Newspaper Page Text
J.A1LY 1ELEGRAPU ft MK^sESGK*.
shed rrcry morning. (except Monday)
Itlrgraph UuH lm*. earner of Cherry
Tli.i A SI l. A r A IiY EH TIS EM E.S W Out JjoE
l'trt#r »\u »rt of te* lines or less for tks first
u>( . r /, iW ,i fifty Cents for ill su'-iequen.
intern ■ Ex - roi rales to e ,ntraetors.
’111! i h /. i.<»>-* HU A SI) M ESS ES(i E U
represents three of the oldest neu f papers in
t\-.t *a-nan afts >rjn in i for many years
4 i« fnrnxs'ied the earliest netes t<» tuat scope
of ,rj! i.A.a',1 m ml florui i traJ.ng at
t %,s point. it f.n-ls
old C
As i
. advertising ,
eUnruyh&JjJesseUx er
. iCU AY. ADGUSr 30. 1870.
ciuCw t:.e cotton mi Lin ot
t>J jyod to good a
a-tto tia
t article
1 DOW
iid, makes &n
id machinery
, Florida, for
h a o- til nut np At FdrDAl
experimental purposed in tbL» lino.
—The United .StAtj« hive now more than
flv.t.e much railroad mileage as aIi
Europe, and it will be bnt a few yeara before
vro hAv h-. much Ad All tho rest of the world.
—The KugLali faalotiee Act requires UiAt
no w jictn k’.iaI: be employed continnonaly
far m iro thin font board And a half. After
w mnig that length of time ehe mnat have a
—Shipping she 11s from the coart to tho in**
ter or an 1 the North Boema to be qnite An in'
dnatry in Florida. B. Johor, of Tampa, will
e )0n ship on . wj esboonora thirteen car
loilR, Among which will be a quantity of pa
ving alibi; • BUfbcont for six miles of a road
way at Chicago.
Noit&wistds Wheat Chop —Tho In-
C'*.a-o in tho jit Id ah jni 7,LOO,<>00 bnahela
in Minnesota. 13,000,000 in Iowa, 4 4 uOJ,COO
in Nebraska, 4.000,000 in Wisconsin and 3,-
000 (u0 in Dakota. Tho other flU’.oe show a
•light falling off. Tho qaality generally is
nportsl very good, hotter than for some
yt
—It. d snow, which ij usually found only
in Arctic latitudes, is seen on a lofty enmmit
near Mount Stanford In the Sierra Novad
For several acres the vast drifts aro of
beautiful pinkish ti it to the depth of throe
or four inchos. 1' .« a boantifal spectacle
One explanation of it is that myrii
niinnto organisms c^vor the sarfacd.
—According to the re;>ortof Oonsnl Per
c val of Port Bald, tho total number of ves
seln which parted through tho Baez Canal
1,73 w.ai 1,553, of which 1,227 were British,
80 Fro eh, 71 Dutch, 41 Italian, 38 Austrian
2*2 Germati, 21 flpanuli, 8 Egyptian, 8 Japa
nese, 6 Danish, 5 Bivodish and Norwegian,
1 Portngm se, 3 Torklab, 2 Bolginn, 1 Amori
can, an 11 Zanzibar. Total, 2,178,31G tons
of winch 1.72';,016 were British.
\> hon O’Brien, tbo California millionaire,
diol, ho left a largo part of li h estato to
joang U ly win ha l cared for him in h
I.'.stdays and who turned ont to liavo boon
nicco. Tho young 1 • • ly. Mies Isabel Cole
man, was tho bri 1 j tho other day at one of
thosebrillant waddings for wbicli tho Pi
c net is marked, tho groom boing Henry
s hoa of ex-Cougro*muan May, of Maryland
and a cousin of tho May who fought James
don Ik
ott
t xposts or America:? BncaDSTurrs —Tho
JUojidon Financier says that American food
pnrchaece r.ro now beginning to boeatimatod
a: Amounts con tide, ably in excess of those
thought of a week or ton dags ago, and
withstands g the purchases of iron and other
mannfactur a horo, tho conviction prevail
that gold will ho taken in payment to a con
sidcntble amount. It is known that largo
iiinour.ls of bills against wheat shipments
with tho usual e*xty days to ran, have boon
11: adtly a .'cumulating daring tho laid month.
—Although tho B;g Horn canon is calloi
impassable two m n rs have gone tbrougl
it; but their experience was each as todia-
o. nr ago anybody who would repeat tho feat
Dosiri ig to stvo 230 miles of roundabont
invd by land, they built a small but stand;
bo it, pot soma provisions aboard, and cm
bitUid on luo rushing si^oam. They wen
wturlc d .Along at a frightfal rpood, and final
ly tinrh d ashoru, the boat going on without
them The walls of tho canon rose perpen
dicularly 5 jd feet, end there was no escap<
exe.pt by w.ter; so they lar<hod two logs to-
S-th t with their bolts, and again trusted
thc:u«o!vo? to ;lio rapids, finally completing
tho trip unhurt,
— Minn *ota is tho name of a new Icelan
ill.* town on tho Winona and Bt. Peter Bail-
xoAil, in Wamun Minnesota, which promise
to add to tho products of the Stato in tb
matte* of curionsly-manufactured furs. Two
hnn i ei IcclanJors have ariived and soven
hundred families are on the road, coming by
w«y of Gi .<gow, Scjtland. Shoopskin coats,
tli«thread of which was mado from raindecr
ainows, are a cjnspicuous feature of their
• x.r*. Many wear slieepskn leggiua and
usi' vio'doa clogs in*t:*ad of shoes. Net
only have they brought a largo amount of
baggago * it h them, but thoircash assets aro
sud to average Jt .OOOlotbo family. They
aru invmably of a very light complexion,
with bloo eyes and whuo hair.
RiMraXT OOMEUMST3 i.*? Washikoto.v —A
Cincinnati Times Washington special of
Thursday says the Ban Franoisco affair has
stirred up tlie blood of tho dead-beat Com
munists of this city OneJ. Psge Huduut,
thoir loader, and ona of tho wildest dcniigo-
gnoa u. hung, yesterday went into tho Treea
ry Department, ostensibly as counsel for
the workingmen in certain claims before tho
department Hoabus-d tho Troasnry ofii-
dale roundly. Ho then went to the Execu
tive Mansion with s.tmo of his gang, ineultod
the Pres: tent and threatened to lord 10,000
workingmen to sack the Treasury and wipe
out the c;ty and government officials in it.
This was followed by incendiary epoeches at
the moetin.KS la?t night.
Hudnnt has been engaged in previous
rio's here, along with another Communist
named Cohen.
Considerable excitement prevailed amorg
tho limid lust night for fear that tho Hudnnt
crowd would carry out their threats.
Corros Coop Talk —Tho Thomasville
Times says you can hear almost any kind of
a report on the streets about the cotton crop.
One planter will tell you that he is ruir,cd;
auotiier will say that the caterpillar is £oing
to sweep the couutry; another that the rust
lias mined the crop, and then you’ll meet
with another who will toll you that hd has
a better crop than ho had last year. The
thiog is mixed.
We saw yosuday. says the Eufaula News,
the tops of seveial "talk* of cotton that had
been taken at random from a cotton patch
on the Shorter place, three mhos above town,
that were literally riddled by caterpillars
that wero then crawling about over tbem
Toe caterpillars w.li soon destroy the whole
top crop of the cotton patches in which they
aro now found.
