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The
VP' .iaY, NCKMEBR s !»;».
Ground-Swell from the
Panic.
, Tho World says, (probably with jus
tice,) that the ground-swell from the late
panic is likely to prove more destructive
Is t orn.' of the We tern granges, it is y iM1 y ie B to rnl itself. The press dis-
said, the members are plodged never to. parlies of the last few days have teemed
go to law with each otaer, but io s .ttle announcements of closed mannfac-
*11 their dispute* by arbitration. That is and haad3 discharged by hundreds
* good idea. ! and thousands, who are thus consigned to
A Chinaman came down one of the .want and suffering, just as winter ap-
main streets of Millerton, California., on ( proaches; and then, in their turn shorn
olectiou day, in a state of exaltation, and of all purchasing ability, become the un-
thus delivered himself; “Hoop la! me all; willing instruments of loss of employment
name Molican mau. Hair cut short and to thousands more, who earn them bread
drusli like h—11. Hoop la!”
Tub Sioux Indians are disgusted with
•their summer’s work in the vicinity of
the Yeliowatono Park. They say “spec
tacled man from Spoon Butler s country
heap fraud; white woman all cotton,
dried up and full of .horse liairj heap
fraud”
Kbi, logo's army or 485 men axe bring
ing tuuir bills in. The “ demd total ” is
4738,597, or §1,506 per man—§4 00 a head
for the tas-payers. We need a clean
slate in Louisiana. Let them pull down
the levees and fioo 1 the country twenty
feet deep for ten years or so, and then
•begin again.
A Connecticut genius is said to have
found his way to Paris, with a patent
ready-made billy and bullet-proof, self-
erecting street barricade, tiirown up in
two minutes by t ie .most umnilitaiy re
former, and, by touehing a spring, will
fly any* flag Bourbon, Orleans, red or
tri-coler—audplay tunes all the way from
Alarseilies to Syria.
The Washington Star says: “ It seems
that the colored cadets at the Naval
Academy are again in trouble, as the Sec
retary of tiie Navy is in receipt of a re
port from the commandant, the nature of
which is not yet unde public, but which,
it is said, charges Conyers and McClel
land with disregard of the established
discipline of the school.”
Tub English Dean oi Canterbury
visited the Episcopal Theological Semi
nary, near Alexandria. Va., on the 17th
instant and delivered an address to the
faculty, students and visitors of that in
stitution. The subject of the address
was •• The studies p.irsueJ at the Oxford
University preparatory to admission into
the CuurcH of England.”
Business men in Bo-ton, and Massa-
-ehusct:s generally, compliin of the de
lays encountered in obtamiug settle
ments from the receivers appointed to
wind up the affairs of the insurance com
panies which were rendere d insolvent by
the great fire. It is hinted that the re
ceiver < use the money for their own pur
poses, and are in no hurry to pay claims,
no matter bow pressing may be the wants
<*f the creditors.
Gkori.ia, ays an exchange, is the
•champion sheep State in the Union.
.Many farmers count their docks by the
thousands. What a mistake. Georgia
might well be a great sheep State, and
annually turn out a crop of wool which
■would contest her cotton crop in value,
but so far from being the •"Champion
•Sheep State of the Union,” her wool crop
in 1870 was only 846,947 pounds, while
that of O -iO was 20,339,643 pounds.
The Paths arch or the Gourd Fast
sly.—If Woods, of the Haw kinsviile Dis
patch, comes up to the Fair and sees that
gourd on exhibition as part of the Bibb
oounty display, he will go back home
perfectly assumed of himself. It is the
patriarch of t‘ie srturd family. It holds
nearly iiu-ee peck*, and is over eighty
years of age, having belonged to the
mother and grandmother of tue Hon.
Ab. Lockett, one of our representatives
in the Legislature, who enters it. Here
after let Woods and all other discoverers
«f abnormal gourds hold their peace.
by furnishing supplies to the laboring
classes. Thus what began as a panic in
stocks is to be carried down through trade
and society in all their ramifications, un
til every man, woman and child in the
country feels tho shock in some degree.
But tnere is nothing in the original
collapse to justify such a result. At the
worst, it was but a simple change in the
conceptive value of certain stocks. There
was no tangible value lost. _ All the re
sources of the country remained. All
the money and currency remained, and
indeed, have increased since the panic.
The block in the current of trade re
sults from causes as purely ideal as did
the original panic itself. The fact is in
controvertible that the present and pros
pective disorder and stagnation are with
out any more real or tangible cause than
popular distrust of the future. The
spirit of hoarding, as opposed to that of
trade and business investments has sud
denly seized hold of the people, and un
til we shake it off the mischief and
misery will remain.
Meanwhile the country loses tho labor
of thousands of industrious mechanics
who must lie idle, and we shall use and
subsist upon the products of the past,
until we get more sense, or until scarcity
shall compel us to set the wheels of pro
duction again in motion, and this scarci
ty, in turn, force upon the people in en
hanced prices, the cost and compensation
for long weeks of idleness.
While trade is governed by certain
general and fixed laws, it is a mi-'take to
conceive that the industrial interests of
a country can always be regulated by the
suggestions of reason and a sound econ
omy. Sometimes they are as deaf to ar
gument as the clamor of a mob, and as
uncontrollable as the ocean tempest.
The only chance is to let them blow, and
it is the misfortune of such crises that
most; J1 individual efforts for personal
security tend to aggravate the common
disorders. The whole machine is out of
gear and runs at cross-purposes. The
harmonies are destroyed. This is the
case now.
Private enterprise must he cautious and
secure itself. Bat it cannot guiltlessly
do so at the sacrifice of its own honor and
the rights of others. Every man who
falls under temptation and compromises
his integrity at such times, has inflicted
upon himself a life-long and perhaps an
eternal misfortune. Be sure to stand np
to your own obligations to the furthest
limit of your ability, and outside of this
go on with your operations as nearly in
your accustomed way as you can. As
the panic is all fancy, and nothing but
fancy, so if all the people would fancy it
over, it would be ove’r.
Personal Economy.
A correspondent to-day writes wisely
when ho says that public wealth and
prosperity must find its last analysis in
individual economy and thrift. No com
binations or tactics, without this substan
tial basis, can wort wealth and comfort
for a poor debtor community. And one
might go farther and say that tactics and
combinations, as they frequently mis
carry, may sometimes make a poor com
munity out of a rich one. We reckon
the Wall street brokers feel the force of
this truth just now. They have well
nigh combined, cornered, speculated and
tacticised themselves out of house and
home. Bulls and bears alike have been
The National Centennial Exhibition
and the Interests of the Southern
States.
