iiies or T yto buy of us. Am on _r "U; r. ..y found. A Ivey, x. Blue Fav«.;r:‘.e, Ajana a, <> . i atawba, c. oocord;. ("rev, ing, (» -ethe, Ha.- ; and Prolific, lowa, Ives' Seedling, Martha, Merrimack, North Carolina Seedling, Perkins, Rubtnder, Rentz. Scuppers iiorig, Taylor, iider. etc. good list cf A m ! fi Peaches, Tears, Plums, and Cherries. V» T e c*o - mi;- • the • \ • Hence and genuineness o. f our fru’t, ;nd .b -u ■*= o"'>:pHrison with anv fruit grower - th, ,;s to the <ize and thrift of our Tines end Trees. ee >ur lists and pri m. . . W. CLARK. Fob . iml3 Covington, Ga. Runaway. »M Y ' L IT fie last day of De ll. fierl oT. ; iie 2 ■ y named DANIEL i ruo PS ON, who was formerly my property, age*: boat 15 y and weighs about 85 lbs., | and of gi: rer read co!Said Daniel is bound to me, and I h.-reby forbid any person from hirine or harb*iring him. i will pay a reward of slOto anv perso i wfio will return him to me, or place him where I can get him, an] I will pa all reasonahie ex:- -e. lie had on when helvft, a wa'-nut y-’ r .us roundabout coat, horn • made woollen :■ nw, and wool hat. JAM .. S. THOMPSON, J;:u. 20, 1971—luill AValnut Grove, Ga, j