A gi ctleman of this city, says the Eafaula
Times and News, who has an eighty acre
patch of co:ton on the Duuwoody place in
Florida, says the stalks are from four to «ix
feet b.gb anJ to all appearances it is as duo
a patch of c.’ttoa as ever grew, yet he will
take four bales of ootton for the whole
patch as it elands. He says the boll worms
have almost totally destroyed it. We hear
daily of the devastation of this insest in
tins section
We have not received a paper from any
point in the State the present week that has
not contained a notice of the destruction now
going on in the cotton fields by boll worms,
rust and caterpillars. These worst enemies
of ootton together must tell fearfully upon
the orop in this State ur. J also in Georgia
and Florida.
Herald on Grant's Hiucerlty.
The New York Herald, cf la^t Wednes
day, devote? five of its coluxna to inter-
vi.-wd with VAriona prominent men of all
P-irti. t, on tnc question of how far Gen.
irant’d disinclination for another preei-
• -nti.il term, expressed to Li Hung,Vice-
roy of Tientsin, And published in that pa-
P~r of the 6th, may be taken as the expres •
.-i 'jn of i e* net re purpose not to become &
candidate for the Presidency. Tne parties
interviewed on the subject are G. Wash
ington Childs, Gon. Grant's familiar;
Horatio Ssymour, Senator Kernan,
Senator Hoar, Murat Halstead, Senator
AiiUon, of Iowa; Senators Hill and
Gordon, of Georgia; Senwtor Blaine, ex*
Congraesman Hale and *'a prominent
New York Republican.”
As to what our Senators had to aay
we will quote the following:
FROM 8BHATOB HILL.
"I am Auxioua to believe and I will be
lieve that General Grant is sincere in
thee utterances. I desire to believe that
we have something decent and even grea
left in American politics, and these word
of Gtfnvrsi Grant, if they were uttered
sincerely, and if bo ia steadfast enough
to act upon them, are both ascent and
great. Indeed, it 13 not too much to say
that if General Grant shall act upon the
wise andpatnotic sentiment he has thus
expressed he will prove himself to be
far greater man than ever his warraes
aixr.iror* have claimed him to be. Bnt
if it shall turn out that he has uttered
these words merely to deceive as a means
of seeming to pash aside the Presidency,
only that he may seize it tho more cer
tainly, as Caosar did the crown, then he
a ill prove himself to be a man of the
lowest canning, and far worse than his
bitterest enemies have ever claimed him
to be.”
OBNZBAL GRANT'S GREAT WOBD3.
‘‘Do you thick it possible that General
(irAct could be using these words with a
view to deceiving the public?"
“X say that I desire to believe that ht
is sincere, and that I will believe it nntil
forced to an opposite conclusion. There
aro some carious points in General
Grant’s character. I doubt if he oocl
make an argument. He is certainly not
a constitotiouiil lawyer. And yet he has
frequently said great things. He has nt
tered expressions equal to anything in
hibtory. Bu; it mast be confessed that
lie ha* not always lived np to the spirit of
his past sayings. His conduct and his
•voids at the close of the late war were
fnlly equal to those of the great
est commanders in any age
country. Bat when he descended in
to politics his actions took all the brighter
glory from the record he had mad.* as u
great general. On a celebrated occasion
he said, ‘No man worthy to hold the
Presidential office would takit tainted
with frnad! ’ Nothing greater or better
than this was ever said by any man.
But it tarns oat that at that very mo
ment ho was doing what tho Constitu
tion did net authorize, and what no pre
•cedent could excus-—appointing visiting
Mate.- men, who aiimaiAted and encour
aged the greatest fraud ever known in
the history of any people. No man did
half so much as General Grant to give
this fraud final consummation; but I be
lieve that in the instances noted, and in
similar instances, General Grant meant
what he said, but that his meaning was
destroyed by tho action of bad men who
unfortunately had his confidence, and
who cared nothing for General Grant's
fame or for the country’s good.
FROM SENATOR GORDON.
"I cannot put much canfidenoe,” said
», “in the npparent motive of General
Grant's words. It rectus to me that ho
net decline positively, but rather
puts himself in the attitude of being
le to Fay, in case of tho failure of his
party to give him the nomination, that
he had declined it, aad ia case it is ten-
tiered him to 6ay that it came to him un-
ought and over his protest. I must
‘infeed, therefore, tbat I cannot consider
•hia a decimation on the part of Geucrai
Grant. It would be very easy for him
to speak positively upon this subject.”
Do you think it will be accepted as
general by the country ?”
I don’t know. I do think this: I do
not believe tbat General Grant could be
elected if be were Dominated, and I
tunk the party managers know th&t to
1)^ true. The articles in the Herald on
Cie tiiic-m of several years ego made an
nt fl'aceable impression upon the Ameri-
•au mind, and General Grant’s nomina
tion now or bcieafter would be flagrantly
a violation of the spirit ^iat inspired
tbo-o art:o!eg and an outrage upon the
Dhinent of the country. The exampl
f Washington has been so strengthened
by continued examples that it has be
Hang and this college < f American in
terpreters. And to strengthen the fence,
the Herald also announces contemporan
eously that Gen. Grant has made a new
depariurt?, and is going to be President
of the Darien Canal Company. Let us
have peace, and let u- not b? deceived.
T Helen ana Iterated Kaliway.
In the New York World of Wednesday,
ia the form of an interview by a reporter
o; that paper, Mr. Cyrus W. Field come3
out with another anti-Tilden blast of a
fierce character. In the course of it he
charges Tiiden with trickery, lack cf in
tegrity, bad faith and falsehood, and
pronounces him “an untrustworthy
and unreliable man.” Field ia going to
publish a statement shortly, when he
get9 ready, which he declares wiii reflect
far more severely on Tiiden than any
thing he ha3 yet said. In reference to
the forthcoming lawsuit, we copy the
following:
“You spoke the other day, Mr. Field,”
continued the reporter, “of a lawsuit
which was likely to be brought against
Mr. Tiiden. Ia there Kill a probabilty
that fU h a suit will be broaght?”
“More than a probability—it is almost
certain to bo brought.”
“But Mr. Tiiden soya that he had a
perfect right to sell his stock.”
“Has any man” (Mr. Field rose in hia
indignation) “a right to break faith with
another mao?”
“Certainly not!”
“No, sir,” continued Mr. Field; “he
has no moral right nnder the suu to do .
each a thing.”
“Bat may he not have a legal and
technical right?” Intimated the reporter.
“Yoa may be quite sure,” said Mr.
Field with some warmth, "that no sail
will be brought against Mr, Tiiden nc-
lesa there are good legal grounds for it
I do not propose to show Mr. Tiiden my
hand in advance, so I maet decline to
say anything about tbat suit just now, ex
cept that there is every obaace in the
world that it will be broaght.”
In short, a more angrj and inflamma
tory performance than this interview
it is hard to conceive, and a mere vio
lent and direct aasaalt on personal repu
tation it would be hard to make. If
that lawsuit is not pushed forward at
once, Mr. Tiiden should take the short
est and sharpest method to compel Field
to bring his allegations to tho arbitra
ment of a court of justice, for they are
of a nature fatal to the pretensions of
any candidate for civil office, much more
a candidate for the Presidency of th<
United States. If Field can substanti
ate any of his charges, the Elevated
Railway has given Tiiden a lofty and
crushing fall.
GEORGIA PKE88.
Dovz shoo tiag is a pastime in many
parts of the State.
A panoramic Paradise Lost ia circula
-ing with organ attachment along the
Mncon and Augusta road.