By an act of Congress it- has been de
cided to celebrate the approaching anni-
“Tossod up in a blanket „
Seventy tunes ns high as the moon.
To tie one’s self up in a knot with a
combination, for any purpose, may mul
tiply the chances of success or of defeat
just as it happens; and the safest man
in the long run, is he who so orders his
own affairs, as to stand firmly on his own
feet, and neither corner.nor be cornered.
Just now, we see, there is a talk in
some of the States about getting up a
comer in cotton. . Cotton is too low, no
doubt, but it is suffering and sympathiz
ing with other products and interests. If
a planter be in good financial condition,
it would probably bo sound policy to
withhold his crop and take the chance of
better prices after Christmas. He can
hold on his own expense and risk; but
the man in debt who proposes to hold at
the expense and risk of his creditors, can
not do so honestly, and he who sells his
character and reputation in such an at
tempt, makes a wretched trade, even in a
money point of view.
Aside, however, from this view of the
case, if a general withdrawal of the crop
from the market were practicable, it
would only incite an antagonistic combi
nation still more powerful, and, in all
human probability, a break down in our
combination would result in a still greater
concession in prices, perhaps in the very
face of the next incoming crop.
The Courier-Journal is hard on young
lawyers and doctors. It says; Many
young men become lawyere or doctors
because they have an idea—and it is
about the only idea they have, too —tliak
the professions of law and medicine in
volve no hard work, with plenty o: gen
teel ease and idleness. And when they
have become doctors or lawyers they find
that they have to work much harder to
keep themselves supplied with beer and
tobacco t.ian they would to earn a gen
teel living in the capacity of a street-car
•driver. It is the duty of every parent to
paste this in the hat of his ambitious but
feeble-minded son.
The Pranks op a “Triad Jestice.”—
The whites in Cnester, South Carolina,
were much moved on Saturday, and the
negroes correspondingly delighted, by the
<oommitment of a lady of high-standing,
Airs. William Robin;, to the common jail
for alleged contempt of the court of one
Michael, a negro colored justice. Mrs.
Bobina was summoned before this court
to answer tho complaint of a negro ser
vant on her place, and remarked while
oonvoreing with her counsel'at the door
-of the office that she had experienced so
much trouble with" negro servants she
should em ploy no more. Upon this Mich;
•sel sent her to jail for twelve honr3, and
alia was carried off by a negro constable,
3>ut finally extricated through the inter
position of a white judge. Thus we see
how careful white people have to be in
that State.
Personal.—We are glad to greet that
•specimen Maryland gentleman, the Hon.
-John Merryinan, of Baltimore county, in
Macon once n tore. He lias has been hero
before at one or two of our fairs, and we
•are beginning to feel that the fair would
•not be complete without his genial pres-
•ence. Mr, Merryman is one of those
border State men who have peculiar
claims upon the hearts and hospitalities
■sf all true Southerners. Ho proved his
•faith by his works during the late civil
war, and had the distinguished honor of
being one of the victims of Seward’s
■** little bell,” languishing for months in
*• Federal hostile, simply because with
a true man’s manhood he enteriHined
♦pinions that were not pleasant to the
Lincoln tyranny.
We arc pleased to welcome him to JSh-
•oon, and hope his present visit will prove
•exceptionally pleasant and profitable.
Ho is a candidate for the Maryland
House of Delegates, and his election is so
certain that ho can afford to trust his in
terests entirely with his friends. The
The Great Centennial of 187G
We beg the special attention of our
readers, to the comprehensive and sen
sible article published in another column
on this national jubilee. It is true that
the arbitrament of the sword' by which
was decided many vital questions to our
people, and subsequent legislation of a
most unjust and sectional character, have
tended in no small degree to weaken the
affection and loyalty of the South for the
old flag, and Union of the States. But
where is the Southron who does not hope
that present abases will yet he reformed,
and constitutional liberty as it once ex
isted, again make the birth right of an
American citizen something n\,ore than an
empty name ?
Besides, we should never forget that in
the great struggle for independence our
forefathers were in the front of the fight,
and suffered, and bled, and died for free
dom. It is the glorious principle of self-
government and the rights of man, ab
stract and undeniable postulates, whose
triumph it is now proposed to celebrate
in the centennial of 1876. And why
should we nurse our injuries and brood
over those wrongs which degenerate and
wicked rulers have inflicted? Let us
rather rejoice over the glorious past, and
nerve our arms, and plume our wings for
a bolder and grander flight in the future.
The magnificent array of the products
of the *jeld, and the many beautiful and
useful objects which grace the Industrial
Exposition of our native Georgia, pro
claim trumpet-tongued that our people
are neither conquered or dismayed. Let
us join, then, in the Centennial Celebra
tion of the deeds of our ancestors, and
Vise above the feuds and jealousies of tho
present hour.
In this connection, we would make
mention that a portion of the Centennial
Committee of Arrangemi^its expect to
be here during the Fair, and we trust
will be greeted and entertained with true
Southern hospitality. A former towns
man from Philadelphia writes, also, that
"before tho Fair adjourns I trust that
you will pass resolutions endorsing the
Centennial, and will appoint committees
to see that the State is properly repre
sented. Permit me to suggest, also, that
an invitation be extended to cx-Govcrnor
Patton, of Alabama, who will be present,
to address your people on this subject.'
We are certain our citizens would be
glad to hear from Governor Patton, and
should be glad, likewise, if the initial
step3 could be taken to have Georgia,
ono of the "Old Thirteen,” once more
represented in that true cradle of liberty.
Independence Hall, in 1S76.
Tlie Pair Must be Prolonged.
Wo learn from Captain Holt that at a
very late hour last night, a whole car load
of the choicest poultry from Massachu
setts, and another of blooded stock, had
just arrived, and a'most every hour dur
ing the day telegrams were received from
nil parts of the Union, asking if entries
for the exposition could still be made.
Large shipments of superb goods are
still en route from New York, also, and
scores of packages are yet to be opened
and arranged.
Under these circumstances, the feeling
is nearly unanimous that the exhibition
should be continued through another
week. Indeed, justice to the exhibitors
I who have been at much trouble and ex- -
pense demands it. It should be remem
bered also that the extensive auction sales
♦doe, in his case, seeks the man, not the *£^ 40 “T
man theoffica. - . . off, and will necessarily consume consid-
r' * 'mem I c f a ^ e tune. We hope, therefore, the
Si—» l« • i | Executive Committee, at its meeting this
^ reported to bo living in • morning, will take the necessary acLion
Mexico in a condition of poverty. J in the premises.
Death of Mrs. S. I. Gustin.
Wo are pained to announce the death
of Mrs. Samuel I. Gustin, a resident of
Vineville, in this county, last Sunday
night about 12 o’clock. She has been in
declining health since early spring, and
last July went North to try the effect of
tiavel and change of climate; but with
out any benefit—returning home three
weeks ago in great physical prostration,
which, with a slight occasional * rally,
increased from day to day, till tho flick
ering lamp of life expired without a strug
gle at midnight on Sunday. .
Mrs. Gustin was a native of Morris
county, New Jersey, the daughter of an
eminent physician of that State and about
fifty-five years of age. She was a lady of
more than ordinary intelligence; but the
great distinguishing feature in her life
and character was her moral goodness—
her friendliness, helpfulness and fervent
charity. She was an embodiment of the
good SamaritanoftheNewTestament,and
wherever there were sorrow, suffering and
want, there she was ever present to the
sacrifice of all personal considerations,
with rich stores of sympathy and assis
tance—always furnished so opportunely,
so cordially and discreetly that her memo
ry is endeared to every one who knew her
by the recollection of some such personal
service in time of need.
.The los3 of such a wornan to her own
household is indescribable, and we can
only tender our heartfelt sympathy to the
stricken family. She has sunk calmly to
rest after a life full of usefulness and
good fruits. The funeral will take place
to-day—dne notice thereof appearing in
the appropriate place.
TELE GEORGIA PRESS.
The gin house holocaust still rages.
The last two cases reported are from
Butts and Sumter counties. The Coving-
versary of our one hundreth birthday as ton Enterprise says:
a free and enlightened people. Equally ^ j 10Use containing eight hales of
by an act of Congress the maimer and j cotto ° was burned last Monday, at Stark,
place of this celebration have been fixed, county. The fire is supposed to
We are to be placed on trial before the j iav0 or jginated from the engine. The
people of the Old World, and our progress
in all that tends to improvement, is to be
exhibited side by side with similar objects
from foreign hands. The place selected
is already marked in tho memory of
every native bom American. The Decla
ration of Independence, penned by the
immortal Jefferson, is our National Bible,
and the spot, ever sacred to a true
American, is well selected for the Cen
tennial Exhibition. Putting aside the
above patriotic considerations, there are
other reasons for the selection of Phila
delphia for tho location of this great un
dertaking. Fairmount Park presents
every possible advantage, with five hun
dred acres' to spare, if needed for this
purpose, of ready access, not only from
tiie city by many lines of horse cars, but
from every other important city in the
United States, as passengers by any
through line of travel can be deposited at
the door of the Exhibition building,
while articles designed for competition
will be taken through the building and
placed in their proper location directly
from the cars. It is well that our readers
should bo advised of the importance to
oar own interests of this celebration. In
1876 there will be brought to our
shores representatives of every class
Europe. Scientific societies will
send their most able associates. The va
rious. manufactures and trades will be
represented by mechanics and workmen
desirous of studying tho secret of the suc
cess of this Republic. The capitalist will
seek here the opportunity for investment,
and the laborer a home for himself and
family. Never again will such an oppor
tunity offer for a proper setting forth of
the valuable resources of our States of the
South. Every possible advantage should
be taken of this, and no timo should oe
lost to prove that capital and labor can
nowhere be made so profitable as within
our borders. In addition to our great
staples—cotton, rice and sugar—let each
State present its- coal, iron, marble, its
valuable phosphates, and its capacity to
furnish silk, tea, indigo, corn, grain and
tropical fruits and plants. What a mag
nificent display could be made, and how
certainly it will redound to our credit
both at home and abroad, and as ancil-
liary to our own interests as a State-!
Let the energies 6i our people be awak
ened to. this great enterprise, and if we
have not the means to give large finan
cial aid let it be understood by our mem
bers in Congress that Georgia, as one of
the old thirteen, and os the home of
George Walton, Button Gwinnett and
Lyman Hall, three illustrious signers of
the Declaration of Independence, will do
her duty oa this occasion side -by side
with her fellow States.
engineer was badly singed by burning
That Bear Fight.
• One of our contemporaries raps ns sharp
ly over the knuckles for advertising Ben
ner’s bear fight, exclaiming against the
inconsistency of the procedure after the
cock fight manifesto of the Telegraph
and Messenger, some months since. The
point is fairly made, and we can only say
peccavimus. But the advertisement in
question slipped in without coming under
cinders. A Mr. Cook lost four fingers by j the purview of that editor, -who is also
the same gin a few days before. i tLe business manager of the paper, and
And the Americus Republican reports , 1 -03ponsiblo for tho game chickjn pro-
the burning of the gin house, screw and mmciamento.
one thousand pounds of cotton on the tTa now takes occasion to say that the
First Day of the Fair.
As nsual, Monday was a day of intense
labor and preparation for the Exposition,
which in the present instance is hourly
assuming grander and more imposing di
mensions.
The display of live stock is unrivaled
in the history of similar exhibitions,
while every other department, also, bids
fair to surpass anything of the kind ever
witnessed at the South.
Of course the number of visitors,
though respectable, was not large; but
train after train, in the afternoon depos
ited their thousands at the depot, and
the city is now swarming with strangers.
There is every prospect of a full attend
ance and a most successful industrial
shaw. _
Since our last issue, Pike and Clayton
counties have unpacked their varied
stores of beautiful and useful things,and
they now form a most important and in
teresting feature of the Fair. Which
ever county may win the prize, however,
all boasting will be excluded by the close
ness of the contest and the excellence of
the several exhibitions. In many indi
vidual articles, each county may justly
claim superiority over the others. But
the question of supremacy must be de
termined by quantity as well as quality.
Cannot Bury Caesar.
The Tribune and the Illinois and Ohio
Liberal organs, to which might be added
the Courier-Journal, agree substantially
that the Democratic party is the party
of obstruction in respect to the rise and
progress of that new party which must
ultimately be relied on to bury Radical
ism one of these days. Hence the sud
den revival of Democracy in the West
is practically considered in the interests
of Grant—it insures his re-election to a
third term, by crystallizing old issues and
perpetuating questions which have here
tofore resulted in Democratic defeat. We
submit that national party organizations
and movements are now too ponderous to
be managed and controlled by small com
mittees, and the best way after all, is to
allow things to take their course. The
country has grown—the people are nu
merous—the field is very large, and it is
not an easy matter for anybody, however
astute, to forecaste the ideas and events
which are going to control a great popular
election in the distant future.