Colonel William A. Harris,
Worth connty, would accept a nomination
for Congress in the Second District, if
Hon. W. E. Smith was out of the rao?
So says a correspondent of the Albany
NflCi.
Albany has a German club. Socially,
the city stands in the front rank.
A small fire in Albany destroyed two
«e tee owners cf three eaw mil f. tni hanJred andfi ; ;y do Uara worth of prop
forest, of pine land. At Brentwood they J r r
150THIB GREAT INTEREST
ia the milling and shipment of timber and
lombev from this region for dome.be snd
foreign consumption. To tfford some idea
of this business wa need only cite the ope
rations of a single firm, tbst of
KE3AB8. D E WADL1T A CO. t
wh-ch is locitd st 5;.j ..scon A Brncsw'cV
lUilrpad. Tne writer hid the pleasure of
trotting, Mr. ffs.ley and hia excellent wile
on the train en rente for tbeir home
Brentwood, which is the T.ame of the post
rflire at 5}£. He had been to Sb Louis to
purchase nddihonal machinery and gearing
for eoTeral new mills. And here it ahonld
be eaid that President Wadley has no con
nection whatever with hia brother's business.
Tho firm ia composed of Mr. D. O. Baron,
Mr. M B. Millen. of Savannah, and D. B.
Wed ey. The :att6r even pays his way like
any ether passenger over the Central Bail-
road when parsing over it. This company
Cotton.
There ia, or ought to be by this time,
a growing conviction that a big cotton
crop is not on tho oxrds this year—an
average crop problematical and a small
one moat likely. Perhaps some euch
ideas are stiffening the Liverpool market
just now, bat we read with great pleas
ure also that the Manchester markets are
looking up.
To illustrate tho backwardness of the
crop oompared with last year lot ns make
a comparison of the state of the Macon
market. So far in August of the pres
ent year thirteen bales of cotton have
been received. Last year tho report
was for August 20:h, 1S9 bales; 2S:b, 130
bale,; 27th, 141 bales; 26th, 53 bales!
2-ltb, 140 bales; 21st, 119 bales, 15th,
44 bales; 8th, 23 bales; 1st, 6 bales, or
850 bales against 13 this year. In other
words tho crop is far behind time
an 1 the cool weather daily increasing
tho distance.
ED1TOK1AL CORRESPONDENCE.
It yon want to feel well and lively, use
Dr. Ball’s Baltimore Pills. All draggis •
keep them.
come the unwritten law of the oocutry
and ono of oar most essential laws. The
people will not see it violated, save in
otne tremendens emergency. Nj eme
goncy exists a! presenr, exoupt the emcr
geuev of a few dispossessed office hold
So, I say, this feeling again:
bird term wonld inevitably defeat Gen
era! Grant, oven if there wero no vulner
able points In his record and weakness in
his administration.
HE ONLT CHANCE FOR THE REPUBLICANS,
“In addition to this,” continued Gen
Gordon, “X do not believe that any V,al
a's it’ ojg carry the oonutry in 1880, or
ver again. The only ohsnoe for the Rs
pul.he.n parly, in my opinion, is
ominste some man of liberal and pstri-
a views, who can win back to the rank
) men who have been driven ont of
hem. If I tboagbt this country coaid
be carried on a seotiocal or violmt plat-
orm next year—After the war has been
oio-edfor fifteen years—after the peace-
loving, law-abiding record cf the South
‘>r the past six years—I should almost
despair of the Republic. I should know
ton certainty that we need never hope
for complete national harmony and re-
onclliatioD, Red that the South wonld be
Id in oontinnsl and lasting subjection
to the North, or that some fearfnl disas
ter wonld befall us. Of coarse If Gen.
Grant is aino.ro in his words tbey ere
very nupoiUnt. Bat whether be is sin
cere or canning I do not tbink be could
be elected President again; first, because
iie Am rie»n people will never give a
tmrd term of the Presidency to any liv
ing naan, and secondly, bscanse be repre
sented, and still represents, through his
friends, a poiioy of proscription and sec
tionalism that oan never again, in my
opinion, carry this country. It eonld
not do it in 1376; it will never again come
so near doing it.”
As to the other witnesses, most of them
were willing to endorse Gen. Grant’s cred
ibility and sincerity, and, in fact, rightly
interpreted, we have no doubt. Grant is
entitlel to credit. Ho has always held
the same position in regard to the Presi
dency. He was not a candidate for the
office in 1S67; he was forced into it
to save the country; be was not a candi
date in 1871. bat had to accept
the otfioe for the same reason. He is not
asbe says, a candidate now, and does not
want the cffice, but the same high con
siderations of public exigency would
produce the same result.
When the Republican brotherhood
meet in National Convention and Snd
the forcee of Sherman, Blaine and Conk,
ling, irreconcilably arrayed againat each
other, it will be necessary to save the
parly and the country by nominating
Grant, although he is not a candidate
and does not want the office, and al
though he has been hiding out in the
buah for two or three years, at large ex.
penae to his friends, on purpose to be
toe dark horse and a more unobjectiona
ble necessity for that occasion.
There’s no trouble about sincerity in
the case. It Grant did not mean to rnn
in any contingency, he eonld have said eo
in ten words, which would have needed
none of these efforts to establish a fixed
interpretation. But the Herald, for rea
sons of its own, wants to establish one in
advance which will bold Grant in check.
Therefore, thie nevel spectacle of Id-1
Marshall House,
Savannah, Ga., Aug. 26,1879.
THE DEBATEABLE GSOUND —M. A B. B. B.
The writer passed rapidly and emoothly
over h moat tbs enure length of this great
Georgia highway two days ago, which Just
now ooiupies euch a large share of pablic
Attention, and whose future seems hung up
like Mahomet'e ^coffin—” twixt earth and
Leaven.”
ns I RESENT CONDITION
is simply admirable. Col. Adams and Messrs
Lofton, donee ana PJewellyn for once have
famished an exception to tbe general rule
tear worltB of internal improvement conduct
ed by the State are demoralizing and un
profitable.
the road bed, track, bridges and manage
ment of this important artery of commerce
n ill compare favorably with the beat and
most economically administered private en
terprises of the Union.
There is nothing loose or
SLACK TWISTED
abont the establishment, bnt on the contra
ry the strictest discipline and system obtains,
and eveiy official and employee is held seve
rely accountable for the pioptr discharge of
his dmy.
In estimating tbe income of the Road,
due allowance should be made for its actual
value; not the past coat of the conoern in
t e dash days whicu succeeded the war.
Thus, if tbe Road and appurtenances were
w rth no more than cue luidton and a quar
ter wbeu it came into the possession o/ the
htate, it is upon that valuation that all divi
dends should be predicated Had Ibis been
done, it will bo seen that for a year or two
nnder the present managem ent the Road has
actually earned lully rive per cent, for the
mate, if tbe rent paid for rolling stock be
included, and aside from the many improve
ments that have been added. This is not a
bad showing when eo much of the business
has been of a local uatnre.