The Democracy of the United States,
reduced to its strictest proportions, is a
vast minority, needing but compara
tively small accessions to give it a pre
ponderating force. It is better general
ship to move the smaller force to tho
larger than to reverse the process. Ma
homet should come to the mountain.- Let
those who want to prevent imperialism
and a third term rally to the great body
of the Democracy, instead of demanding
that the Democracy shall move-to their
orders. u .
Tiie Rev. Dr. Munsey-A De
nial.
The recent publications relative to the
Rev. Dr. Munsey have induced a well-
know gentleman of Baltimore—for many
years a personal friend of Dr. Munsey—
to write him, inquiring as to their cor
rectness. To this letter Dr. Munsey
makes the following reply under date of
'the 16th inst.:
“The ‘strange rumors’ are altogether
unfounded. I suppose you allude to a
publication which I learn appeared in the
Baltimore American as clipped from the
Salem Register. I have not seen the
American. The article was to the pur
port that I was a reeling, profane, ragged,
friendless, moneyless drunkard. • I have
moderately good clothes, not much
money, plenty of friends, don’t know
how to swear, and having used a stimu
lant for my health only, have abandoned
its use entirely, as bringing reproach
upon me, those I love, and the cause of
Christ. The whole thing is a malignant
falsehood, which I can prove by the whole
town.”
Confirmatory of the above, the Knox
ville Press and Herald says Dr. Munsey
was present at the recent conference of
the M. E. Church at Marion, Va., “ and
plantation of Mr. A. K. Schumpert, near
that place, last Thursday. Incendiary,
and loss $1,000.
The Brunswick Appeal says sixteen
million feet of lumber valued at $300,000
are lying in the river at Darien. Also that
there are only two lawyers and two doc
tors at Darien. Why should the Appeal
cherish spite against Darien? Doesn’t
it know that the publication of such in
format on will have the effect of greatly
increasing the number of both necessary
evils?
A ten weeks old baby down at Perry
has a full set of teeth—as we learn from
the Home Journal. Why will the editor
of that paper thus poach, upon the pre
serves of that renowned discoverer of ab
normal vegetables Woods, of the Haw-
kinsville Dispatch ?
We find these additional paragraphs in
the Home-Journal^
papers contain high compliments to the
estimable wife of Rev. Dr. Landrum who
is a daughter of Gen. Warren, of this
place, and who has taken a prominent
part in extending relief to the sufferers.
A correspondent of the Appeal says:—
“Among those who are so nobly sacri
ficing time and energy for the good of
the distressed city there is one of the
“gentler sex,” whose efforts are worthy of
the greatest commendation. I need but
refer you to dozens of houses where the
victims of the scourge are writhing in
pain to have my statements verified in
regard to the noble work of Mrs. Landrum.
Aiding her noble husband, she has ac
complished an amount of good incalcu
lable. I simply mention this self-sacri
ficing lady that she may inspire others
with like zeal. I am a stranger to her,
yet I know what she has done, and I feel,
that, as a people, _we should know to
whom wa are so indebted in tho hour of
need.”
Burned Out.—We regret to learn the
dwelling of Mr. O. R. Faulk, of Twigg3
county, was burned last Monday, con
suming all the furniture and a portion of
even the wearing apparel of the family.
This is a serious loss, especially during
these tight times. Sparks from the chim
ney ignited leaves that had lodged on
the roof, .and when discovered the whole
building was covered with fire.
Homicide at Byron.—A negro named
Abram Ruzer was killed at Byron last
Saturday night. He was sitting in a
cabin, and wa3 shot dead through a
crack. An inquest was held by W. W.
Wagnon, Esq., and a jury, but failed to
accuse any perron of t ie crime. Subse
quently, however, a negro man who was
suspected, was reported as missing, and
he may be the murderer. - Jealousy was
supposed to be the cause.
Mr. Hiram Kincben, of Early county,
aged fifty-seven, made this year six hales
of cotton, classed low middling. Besides
his cotton he has made plenty of rations
for another year. He paid out for labor
during the year about $S0, but made over
FR- FR F=?
THE GREAT REMEDY
HOME PURPOSES.
IMPORTANT
j TO the Sick and Afflicted
KB Hear and Beioicc, ^
TAKEN INTERNALLY—Half a teaspoonful
diluted in water, is a pleasant drink—stimulating
and strengthening.
APPLIED EXTERNALLY—when there is
pain or Inflammation, affords instant ease.
STOPS PAIN quicker thaii morphine, chloro-
ferm, opium, or any other anodyne known to the
worid.
old Telegraph and Messenger is still
oppo'sed toto coelo to cock fights, dog fights,
bear fights, bull fight3 and man fights, in
the ring. They are, one and all, barbar
ous relics of a savage era, and tend great
ly to imbrute the sensibilities and odd to
the sanguinary tendencies of the youth
of the present period, who are already
too much given to the use of the knife
and pistol.
Such exhibitions, too, are the prolific
cause of a vast amount of drunkenness,
gambling and profanity.
As the exponents of public sentiment,
charged with grave and weighty respon
sibilities, we cannot, therefore, lend our
sanction and influence to such pernicious
amusements, or consent to advertise them.
In the present instance, however, we
do not actually believe that Mr. Benner,
who is a quiet and respectable citizen,
ever contemplated that his “ bear fight ”
would come off. His proposed match
might have been' intended simply as
an ingenious advertisement of his
business. The same individual has a
funny monkey kept for the entertain
ment of his guests, and another neigh
bor sports a regular wild cat, claws,
teeth and bob-tail, fresh from the wil
derness, which brings many a person to
a halt, and induces him perhaps to do or
take something else. It is all in their
line of business, and more’s the pity if
some ere they depart see the monkies in
a two-fold sense, or are disposed to emu-
laVj the scratching proclivities of that
feline habitue of the forest..
IF SUDDENLY SEIZED with pain, ono tea
sjxxmful in a class of water, will, in a few min
utes, remove all uneasiness.
A Case Witliont a Parallel.
The most singular suicide on record is
reported from Springfield, Illinois,
prompted by an unheard of display of
fidelity on thepart of a young widower.
Some six years since a young man
named Doiy married a handsome and
accomplished young lady with whom he
lived in perfect happiness and content
ment until her sudden death, which oc
curred within a year after their marriage,
and the idolized wife upon her death-bed
exacted a promise from her husband that
ho should never many again. After the'
death of his wife, Mr. Doty went to
Chicago, where it seems he afterwards
became enamored of a young lady, and
to whom in due- course of time he en
gaged himself to be married. The
promise that had been made to the
dying wife seemed to haunt him at all
times, and had so affected his happiness
that some time ago, when he was visiting
his friends, ho said to them that he dared
not carry a pistol or knife with him, as the
temptation was strong to him to take his
own hfe. Having occasion to visit the
scene of his former happiness, recently,
Doty repaired to the room formerly occu
pied by himself and wife and there com
municated his rash intentions to a gen
tleman whom he had requested to accom-
pany him. He said that he had prom-
double that amount by his own labor out- • feed his wife on her death-bed that he
side of the farm. The New3 calls this , would never marry, and that rather than'
good farming, which verdict we cordially
endorse.
A tale of woe comes to ns from Savan
nah through' the Advertiser. A young
gent who had soured on the hash or some
thing else at his boarding house, thought
to revenge himself by making some un
pleasant remarks about bis landlady,
which, of course, reached her ears, and
hearing that she was wroth thereat he
called to smooth matters over. She re
made a statement which entirely satis-
ceived him quite graciously, and imme-
fied the body that he liau been out
rageously slandered. Ie was invited to
preach, and did so on Sunday night, to
the largest audience ever assembled at
any church in Marion. The doctor’s
health is vastly improved, and he will
soon be in the regular work again.”
The Situation at Baiukritlee, as
Viewed by a Savannah Physician.
The Savannah Advertiser-Republican,
of Sunday, prints the following:
Dr. Thomas J. Charlton, who has been
in Bainbridge for several day3 past in at
tendance upon the stricken with yellow
fever, returned yesterday morning. The
doctor informs ns that, our telegraphic
dispatches from Bainbridge exaggerate
the situation somewhat. He thinks that
since the fever broke out, some two
weeks ago, there have been about ten
deaths resulting from the fever. At the
time of his departure, Friday evening,
the disease had evidently abated very
much, and was thought to be under com
plete control—there were no new cases.
He consulted with the physicians, all of
whom agreed with him in tjje opinion
that there was now no cause for alarm.
The doctor visited all parts of the city,
and is satisfied that there is nothing in its
sanitary condition to produce anything
like an epidemic.
It is quite true that there was consider
able panic there, and has bben since the
fever first made its appearance. The re
ports all along tho line of railroad were
very much exaggerated, and calculated to
alarm people. Some of tho citizens had
left fearing the fever would spread and
become epidemic, but tho feeling when
Dr. Charlton left was that there was now
no causefor alarm, and the panic hadsub-
sided in a great measure. • .
A Negro Legislature in Trouble
The Charleston News and Courier of
Saturday says the Legislature.of that
State is in trouble. There is no money
in the pockets of the members, and not a
dollar in tho State Treasury. Their per
sonal credit, as ono of the members de
clares, is no better than the public credit,
and the boarding house keeper, the
laundress and the grocer will soon clamor
for their little bills. What is to be done ?
An earnest member of tho .lower House
diately locked the door and proceeded to
give him a deuced good cowhiding. The
curtain fell on a young man in a dead
faint, and an irate woman standing over
him too tired to wag her arm.
Four dwelling houses and several out
houses on West Broad street, Savannah,
were burned Friday night, causing a loss
of nearly $9,000.
We find the following in the Chronicle
and Sentinel, of Saturday :
Horrible Accident—A Negro Wo
man Burned to Death.—Last Thursday
evening, a colored girl, who, with her
mother, lived in a house on Mr. John
Brislehan’s premises, on the- corner of
Broad and Marbury streets, went to the
circus and left her mother at home. On
her return she was horrified to find the
woman lying on the hearth of the room
burnt to a crisp and stone dead. The
poor creature’s clothing was completely
consumed and her body lit -rally baked.
The girl’s screams aroused the neighbors,
but all human aid was part avail, her
mother having apparently been dead for
some time. The woman was a sufferer
from epileptic fits, and it is supposed that
during her daughter’s absence one of
them came upon her while she was near
the hearth, and caused her to fall into
tho fire, where she was burned to death.
Off for Europe.—Tiie two Georgia
ladies, Mrs. Campbell and Mrs. Cham
bers, an account of whose marvelous
good fortune in falling heirs to an estate
of twelve millions of dollars in France we
published some time since, sailed from
Charleston yesterday for Europe, in com
pany with an old citizen and prominent
lawyer of this city, to claim their inher
itance. We wish them the utmost suc
cess. •
A meeting of the Mexican war vet
erans residing in Richmond county was
held in Augusta on Saturday. Eighteen
were present and the following appointed
delegates to the convention^ he held in
this city on Thursday next: Messrs. Jas.
M. Dye, S. P. Hunt, W. R. Sikes and W.
A. Archer.
Some New Granger Poetry,
As there will doubtless be a large gath
ering of “homy-headed” politicians who
have suddenly fallen desperately in love
bids hia colleagues adjourn and go home, | with the Grangers, at the meeting next
break it he had determined to die by his
own hand. The gentleman tried to dis
suade him from his purpose, and started for
assistance, but had passed but a few feet
from the room when the sharp report of
a pistol announced that the fatal art had
been done, and upon returning to the
room it was found that be had discharged
the contents of tue pistol into his head,
cansing instant death.
PERSONS SUBJECT to appoplexy, heart dis
ease, headaches, sudden faintim.*, .should- keep
the relief near them; a tcasjxttnful in water, will
in three minutes, remove all difficulty.
Railway's Ready Relief
Its Grand Power in tbe Prevention
and Cure of Pestilential and
Contagious Diseases.
Jackson’s 'Magic Balsam
THE GREAT MASTER OF
Is curing the sick and afflicted „„
er before heard of in the nnnab ofriKff^ t i Cntlle »-
It is curm;r, without fail ' scire*,
It is in diseases where immediate and absolute
assistance and relief is required wherein this rem
edy proves its superior, and we might say. super
natural power m saving life and promoting
health
In eases where epidemic diseases, pestilence,
small-pot, fevers, etc., exist, this remedy proves
the potent power of a disinfectant, ncutrnUzeri
and cure. No one that uses the Ready Relief
when Asiatic cholera, yellow fever, typhoid fever,
small-pox, diptheria, etc., prevail in a communi
ty, will be seized with these diseases; and if
seized when using it, will bo cured if the direc
tions are followed. Simple as this, remedy is, it
possesses the elements of cure of teemost violent,
painful and fatal diseases that scourge the earth.
RADWAY’S EEADY EELIEf
WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE.
INFLAMJIATION OF THE KIDNEYS,
INFLAMMATION OF THE BLADDER,
INFLAMMATION OF THE BOWELS,
CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS,
SORE THROAT, DIFFICULT BREATHING,
PALPITATION OF THE HEART
HYSTERICS, CROUP. DIPTHERIA.
• CATARRH, INFLUENZA,
HEADAQHE, TOOTHACHE,
NEURALGLV, RHEUMATISM
COLD CHILLS. AGUE CHILLS.