With an unobstructed outlet to
KNOXVILLE
give constant employment to eixty bands,
and ahip annual,y
EIGHT VTLLIOSS
of feet of lumber. Tma ia aeld coastwise,
frem SavinLan to the British Provinces,
and in Liverpool, the We't Indies and booth
America. In ten days they can cut, trans
port, and load a ship >mh lumber at the
wharves of tbs Atlantic A Gulf Railroad in
Savannah. They hive two other mills of tbe
same capacity, eo that this single establish
ment wi.i send abroad twenty roar mill one
of fe.t of lumber every year. Last year
they ptid 910,060 iu freight to the Haoon &
Brunswick Railroad. Tbe Brentwood mill ia
eitnated on the confines of a tract of msg-
nincentiy timbered land, whi h covers
roarv thousand acoxs.
and ex ends to tbe distance of fifteen miles
from the railroad. To permeate this vast
territory aud render tbe lumber available,
she company are building a tramway fifieeu
milea iu length, at acoet of $2,50u per nuie,
with intersecting roads and branches. In
fifteen years they will denude this ..msmeuae
principality of us lumber, pull up slakes
and remove elsewhere.
This is but one of many other establish
ments. and etill the traveler in a private
conveyance through this country will hardly
find
A BUCK AMISS,
and million of acres ot the finest pine timber
in the world remain in their virgin condition
and primeval eolilu le. Mcch of the cleared
lend will be valuable for agricultural purpos
es, and it requires no prophet to peiee.ve
that era the lapse of another half century
this neglected pine region will bo covered
with waving fields of cotton, corn and sugar
cane, and thonsanus of eheep, goats and
cattle enrich the inhabitants.
THE COTTON TBOSTEOT
all along the road was quite encouraging.
While other portions of the State have suf
fered from excessive rains, her j tho water
courses were all very low and the shallow
ponds dry. Not a drop too much of water
nas fallen. The cotton weed is almost en
tirely free from rust and is growing and pat
ting on frait finely. Nothing was said of
caterpillars and soon it will be too late for
these pests to do sericus injury. On the
whole, the agricultural outlook is satisfac
tory, and though the corn crop of the State
will fall considerably short ot an average,
yet so abundant will be the yield of peas, po
tatoes, turnips aud rice, that with tne aid of
tbe next oat crop, not a bushel of ooinneed
be imported from the West another year to
supply the plantations of Georgia. Indeed,
at I.ngth our people are beginning to realize
that provision crops rank all others iu im
portance, and the offly true road to inde
pendence is to raise a sufficiency of food for
home consumption
JESUf.
The train approached this thriving town
in the midst of a rain-storm which was the
out-come of a murky cloud, terribly sug
gestive of typbeons and cyclones. But tbe
t. ements dissolved in tears, and there was no
tornado, for which, heaven be praised. In
the midst ot the pelting rain the writer made
his way to tbe
JESUP HOUSE,
wkoro he was cordially received and enter
tained by the proprietor, Mr. Littlefield
Hero, for lack of connection with the A. &
G. R, R. we spout the night, free from mos
quitoes, in a pore, piny wood’s Atmosphere,
and possessed of an airy apartment and
comfortable bed. The next morning the
tisiag sun found us on the cars again eu
route for
walthoubville,
distant only fifteen miles. In this pleasant
village we passed tbe Sabbath among old
friends and relatives, and hOAtd an orignal
and powerful discourse from the Presbyteri
an pastor, Rev. Mr. Montgomery. This
gent.eman is a nervous speaker, his dis
courses abounding in antithesis and salient
thoughts. The sermon be delivered wonld
have graced the pclpit of a metropolitan
church.
TRUE TO THEIR RECORD
The Puritan stock of old Liberty upon oo-
casion still asserts itself even after the lapse
of ISO years. This has again Doen illustrated
by the following incident: Not long since a
female lecturer and bookseller visited tbe
village and asked permission to hold forth,
iu the Presbyterian church. Her request
was roru-.ed, bnt tbo use of the acauetr.y
tendered and accepted But the rightoc.ns
son! of the Dominie who for leng yoirs had
held the fertile and shaped the morals of the
risirg generation of tbat community, was
stirred within him at the thought of this
violation of biblical authoriiy aud womanly
decorum. The lecturer had announced hoc
intention to speak upon the conversion of
the Jews or some kindred topic. But when
the audience, attracted by the novelty ot the
occasion, had assembled in large numbers
aud the lady was about to orate, tbo good
maa arose and said iu substance tba: it this
woman ntteiei anything derogatory to scrip
ture cr morality he would claim the right to
INTERRUPT ASD CORRECT HER
Then ensued a scene both edifying and
amueirg. The Virago got upon her high
hor-.e and declared she had come there nut
to be insnited but to enlighten the comma
nity and if this was to ha her reception she
would retire incontinently. And so she did,
in melo dramatic style, to tho sore disap
pointment of the crowd who had never heard
a woman talk in public before Tbe Profes
sor sturdily held hia ground, however, and
tbe strong-m.nded sister was forced to be
take herself elsewnere.
This serves to show that a little of tho
same old leaven still remains which caused
that people in 1752 to emigrate to the wil-
Cernsen of St. John’s Parish that they might
oLjoy freedom of conscience and worship
God in their own way. Bnt here endeth this
epistle. H. H. J.
Parents cannot be fno careful in guard
ing the health of their Babies. Only-
good and reliable medicine should be
given to them. Dr. Ball’s Baby Syrup
is known not to contsin anything inju
rious.
au! the West, wa doubt not it wonld be one
of the beat paying roads in the South. But
the question has besn eett'ej, if some luck
less lessee takes hold on the terms imposed
by the Legislature, or Tom Scott gobbles it
up with a view to securing Southern votes in
Congress for his favorite hobby, the Texas
and - tcific Railroad. The argument, there
fore, is exhausted, and we can only hope for
the beet, ihongn tbe outlook is certain!v not
cheering either for the Central or the forced
extenders of the Macon A Brunswick Biil-
road, if j such adventurous spirits can be
lonnd.
In the meanwhile ic is pleasant to note
the
RAPIDDEVELO LENT
of all the towns and industries on the line
of the rout e to Brunsw.ck. Cochran has a
stately block of brick stores on tbe site late
ly devastate! by fire, and is extending on all
etdee. Eastman, too, shows decided eviden
ces of improvement, and tbe turpentine,
lumber, s’.ocs, and agricultural interests are
ail rapidly advancing, pari passu, as tbe capa
bilities of this pine ooontry begin to be pro
perly appreciated.
At Eastman we saw probably
THE REST oonox HELD
in Georgia. It was a perfect mass of flowers
fruit ana foliage, not an inch or the soil be
ing visible.
It was astonishing also to observe how
well the com crops had turned ont, despite
the long droughts of summer, all along the
road to Jesnp.
There otoe despised “pine barrens'
whenever sufficiently elevated for drainage,
with a little •* oow-penning,” or the smallest
artificial assistance, produce wonderfully.
Tne cattle and sheep range, too, is excellent!
No bousing in winter is needed and the
stock eat ihe green wire-grass or browse up
on tbe cane, briars and bay bads of the
swamps, in stormy weather seeking eome
loafy covert which affords them protection
from tne wind.
THE TUB! ENTIRE BUSINESS,
though etill in its infancy, is fast becoming a
source of splendid revenue co tbe road and
people. The sons of the old North dtate,
havi-g exhausted thtir1fore : ti a; tome, are
pouri- g into Southern Georgia and causing
tne wilderness to reverberate to the sturdy
blows of their axes. At every station distil
leries have been erected, and a large area
arouDd the depot is covered with barrels of
roem snd spirits of turpentine awaiting
shipment. And yet, so far, the turpentine
farms nave been confined to the immediate
vicinity of the railroad. Boon tram-ways
will commanicsie witb :he boundless interi
or snd the water courses be subsidized for
transportation Then it will be seen tbat
this sltg e industry wilt produce millions of
capital for cur people and of itself go far to
wards sustaining the Macon A Brunswick
Railroad.
Pope Leo is said to look taller than ho
really is because of his extreme slender
ness; his figure, however, is elegant, in
spite of bis leanness. He hie a splendidly
shaped head, fringed with silver hair, and
a kindly faee, healthy in coloring. His
mouth, ohin and jew express etrongth
and firmness, aud there is esid to be in
his expression a beautiful "light of in
ward joy.” He wesrs s soutane, or close
redingote of soft, white woollen cloth
taking the form of the figure at the wais
and held there with a band of embroid
ered silk, and buttoned quite down in
front, showing the slippers of red silk
embroidered with a geld arose. A cape
of the same eolor and materia! falls from
the shoulders to tbe elbows, similarly but-
toned in front, with sems soft sub
stance, like down or ermine, edging tbe
cape atoned the neck, but not closely,
■ind down in the front; a golden cord
hangs atoned tbe neck, resting on the
shoulders, and depending in front is
golden p.nd jewelled cross. His white
bands are narrow, aud the fingers long
and beautifully rounded, and tbe nails
are perfectly almond-shaped and pink-
tinted. On his bead he wears a white
skull csp.
Mr. Tildrh on the Issue in 1880.—
In a recent interview with a correspon
dent of the Cincinnati Enquirer on the
political sitnation, Mr. Tiiden is reported
as having expressed himself as follows:
••The d:fferenoes in the Democratic par
ty in the United States are transitory
and cvace-cent, and will disappear in tbe
presence of inevitable events. The
principles npon which the great moss of
the Democratic party are agreed on ore
fundamental and eternal. In the contest
of 1876 the issue was the restoration of
tbe Government, its practioal working
and administration, to the original ideas
of its founders. Tbe defeat of the pop
ular will, as declared in that election,
has raised a vastly greeter issue—that
is, the integrity of the system of self-
government through elections by the
people. This issue transcends all others,
and it would be a betrayal of the most
acred duty to mankind to permit it to
be sacrificed to inferior and transient
questions.”
Wall Street is where money is made
rapidly. Yon may realise hundreds of
dollars by investing $50 in etock opera
tions through the rdi-bie house of Alex.
Frothineham A Co, brokers, 12 Wall
Street, New York. Their Weekly -Finan
cial Report gives full information and is
sent free.
erty in Albany last week.
The chain gang of Thomas county,we
learn from the Albany JYeics, made an at
tack on the guard, and, after fracturing
his skull, five of the prisoners escaped.
Numerous weddings are taking place
in and near Ty-Ty in Worth connty.
Albany News : The boat of the Flint
River Transportation Company has been
bought and paid for, and she is now be
ing brought around to Apalachicola.
Arrived there, Bhe will .proceed up the
Chattahoochee to Bainbridge, at which
point, in all probability, au excursion
will board her for Newton.
On the same subject the Bainbridge
Democrat says: Our business men are
of the opinion that the steamer will have
all ehe can do carrying freight up and
down the river between this place and
Newton. Bainbridge is full of exulta
tion over her prospects.
The Eastman Times says Hon. J. C.
Clements, Senator from the 15th dis
trict, who died in Atlanta a few days
since, was buried with MaBonic honors
in his family burying ground near Lum
ber City.
Baknksville Gazette: Farmers ot Pike
may prepare for a negro exodus. The
influences that are at work, will bring
it about, and in the near fnture at that.
So put your houses in order, and show
to tbe world that tbe adversities von
have snbdued heretofore, have developed
only half of yonr manhood and power.
Tbe same paper has a onriosity. It
says:
We have npon our table a shingle con
taining a ball supposed to have been shot
into tbe tree in the yeer 1812.
It is a faot that Gen. Floyd camped
on or near the very spot where thie tree
grew, and taking into consideration that
the ball, snob as who used in olden times,
wa have no doubt but that the ball has
been there sinoe 1812. At any rate the
ball was imbedded in tba tree some six or
eight inobes, which proved tbat it has
beer, there many years as no gun will
bury a ball so deep m a solid lightwood
tree.
Dawson is to have another fashion
able wedding shortly.
Mbs. Smith, wife of Dr. C. M. Smith,
of Box Springs, is dead.
Thebr is a great deal of siokues3 re.
ported in the neighborhood of Box
Spring and Hpatoie creek. jfjSi
Madam Johnston, a colored teaoher in
Talbottoo, says the Standard, Ia hopeloaa-
ly insane.
In Cochran nearly twenty new build
ing are being erected.
Ibwinton Southerner and Appeal:
Mr. Richard Barfield, of Gordon, has
a well on his place tbat is eighty -four
feet deep, and over half its depth was dug
through solid rook. The water in this
well contains a large amount of sulphur,
iron and other medicinal properties, and
will rust a tin vessel in two hours. Mr.
Bitfield and family nil have been healthy
siDce this well wosdug.
Home Journal: Rev. Jas. H. Nall, D.
D., of Columbus, will begin a meeting at
the Presbyterian church at Perry, on
Thursday before the first Sunday in Sep-
tember.
The Cuthbert Appeal refuses to pub
lish au orbituary exnibiting the virtues
of an old subscriber because he died
everul years in arrears to that paper. It
.lys it has firmly resolved to cease pub
lishing the noble qualities of any one
who dies in its debt.
A man by the name of Parks, says the
Gainesville Eagle,sold all hn effects a day
or two since and left tor parts unknown,
deterring his wife and children, and
leaving them entirely dependent on
charity.
Some ono has mortally offended Ham,
of the Gainesville Eagle. He thus dis
courses:
Cool iTeeatmknt —To effer jour guest
ice water when his stomach yearneth for
red liquor.
Ccchban Enterprise: Laurens Supc
rior court was oDened Monday morning
at 10 o’clock by Judge A. C. Pate. Tne
attention of the Graud Jury wa3 call to
matter of jail breaking by the Judge and
they retired to their duties.
The Judge ought not to have been eo
destructive.
Sandebsville Courier: Mr. G. F.
Rhode; of Hanoock has two acres of
ground from which he realized faliy 149
busbels of oats, and then planted it ic
cotton the 10th of June, and the prospects
of realizing a bale or two of cotton is very
flattering. He has proved by experiment
hat it does not alwajB take thirty days
for a cotton square to make a bloom. It
depends npon the land, the time of year,
the eeasons, the cultivation and the age
of tho cotton. He produoed a bloom in
twenty-five days since the first of Au
gust, and believes, under different cir
cumstances, they can be produced in
twenty days.
Chronicle and Constitutionalist: The
Walton County Vidette complains be
cause Gwinnett men come over and kick
np rows in their realm. Walton should
put up a barbed fence.
A shot gnn quarantine wonld be qnite
an effective remedy. It wonld not be as
peaoeabla but it would be livelier.
Auoubta Evening Hews: Mr. Robert
Butler is training a pack of thirteen
hounds to take to the North and give
exhibitions. -He will be accompanied
by his son, who is a very fine horseback
ridqf.
A Colored Otficeb Court Martial
ed.—Savannah Ninos: We are informed
tdat on the 13lh instant Charles Green
Capiaio of the Delmonico Guards, color
ed, was tried by eanrt martial by order
of the Governor for conduct nnbeoomiDg
an office, etc. The court was presided
over by Captain Gudoer, of tbe Chat
ham Lrght Imfantry, colored. He was
found guilty and was deprived of his
commission.