The application of tho Beady Relief to the part
ir parts where the pain or difficulty exists will af
ford ease and comfort.
Twenty drops in half a tumbler of water will in
a few moments cure Cramps. Spasms, Sour Stom
ach, Heartburn, Sick Keucliaelie, Colic, Wind in
tho Bowels, and all internal pains.
Travelers should always carry a bottle of Rad-
waj’s Ready Relief with them. A few drops in
water will prevent sickness or pains from chance
of water. It is better than French Brandy or Bit-
tors as a stimulant.
FEVER AND AG-TTE.
Fever and Ague cured for fifty cents. There is
not a remedial agent in the worid tliat will cure
Fever and A cue, and all other Malarious, Bilious,
Scarlet. Typhoid, Yellow and other Fevers (aided
by Railway's Pills) so quick ns Railway’s Ready
Relief.
Ready Relief 50 cents per bottle, and Pills 25
cents a box. Sold by druggists.
HSALTS! BEAUTY!
STRONG AND-PURE RICH BLOOD— IN
CREASE OF FLESH AND WEIGHT-
CLEAR SKIN AND BEAUTIFUL
COMPLEXION SECUR
ED TO ALL!
DR. EADVAY’S
Sarsaparillian Eesolvuat
. The Sandersville Fair.
A friend just returned from Washing
ton county, who was in attendance upon
the annual county fair hold during the
last three days, gives a glowing account
of this glorious old county, which was
once the home of so many *of Georgia’s
most distinguished sons - Govs. Irwin,
Jenkins, and many able politicians and
lawyers, the Telfairs, Staines, Saffolds,
Rutherfords, Warthens, Tarvers, and a
host of others. Tho fair was emphati
cally ft success, and would have done
credit to the whole State. We have not
space to particularize of the many supe
rior articles on exhibition, but cannot
withhold the mention of five excellent
bales of cotton, tho product of one acre,
and one stalk of cotton that would al
most remind ono of the famous cotton
trees that grow on the banks of tho west
ern rivers.
We would especially notice the bloom
and beauty of the young ladies; also, the
handiwork and many preparations of
good things by the matrons. He says
Mrs. Warthen had the finest collection
of jellies that he ever saw. Tho hospi
tality of the citizens was certainly unsur
passed, and though Sandersville is r.ot a
very large city, the hotels are eqr.al to
any in the country. Our fellow-towns
man, Hon. T, Hardeman, in his usual
eloquent and happy style, delivered a
very able annual address. J. J. Olay,
with his world-renowned four-in-ha:id,
was the great attraction of the occa-ion.
As an evidence of their merit, he bore off
every premium in the speed and exhibi
tion ring.
’Wilkinson County’s Donation
to Memphis.
Rev. Dr. H. H. Tucker, of Atlanta, re
quests us to say that he has received from
citizens of Wilkinson county, through
Rev. E. J. Coates, twenty-five dollars and
eighty-five cents In aid of the sufferers at
Memphis and Shreveport. ^
By an appeal through the Christian
Index to the readers of that paper asking
for a contribution o: cne dime each for
the above purpose, Dr. Tucker has suc
ceeded in collecting nearly eight hundred
dollars.
before they reach that poverty-stricken
l week, we respectfully call their attention
to the following verses, which have re
cently been set to music. They should
moke all haste to learn them:
I want to bo a granger.
And with the grangers stand—
A horny-headed farmer.
With a hny-stack in my hand.
and famishing condition which will make
them fit subjects for the blandish
ments of the Bond Ring. This is
good advice; but we fear that it
will not bo followed. The regular ses
sion begins on the 25th of November,
and the members had rather, hang on in
Columbia than wander back, for a week
or two, to the places whence they came;
especially as, by remaining at the Capi
tal, they are* likely to receive mileage
certificates for two journeys to and fro,
pnly one of which they will have made, , ,, . . . J! — .. . .
and which 3inglo journey will have cost _ * matter -of fact, Gen. Butler is m
them nothing. Their present condition j Washington overflowing with vitality,
was foreseen. The State officials knew j deviltry, .vmaaMi^r. yibqaty,
that the members could not be paid, and ~ ~ ~
Beneath tho tall tomato tree
I’ll swim? tha glittering hoc—
And smite the wild potato-bug
As he skips o'er the suow.
I’ve bought myself a Durham ram
And a gray alpaca cow.
A lock-stitch Osage orange hedge
"barwrt
And a patent-leather plow.
and all the other forces, powers and capa
bilities that go to make him the most
conspicuous man in tho country. He will
General Johnston on the Western
Campaign.—We are glad to learn, says
the World, that a leading publisher of
New York has in hand and will soon issue
a work on the civil war of something
more than ephemeral interest. This is
a careful and deliberate account from the
pen of General Joseph Johnston, of the
Confederate army, of the events which
preceded his removal from tne command
of the Southern forces operating against
General Sherman in Tennessee and
Northern Georgia. Military men have
long been aware of the decisive effect of
that removal in favor of General Sher
man and of the Union cause. It was the
personal act of Jefferson Davis, resolved'
upon and carried out by him in defiance
of the counsel and in contempt of the re
monstrances of the ablest soldiers in the
Southern army; and as General John
ston can have no motive now for with
holding tho whole truth in regard to the
matter, the story ho ha3 to tell will have
a real value for the political as wpll a3 for
the military history of the great Ameri
can conflict.
Has mado the ni' : i tn-i hinr cars. So Haiti
so rapid are th?--li r - f. body undergoes, nude
the influence of thi- tni v wonderful medicine
that evi ' ' ia. iEisr nr flesh -HD
wpioin is oj— , —rr.
THE GREAT PURIFIER.