The Proposed Reoroanization.—The
Beaufort District Troop, one of the old
est cavalry organization in the South,
will hold a survivors’ meeting at Graham-
ville, S. C., on Moudsy nex , when «n tf-
fort will be made to effect an organization.
This company took a very conspicuous
part ia the late war as one of the com
panies in the famous “Hampton’s Le
gion.”
Savannah Mass Meetino.-.Od Wednes
day night bo immense mass meet
ing was held in Savannah to consider
the pending lease bill of the Maoon and
Brunswick Road, and to take such steps
as were deemed necessary to protect Sa
vannah interests.
A committee, consisting of Colonel W.
T. Thompson, L. it Montmolin, D. R.
Thomas, David Well?, and Colonel J. L.
Warren, were appointed to prepare reso
lutions for the meeting. Colonel R. M.
Grme addressed the meeting. He favored
bowing to the action ef the Legislature,
bat arged protection for the Central snd
Atlantic and Golf Railroads.
The committee reported a set of reeo
lations prefaced by a lengthy preamble.
The resolutions pretested against the
bill, denominating it as ill-considered;
the resolutions further provided that
a commit!eo be appointed to forward a
copy of the resolutions to the Governor,
aud if he signed the bill, to carry tbe
matter to the courts; the action of
the City Council of Savannah wns en-
dorsed, and thanks tendered the Repre
sentatives in tho Legislature for their
efforts. Colonel Jones, of this paper,
after repeated calls, responded. The
Sews, from which this report is synop-
eized, says “Colonel Jones* remarks were
listened to with great attention, and
were warmly applauded at tho close.”
The committee was appointed ia accord
ance with the resolutions, aud the meet
ing adjourned.
Richard Hesterlie, the negro who
stoned the State Road train, has been
committed to jail in Marietta.
Atlanta Dispatch : We ate r.l ably
informed ot a little eoene that took place
before the committee to investigate the
office of Prinoipal Keeper of the Peniten
tiary. Governor Brown appeared before
the committee,and before being interro
gated demanded as a matter of right that
his own stenographic scribe should be al
lowed to take down his testimony, that
the Governor might revise it.
Messrs., Garrard and Walters, of the
oommittee, arose and promptly denied
that the Governor had such a right. Tbe
Governor insisted, and Mr. Chambers,
the chairman of tbo committee, then ask
ed the Governor to retire whiie the com
mittee passed on tbe question.
The committee unanimonsly decided
that the Governor had no such right, acd
that he must bo examined ns other wit
nesses. They then sent for Governor
Brown and acquainted him with their
decision. Governor Brown then deman
ded that Mr. Nelms be allowed to be
present to confront tho witness. Mr.
Chambers said that he (Governor Brown)
had not been summoned by tho commit
tee, that they had not asked for his testi
mony, but that he was there at the re
quest of Captain Nelms, and that he
ould make his statement. The Govern
or then stated that he knew about the
contract between Nelms and the lessees in
regard to transporting convictB. In re
ply to a question if the Governor thought
the contract a legal one, he said he
thought it was legal, but not one that
Nelms could officially enforce.
Mb. H. W. J. Ham is out in a card to
the Augusta Chronicle and Constitution
alist detailing the Ohristopher-Goldimith-
Ham matter, and closes as follows:
I am no champion of Mr. Goldsmith.
I express no opinion as to his gnilt or in
nocence. It is not my province to pass
upon that, but I desire to say that any
man who says, intimates or insinuates
that I received one cent of W. L. Gold
smith’s money for my own use, cr for any
other purpose than as above stated, or
that I was moved in what I did by any
other than motivea of common justice,
that I ever attempted to "suppress pub
lic opinion,” or "buy”, anybody’s in
fluence, or bribe any individual, states
what is unqualifiedly false and a lie upon
ita faco.
crop notes. •
Rust is seriously injuring cotton crops
in Jefferson county.
Cotton is opening rapidly sinoe the
rains in Terrell connty.
Baker County.—Albany News: Cater
pillars have done no damage as yet, but
the farmers aro afraid they will,
Talbot County.—Standard: Wo no
tice that crops through the lower portion
of the oeunty are looking well; the late
rains have been very beneficial to them.
Polk County.—Oelartown Advertiser:
Wo notice an occasional spot of rust in
cotton fields near town. The late rains
have rather damaged this crop.
Pike County. — BurnesviUe Gaxelte :
Farmers have adjourned fodder pulltn;
till the rain somewhat ceasts. Many are
complaining sorely of rust in cotton. We
see some fields ruined bv it.
Cobb Oountt. — Marietta Journal:
Tne late heavy rains have been very dis«
asterous to the ootton crop, so muoh so,
that it is now thonght that not more
than a half orop will be gathered in this
section. The corn crop was never hotter.
Laurens Countt.—Eastman Times t
We heard considerable complaint of rust
in cotton. Tne rain3 in Laurens, like
here and elsewhere, seems to have been
very spotted.
Upper Monroe County.—Barnesvillo
Gazette: As to the ootton outlook, even
at this late date, it is very uncertain,
and indefinite. The season has not been
propitious at all, a great deal of the crop
is late, with but little matured fruit,
and withal not very healthy, brought
about by an excess of rain, then hot
weather and some cool nights. There
are considerable eigns of botl worms;
should the rainy weather continue, thc-y
cm play sad havoc with tne crop yet.
About Late Cotton.—Sindersville
Courier: General Robert Toombs oilers
his overseers a reward for any evidence
that a ootton square forming on the 10th
of August will mako a mature boll, but
none of them as yet have been able
give the information. If it be trno that
a equare at that time will not make ma,
ture fruit, it will set at naught much of
the fruit that is now on the cotton weed
as well as exclude all that may form
hereafter. This, of course, would short
en the orop considerably. We would
like to give pluce to the experience of
some of cur farmers on this.
Dougherty County.—Albany News
New cotton ia beginning to come in
now, and the pickers aro bnsily at work.
Our report this week oomes from Mr.
W. G. Cross, an extensive planter in
West Dougherty. He says cotton Is
doing as well as oould be expected. "On
m; place I have seen no caterpillars
only a few flies. If tbe caterpillars will
only ‘hold off’ a little longer I will make
more ootton this year than I did last
Will gather only a little better than
half orop of oorn. The pea crop Is
failure ont of the way. I tbink more of
the planters will put in a heavy small
grain orop. Oats will be planted in No
vember abundantly.”
The weather has besn very wet and
nnfavorable to ootton for several days.
FORD’S EXTRACT
the grbat ybgktablb
PA1* DESTROYER AND SPECIFIC FOR IN'
FLAM NATION AND HEMORRHADES.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia.
tion has cured so main case* of those disiress-
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is invaluable in these diseases, Lumbago, Faint
in Back or Side. Ac. Pond’s Extract Gist-
MtNT (50 cents) for use -when removal of cloth*
in* is inconvenient, is a great kelp iu relieving
iulhumnatorv cases.
P r»rr» nwh a cr*c f rom Lungs,
nemonnageb, stomach. Nose, or from
any cause, is speedily controlled and stopped.
Our Nasal Strings.- (25 cents) and Ixhalbra
(50 cents) are great aids in arresting interna
bleeding.
Diphtheria and Sore Throat,
Use the Extract promptly. It is a sure cure.
Delay is dangerous,
n Q f Q -rvli The Extract ii the only specific for
bit! 1 Ii. disease, Cold in Head, &c. Our
r'Catarrh Cure,” specially prepared to meet se*
*iou8 ca*es, contains all the curative properties
of the Extract; our Nasal Syringe is invaluable
for use in Catarrhal atlections, is simple and
inexpensive.
Sores, Ulcers, Wounds, Sprains
and Bruises.'
ment in connection with the Extract; it win aid
in healing, softening and in keeping out the air.
Burns and Scalds.
rivalled, and should be kept in every family ready
for use m case of accidents. A dressing of our
Ointment will aid in healing and prevent scar
Inflamed or Sore Eyes.
without tho slightest fear of harm .quickly allay
ng all inflammation and soreness without tarn
Earache, Toothache and Face-
« ph p "When the Extract is usod according to
iLi/iic;. di rec tions its effect is simply won-
jperfuL
pvlpq Blind. Eluding ou Itching. It is
j ial/O. the greatest known remedy, rapidly
curing when other medicines have failed.
Pond’s Extract Medicated Paper for closet use
is u preventive agaiust Chafing and Piles. Our
Ointment is of great service where the removal
of clothing is inconvenient.
For Broken Breast and Sore
7 vaw-vI The Extract is so cleanly and effi-
■‘■'wr 1 . carious that mothers who have
once usod it will never be without it. Our Oint
ment is the best emollient that can be applied.
Female Complaints. £“ d p b h e y Si£i
in for the maionty oi female diseases if the Ex
tract is used. Pull directions accompany each
bottle.
CAUTION.
imitated,
X trim » IJAtratl The genuine article
has the words “Pond’s Extract,” blown in the
glass, and Company’s trade mark on surrounding
wrapper. None other is genuine. Always insist
on having Pond’s Extract. Take no other prepar
ation. It is never sold in bulk.
PRICE SF POND'S EXTRACT, TOILET ARTI
CLES AND SPECIALTIES.
POND’S EXTBACT 60c. »l and 81.75
Toilet Cream $1 00
Dentriflca
Lip Salve
Toilet 8oap(N jak’j.)
Ointment
Catarrh Cure
Plaster
Iuhaler
Xu-al Syringe
Medicated Paper..
PEEPASED ONLY BY
POND’S EXTRACT CO.
XBW YORK AND LONDON,
8 Idbv all dragcUt* anrSJi wst th’rr
A bkcznt estimate gives to the Church
of Borne about one seventh of the popu
lation of the earth; to Protestantism
between a twelfth and a thirteenth, and
to Christianity as a whole a little less
than three-tenths. AHDther authority
places the whole number of Catholics in
the world at 216 356,000, of which num
ber Europe hss 153,441,000, America
51,400.000, Asia 6,167.000, Africa 1,695,-
000, and Australia 650,000.
The Yellow Fever os Mew Or
leans.
Now the return of pestilence to the cities
of the South, especially Memphis, and per
haps others, recalls to the mind of the
reader the ead calamity which occurred to
New Orleans last year, and brings vividly
forward the memory of the great good ac
complished by the far-famed Charity Hoe
p.tal of the Crescent City, which it was ena
bled to do only by the generous enpport it
received from the revenae derived from the
celebrated Louisiana State Lottery, which
announces its 112th monthly drawing will
take place on September 9ih, and the tickets
for which, or any information relative there
to. can be had on application to M A. Dau
phin, P. O. Box 692, New Orleans. Lx., or
to the aame at No. 319 Broadway, New York
City.
Talce Your Time.
To make money safely, easily and rapidly,
is now, while tne stock market offers so
many splendid opportunities. Ihe combi
nation system has bad unprecedented suc
cess, aud brings good fortune to thousands
oi shareholders in this and other countries.
Investment** of from #25 to #1U,OOU are
thus consolidated into one vast capital, and
operated by the best skill and experience,
result in h.avy profits, which are divided
among shareholders every month. A New
Orleans co.ton dealer made #27,6 9.18 in
two months. A Baltimore merchant receiv
ed an aggregated profit of #9,642.04 from
three combinations. A flan Francisco min
ing agent made 3i2.438.lS from four o&mb -
nations, his first investment having been
#100. Others have been equally fortunate.
Every dsy there are new and grand opportu
nities. New explanatory circular, with ’‘on*
erring rules for eoocese,” mailed by Messrs.
Lawrence A Co , Bankers, 57 Exchange
Place, New York City.
THE GENUINE
DR. C. McLANTE’S
Celebrated American
WORM SPECIFIC
OR
VERMIFUGE.
SYMPTOMS OF WORMS.
T HE countenance is pale and lead.
en-eolored, with occasional flushes,
or a circumscribed spot on one or both
cheeks; the eyes become dull; the
pupils dilate; an azure semicircle
runs along the lower eye-lid; the
nose is irritated, swells, and sometimes
bleeds; a swelling of the upper lip ;
occasional headache, with humming
or throbbing of the ears; an unusual
secretion of saliva; slimy or furred
tongue; breath very foul, particularly
in the morning; appetite variable,
sometimes voracious, with a gnawing
sensation of the stomach, at others,
entirely gone; fleeting pains in the
stomach ; occasional nausea and vom
iting; violent pains throughout the
abdomen; bowels irregular, at times
costive; stools slimy, not unfrequent-
ly tinged with blood; belly swollen
and hard; urine turbid; respiration
occasionally difficult, and accompa
nied by hiccough; cough sometimes
dry and convulsive; uneasy and dis
turbed sleep, with grinding of the
teeth; temper variable, but generally
irritable, &c.
■Whenever the above symptoms
are found to exist,
DR. C. McLANE’S VERMIFUGE
will certainly effect a cure.
IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURY
in any form; it is an innocent prepa
ration, not capable of doing the slightest
injury to the most tender infant.
The genuine Dr. McLane's Ver
mifuge bears the signatures of G
McLane and Fleming Bros, on the
wrapper. —:0:—■
DR. C. McLANE’S
LIVER PILLS
are not recommended as a remedy “for
all the ills that flesh is heir to,” but in
affections of the liver, and in all Bilious
Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Head
ache, or diseases of that character, they
stand without a rival.
AGUE AND FEVER.
No better cathartic can be used prepar
atory to, or after taking Quinine.
As a simple purgative they are un
equaled.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
Ayer’s
BairVigor,
FOB RESTORING GRAY HAIR TO ITS
NATURAL VITALITY AND COLOR.
It is a most agreeable dressing, which
Is at once harmless and effectual, for
preserving the hair. It restores, with
the gloss and freshness of youth, faded or
gray, light, and red hair, to a rich brown
or deep black, as may be desired. By its
use thin hair is thickened, and baldness
often though not always secured. It
checks fulling of the liair immediately
and causes a new growth in all eases
where the glands are not decayed; while
to brashy, weak, or otherwise diseased
hair, it imparts vitality and strength,
and renders it pliable.
Tho Vigor cleanses the scalp, cures
and prevents the formation of dandruff;
and, by its cooling, stimulating, and
soothing properties, it heals most if not
all of tbe humors and diseases peculiar
to the scalp, keeping It cool, clean, and
soft, under which conditions diseases of
the scalp and hair are Impossible.
As a Dressing for Ladies’ Hair,
The Vigor is incomparable. It is color
less, contains neither oil nor dye, and
will not soil white cambric. It imparts
an agreeable aud lasting perfume, ami
as an article for the toilet it is economi
cal and unsurpassed in its excellence.
rilEPAItED BT
Dr. J. C. AYER & CO., Lowell
Practical ami Analytical Chemists.
SOLD BY ALL DUCGGISTS XVXSXWKKRX.