Every dropof tho SARSAPARILLIAN RESOL
VENT conmiunii-itis through the' blood; awea
urine and other fluids and juices of the system
tho vigor of life, for it rejxiirs the wastes of the
iKsly with new and sound material. Scrofula,
Syphilis, Consumption, Glandular Diseases. Ul
cers in the Throat and Mouth, Tumors, Nodes in
tho Glands and other parts of the system. Sore
Eyes. Stnnnerous Discharges from the Ears, and
tho worst form of Skin Diseases, Eruption, Fever
Sores, Soahl Head, Ring Worm, Salt-P-liour., Ery
sipelas Arne, Black Spcts, Worms in the Flesh,
Turner- , t 'aneor* in the Womb, and all Weakening
and Painful Dis.liar • s, Night Sweats. Loss of
bperm, and nil wastes of the. Hfe j,rineiple, are
within the curative range of this wander of Mod
em Chemistry, and a few days’ use will prove to
any person using it for cither of these farms of
disease its tlatent power to cure them. ,
If tiie patient, daily becoming reduced by the
waste and decomposition that is continually pro
gressing, succeeds in arresting these wastes, and
repairs the same with new material made from
healthy blood-and tills tho SARSAPARILLIAN
will and does secure—a cure is certain; for when
once this remedy commences its work of purifica
tion. and succeeds in diminisliine the loss o
waste«, its repairs will be rapid, and every day tho
patient will feel himself growing better and strong
er, the food digesting better, appetite improving,
and flesh and weight increasing. Not only does
the SARSAPARILLIAN RESOLVENT exeel all
known remedial agents in the cure of Chronic,
Scrofulous, Constitutional and Skin Diseases, but
it is the only positive cure for
Kidney and Bladder Complaints,
Urinary and Wuiub Diseases, Gravel. Diabetes,
Dropsy. Stoppage of Water, Incontinence of Urine,
Bright’s Disease, Albuminuria, and in all cases
where, there are brick du-1 dc(.<.>irs, or the water
is thick, cloudy, mixed with substances like the
white of an egg, or threads like white silk, or there
is a morbid, dark, bilious apj-earance and white
bone dust deposit, and when there is a pricking,
burning sensation when passing water, and pain
in the small of the back and along the loins.
Tumor of 12 Years’ Growth. Cured
by Railway's Resolvent!
Beverly, Miss., July 16,1867.
Dr. R.vdway: I have had Ovarian Tumor in
the ovaries and bowels. .<11 (lie Doctors said “there
was no help for it.” I tried everything that was
■dad, ’ ‘ ■ ■ “ ■
recommend
. but nothing helped me. I saw-
your Resolvent, and. thoUgnt I would try it; but
had no faith in it, because i had suffered for twelve
years. I took six bdttles of the Resolvent, and one
box of Radwny’s Pills, and two bottles of your
Ready Relief; and there is not a sign of tumor to
be soon or felt, and I feel better, smarter and hap
pier than I have for twelve years. The worst tu
mor was in the left side of tho bowels, over the
groin. I write this to you for tho benefit of others.
You can publish it if you choose.
HANNAH P. KNAPP.
WO IMS I
The only safe and sure remedy for TAPE, PIN
and WORMS of all kinds.
PRICE $1.00 PER BOTTLE,
.An important Letter
From a prominent gentleman and resident o
Cincinnati, O., for the past forty veers well knewf)
States 6 1 1 ^ pUbUshors throughout me tinned
« Nm* Nobk. October 1L187S.
uiti RAMATi Doar Sir—I am induced by a
c£fise of duty to the suffering to make a brief state
ment ox the working: of your medicine on myself.
For sereril yfears I had been affected with some
trouble m the bladder and urinary organs, which
*?me twelve months a^u culminated in a most ter
ribly atfiictinsf disease, which the physicians al
said was a spasmodic stricture in the ureta, us
UP inflammation of the kidneys and bladder, and
gave it as their opinion that iny age—73 years—
would prevent my ever getting radically cured. I
had tried a number of physician?, and nad taken
a large quantity of medicine, both alopathic and
homeopathic, but had got no relief. I had read o
astonishing cures having been made by your rem
edies, and some four months ago read a notice in
the Philadelphia Saturday Evening Post of a cure
having been effected on a person whe had long
been suffering as I had noon. I went rige. toff and
got some of each—your Sarsaparillian Resolvent
Ready Relief and Regulating i*ills—and com
menced taking them. In three da* I was greatly
relieved, and now feel as well as ever.
C. W. JAMES. Cincinnati* O.
DR. RADWAY’S
PERFECT PURGATIVE AND
REGULATING PILLS.
Tne managers of the Colche rtor (Eng
land) Young Men’s Christian Association
have decided that Mark Twain’s books
are not fit to be read by Colchester j yet enjoyed,
young C.'.ri-itians, and banished them they will mak*i a good name this session, q
from the library. I and wear it to the end of their tern.;
it is quite probable that the calculation
was that the members, a few days after
their meeting, would be forcod by tho
pressure of circumstances to sell out to
the highest bidder. So far, they have „ „ , - , — * o j — t -—.—
manfully opposed every scheme which : tneet), as any small crait that come; attractions was sure to be accosted if
smelt of swindling, and if they bold out J *'fooling around m ms tnwk will find to . 8 n e attempted to go out alone and per-
to tho end the members will have proved j “ ieir cos ^- ” ash'nqton htar. | aistently followed fcy these young street
themselves entitled to a general confi- | 1 * 1 I ' . I loungers. Two or three of them have,
donee and respect which they have never ! Wooden shipbuilding is reported to be in the. meantime, been punished for their
Wo earnestly hope that very active in Delaware ^ | offensive conduct to American ladies,
This large pumber of American ladies
. . in Paris is having the effect of checking I
let off a litile surplus steauiiu some cases ! the offensive manner of youn^ .French-
ho has before the Supreme Court, but men to unprotected ladies on the streets,
will bave a full head on when Congress j a. year ago a lady of youth and personal
Perfectly tasteless, eleeautly coated with sweet
gum, purge, regulate, purity, cleanse and strength
en. Railway’s PiHs for the cure of all disorders o
the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder,
Nervous Diseases, Headache, Const ij'-Htion. Cos
tiveness, Indigestion, DysjK'psia, Biliousness, Fe
ver, Inflammation of tho Bowels, Files and all De
rangements of the Internal Viscera. Warranted
to. effect a positive cure. Purely v -zetable, con
taining no mercury, minerals or ucleteriuus drugs.
Observe the following symptoms resulting from
Disorders of the Digestive Organs:
Constipation, Inward Files, Fullness of the
Blood in the Head, Acidity of tho Stomach, Nau
sea, Heartburn, Disgust of Food, Fullness or
w eight in the Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sinking
or Fluttering at the Heart, Choking or suffering
Sensations when in a Lying Posture, Dimness o
10®”“ l*.*row .mm.
Jho worst Painful
*S£r** SprainSS * Swe,Un * s ’ Rru ‘ses
^The worst Catarrh in the head is relieved in ,
u Tha worst Palpitation of the heart in 10 ^
Tho worst Cuts. Chafe, or flesh wound
The worst case of Bronchitis is relX o, .
minutes. 'vnd-eu mafew
The worst case of-Inflammatory ..