Hunt • v ,;Kanki^ TJ rjLamar
Wholesale Agents,
feb!9
<3-j
ii
LIT'
IN PRICE
run
bl
Signature Is on eTerv bottla ot tho GENUINE
WORCESTERSHIRE SAtJOE.
It impurts the most delicious tasto and zest to
FISH,
-j-s nil oau r
J ot a LETTER from
ipj aMEDICALGEN.
I I TLEMAN at Ma
dras to liis brother
nt WORCESTER,
\May.tS51.
HOT
COLD
GAME, AC.
The genuine are never sugar coated.
Each box has a red wax seal on the
lid, with the impression Dr. McLane’s
Liver Pills.
Each wrapper bears the signatures of
C. McLane and Fleming Bros.
Insist upon having the genuine Dr.
C. McLane’s Liver Pills, prepared by
Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the
market being full of imitations of the
name McLane, spelled differently but
same pronunciation.
ANCHOR LINE
GLASGOW. every SATURDAY i
And &BGULARLY to LONDON direct.
Passage to Glasgow. Londonderry, Belfast
Liverpool.
SALOON CABINS, $60 to $80, CURRENCY
SECOND CABIN, including all requisites, $40
STEERAGE $28.
TO LONDON BY DIRECT STEAMER,
No Steerage.
8ALOON CABINS, $S5 and $65.
Excursion Tickets at Reduced Rates.
Passen^e* accommodations unsurpassed for ele-
g&noe and comfort. AH Staterooms on
mam deck.
For Books of information, PJ&ns, Ac,
Apply to HENDERSON BROTHERS.
7 BOWLING GREEN. NkW IORK.
or to T H HENDERSON, MACON.
mya27 3m
^ Tell LEA A PER-
-3R1NS that tlieir
4|Sauce is highly es-
teemed in India,
JgSSrrfs - -nnd is, m my opiu*
JOINTS, - ion ‘ tbe most palat*
" able as wtll as the
[most wholesome
Sauce that is made.
Sold and used throughout the world.
TRAVELERS AND TOURISTS FIND
GREAT BENEFIT IN HAVING A BOTTLE
WITH THEM.
LEA & PEBRTNS,
26 COLLEGE PLACE AND 1 UNION SQUARE,
febY51aw!y XEWYORK.
TO DB-UCKSIST’S.
W B are now prepared to print Druggist,
.Labels of every description upon as rea
nab leerms as can be hai anvwnere.
fel>27 TELEGRAPH*
DISSOL eJ'j juLtfii.
JTiHK firm of Cook A Chester is this day dia-
.JL solved by mutual consent. Either partner
is authorized to coll t acd receipt for the same
Juno 1st, 1879.
. JL COOK.
Jun7 Ira j w CHKSTKR.
DALE OF CITY LUTS,
B Y resolution of City Council, will be s .ld on
the grounds -murduy, Aucust Suth. *t lo
o’clock, lots 1,2 and a, in .qunre 74. situuted in
the southern part el the city adjoining He
wennn . gardens. Terms mane known on day
of/u'o , , T 0 fi t.ND <UX.
iy*9 tds Chm’n Cora on Pub ProD’ty.
SAJI HAILEY INSTITUTE,
GRIFFITH, Gi.
Boabdikg ixd Day School poa Boys.
sa-Board nnd Tuit.ou tor tno Full Term oi
four months i35*5.
School organized on the JXi’i.ary 8ystem. Full
course of study. Boys prepar. d for t.'oticce or
Business. Thorough instruction end strict dis
cipline. Special inducements offered students
from abread. Correspondence solicited. For
farther informat on and Catalogue address
WM 1KA SMITH, Principal.
„ _ PO Box £27 Griffin. Ga.
a W MASOHAAf, Secretary. augl -eodlm
TO JtiJENT.
O NE STORE ° n Third street, near Seymour
Tinsley & Co’s.old corner, with a good cel*
lar and upstairs. A new elevator in tho store.
Possession given October 1st. Applv lo
TI oa H JS OLIVER.
July 22 . 1879 ful>3 lw
Gtt&i'ErjbKA&.JL*
EUPAULA. ALABAMA.
jjjOOD BOARD and Rooms aud IkeBatAI
»T T T.tGN~W a MOTH
42nd Aunnal Session
ot
Myaii Female coiiep
Will begin on 0
WEDNESDAY, 17th September,
With a full corps ot experienced Professors and
j Teachers.
Toe very be9t advantages in Literature.
Vrt C,6Ut an< * ^°^ ern Languages, Music and
Domestic Department unsurpassed for com
fort and care.
Expenses payable one half in September, bal
ance in February.
Board and Regular Tuition in two Lower
Llassea ...........
Boland Regular Tuition in three *Higher V
Board, RegulafTuVtiom’Musicand Frencb $25 °
German m two Lower Classes «320
• Regular Tuition, Music and French
German iu throe Higher Classed $350
Ten per cent discount on Cash litis lor Board
and Tuition,
No credit except on good bankable paper,
bend for Catalogue to
W C BASS, President,
or GW SMITH. Secretary.
j «n25 3m
N# More Goar, A'enralgia or Lkenoa&m,
A POSITIVE CURE
FOR RENT,
QNE FOUR ROOM HOUSE on Plum street
between First and Second streets. Two room
Kitchen and good well of water cn premises.
W. C. DAVIS,
Attorney and ConnsellorJ
at Law,
SANDEBSV1LLE, - - GEOEQZA j
For Sale.
cnv Jacxwrsjian SWEET navi to-
novisdawljr
BAG JO.
N ENDLESS STOCK OF OLD NEWS-
papers at 50 cents per Hundred, and Four Dol
lars per Thousand.
Much cheapsr than any other kind of Wrap
ping Paper, and very useful about Packing
Goods, Cutting Patterns, Washing Windows,
Etc, Etc.
„ XHIS OFFICE.
S|14 H
Either of the above diseases driven from the
system and wholly banished by a method invenr-
ed and used by the great medical expert of Ger
many,
Dr M VON THANE, of Berlin;
This is not a patent medicine, but the recip3
of this eminent surgeon and phjhician, who has
devoted years cf study to the treatment of tho
above diseases, making them a specialty, and in
nocsse has he been unsuccessful.
We will furnish on application testimonials
from hundreds of patients, bothabroid and in
this country, who have been restored to perfect
:e:n of treatment,
incurable.
Sent with fall Directions on Re
ceipt of $1 00.
WILLIAM H OTTERSOX & CO„
297 Greenwich street. X Y City.
Sole agents for United Slates and Canadas.
aug29 d&sw ]Sw
Rare Chance.
F IVE HUNDRED AND STXTI acres land
Jor sale four miles from Fursj th, S73 acres
under cultivation, about 60 acres original growth
and balance grown up in old field prae. On the
place is a frame five room dwelli: g, also stables
corn house, fine sin house and screw, negrj
houses, good well of water and orchard. Any
one wishing a home lor health and a g od cotton
and grain place, this will suit. About fiftv btl^g
cotton will be made cn the place this year.
Price $3,000, half c*sh, balance payable in equal
installments in one and two .rears with seven
per cent interest on unpaid iruoui.ts Tne cot
ton, seed, corn and fodder tbst is made on the
place tbi* Jtar can bo bought at '•••isoiiabld
prices. Address BOX 409,
aug*91w Ma on, Ga
$2506
YEAii Agents wanted. L<usi«
S3 legitimate. Particulars free,
AidtouJ.votTHAnn Wl)