Tho worst Burns and Scalds m 20
' And for pains and inflammation in snl ntes -
tho human body, either extemSKy or*iutereH < *
there s no remedy in the entire worid twit
dues puns and luallmuntion* so ixsditvrt* ^
promptly and so permanently M l el f »
Jackson’s Magic Balsam
P. VAN ALSTINE. Proprietor, llariai, .
Sold^by all- druggists at 25c.
WHY NOT
LET TOK PUBLIC KXldV IT
If Jackson’ Magic Balsam has bv ronct,.) ,
and permanent cures proveu itself
horse lotion or horse remedy in the wnri,i.-S
let the people know it f
Colic m .horses or mules in 20 ininutA .!^”
prompt is It, in curing Colic that the
will in each and every case, whercSoz
■swH saswss fistasas
exist, either internally or exterrallv
liniment or horse.lotfon in the work thaTSa ^
gin to compare with
Jackson’s Magic Balsam
And the time.is not fardistant When every ogre,
of and dealer in stock will havethimluiUle Sf
lcrne in his stable, ready for any sickness snd dk.'
tress amongst lus stock. Try it. Jtu *
P. VAN ALta'lN E. Proprietor,
■|^ Bamesville, Ga
Sold by all druggists at 25c. 50c. SI and S3 a,
bottle. anrit^T
New York and Brunswick
FACSiEV LINE
T HE attention of the mercantile public is n.
spect fully called to the nbovo Packet Line to.
tween Now York and Brunswick, G l
The schooner S. P. Hall will be ready to recdvi
freight in New York on or about the 12th rf in.
glut, and the G. L. Bradley about the 20th Au
gust.
We have every faciUty for receiving storingand
forwarding freight, and all freight shipped by this
line .will receive prompt attention/
WARREN RAY, Ag't New York, 120 Wall it
. S. G LITTLEFIELD A CO.
angilwtf * Bromwich Ga.
Working Class SgllK.
teed. Respectable employment at honieobw'Jr
evening; uo capital required; full instractionsaad
a valuable package of goods sent by ms'U. id-
dreSs; with six cent return stamp,
M. YOUNG A CO
mar25Mw . 173 Greenwich street S T
Agents, Read Tins!
/"YUR goals must be sold. Wo will pay ageati
V 11 salary of 535 per week and expenses »ho
engage with us at one.:. Steady employment
Addross G. W. BODIXE 4 CO,
augl4\v4t B ittl; Creek. Mic
Executors’ Sale.
VALUABLE RIVER PLANTATION F0RSALS
1>Y virtue of the last will and testament of John
_L> Wi« .ten, late of Monroe county,, deeeased,**
,wiil sell, o i the first Tuesday i:i Auvembcr mat,
before the Court-house door in the town of For
syth, between the usnsi hours oi sale, the foikn*
iiig described lands: Two hundred acres oi hml,
moreorldss,of parts allots 203 and 200, one hundred
anti twenty acres of ports of lots Nos. 213 and sa
fifty-seven acres of land No. 21!>,oncbnndred«i
twenty-six and a half acres of fraction No. at
twelve and one-fourth acres of fraction No. S3,
six aqrea of fraction No. 222, containing five hun
dred and fifty acres, more or less, lyfng in the 5th
district of Monroe oounty. Stid lands sold as th»
property of John Wooten, deceased, tor the benefit
of the heirs and creditors of said cstste.
Terms: One-half cash and one-half in tw:b*
months. Bond ter titles givcu and titl s male
upon last payment. A. MIDDLEROOIH
W.C. BECKHAM,
oetl td Ezecntors.
Valuable Lands for Sale.
■yy ILL be sold before the Court-house door in
. . tho town of Oglethorpe, Macon county..G»,
on the first Tuesday in December next, withia
tha legal hours of sale, the following property, to-
wit: Lots of land Nos. 66,102, 1M, 25 and » a
tlia 15th district of originally Houston, m» Vi-
con county, ns the property of the estate of Jlu-
thew H. Leggett, deceased. Unsaid lands Metro
separate pUmtatiotv, or settlements both wra
improved, anil will bo sold separately; one known
as tho place whereon Dr. K. A. Leggett now re
sides, cm'i-acing tha three first-mentioned lou,
and the other known as the Everett plug, em
bracing the t wo Lost mentioned lots. SoUmpff;
nance of an order of the Superior Court of
county, to carry out and perforin the report onne
Master in Chine cry of the S. W. Circuit makinf
a llii-d settlement of said estate.
Sold at the risk of the former purch^vro.
Terms rash. A. H. Gltr.EB,
ooti w"t
low Eisiavcia
Are Suited h i fife
AND FAMOUS FOR EEIX0
® to U32!
TO
EATJ2STSaS2I!:!‘l
Famous for doles i n ' ro
BETTER COOKlNGj
noiro it
Qnicker r.nd Cheap**
Itea any Suvcoftlo^-J*
FAMOUS FOB GIVU.O
SBtiafkCiicnEvcrjwifffc
AVD BElb'O
Especially Adapted
mi cr imx i
SOI.D JB3T
excelsior manufacturing coipaxi.
ST. LOUIS, SO..
TRUMAN CREEN,
MACON. GA.
•<t!4
Salmon have been introduced into the ( which has had the effect of very <ren-
»New Zealand rivers with great success. erally remedying the evil complained of.
Cbost, Limbs, and sudden Flushes of Heat, Burro
mg in tiie Flesh.
A fow doses of Railway’s Pills will free the sys
tem from all the above named disorders. Price 25
cents per box. Sold by Druggists,
READ
BARNUM’S HOTEL,
Comer Broadway andTwentietb street.NewT'
ON BOTH AMERICAS AND EUROPEAN PLA**
C fOMPLBTE with all modem
J rooms en suite and single; P nT “£ A
baths, elevators, etc. Location "I'-airpoa. •
in the very centre of fashion and bnia . " ,
5(1 Lilt.: *CI» UHIUD m *
York life. In proximity to churches ana p*
&mu.spin«3nt. anil Lord & TH.vlor s, Arno»u ,
imsement, and Lord a ravior&» u#
ables’ anil J. C. Johnson’s dry W
he hotel is under tho manawment ^
"*** formoriyof Bamuitt’a Hotel. "UlU ^ W
•eon, of Dayton. Qhio, and
York; and Freeman Barnum.of Barnum , n
St. Louis. apn!l
hTRA-Uli I. N
Porta bi.b
FALSE AND
Send one letter stamp to RAD MAY AGO..
2 Warren, comer Church street. New York.
Information worth thousands will
maylSeorilwly
r-nmnere^
;«-:i vsr Work- itt
:t Mill Stones o- .„
Pamphlet. Straub Hili
1430, Cincinnati
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rfKvcmc D-tcb A“-
wist ££*5
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