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Iklier Walker—Preuipt andFner^etle
florrmeirt.
An enthusiastic meeting to prepare for a
grand rally of the inasses in aid of Gen.
Walker and his heroic companions in
Nicaragua, warn heid last evening at the
Nicaraguan Agency, room No. 2 over St.
Charles Hotel coiner of Broadway and
Leonard street.
Col. Ward B. Burnett was called to the
chair and iflex. 0. Lawrence chosen Secre
tary of the meeting.
Brief, eloquent and practical speeches
were made by Major lieiss, Gen. Green,
Mr. Oak Smith, Mr. Ga rrison.Gen. Wheat
of Ky., Thos. F. Meagher, Capt. liynders
and the Chairman, who said if we are
to make the name of filiibuster apprebri-
ous in the connection, we shall heap
infamy upon all the heroes of the Revolu-
lution.
Among the distinguisced individuals
present, besides those we have named,
were Col. J. W. Fabier, Col. Anderson, of
Nicaragua, Thomas Placide, the actor, Dr.
W. Magoffin, and others.
A committee, composed of Alexander C.
Morton, Thomas Francis Meagher, Thom
as M. llardcastJe, Jonas Bartlet, and Hen
ry Weldon, Esqrs., were appointed
to devise ways and means, and pre
pare a preamble and resolutions for the
meeting.
The committee in favor of holding
the meeting reported in favor of holding
the meeting at the Tabernacle on Satur
day evening.
A large and influenzal committee
was appointed to solicit aid for the
movement and also various oilier commit
tees.
It was suggested that there were
many friends who would prefer to
contribute in some ether way, and Har
rison & Co., the proprietors of the steam
ship line to San Juan, generously volun
teered to carry anything in the shape of
clothing, provisions, &c., free of expense,
in the steamer Tennessee, which sails next
Wednesday.
Altogether the meeting was one of the
most spirited, enthusiastic and determined
in its tone of any whi ch we have witness
ed, and if Walker holds on liis way till tlie
Tennesssee returns, he will receive the
best evidence yet offered of the sympathy
and humanity of the people of the
North.
The liberality with which money
was handed out by the men present to
defray preliminary expenses, is the
Lest evidence that eloquent as was
the talking, the men present were men
of means, of character and of action
—solid men and heroes, who meant what
they said and knew no such word as fail.
We look for effective and decisive results
as the fruit of their future action.— New
York Netrtt.
The Uidett House in New York.—We
recently had occasion to notice the demoli
tion ol the ancient edifice in I*earl street,
nearly opposite Cedar, believed to have
been the oldest in the city. It was original
ly the De Peyster Mansion, From its
balcony, on many a field-day, the military
reviews were held by the colonial gov
ernors, and it is reputed to have been, at
onetime, the head-quarters of Gen. Wash
ington. For many years it was known as
the “Redmond Hotel,” and became noto
rious on account of the arrest of the
proprietor on the charge of a felony, which,
by the exertion of the late Jacob Hays,
led to the arrest aud conviction of the real
culprit, under circumstances of peculiar in
terest and importance to the community.
Afire partially destroyed tlieold mansion,
but the substantial walls and tiled roof,
with the marks in the adjoining walls,
shwed its ample proportions in days of
yore. It covered the front of the whole
lot, which was 5G feet wide, had octagonal
projections in the rear, with a coach and
stable yard, and alley way to Burnet, now
Water street. This alley was of the same
width with De Peyster, street, directly
opposite, which ran from Burnet street to
the river.
On this let Joseph Simpson, Esq., of
tills city*, is now building two large stores,
covering the entire breadth on Pearl street,
which are to have marble fronts, aud be
each one hundred feet deep. They will
be used together in one business, ami thus
form a large and ornamental structure. A
map of the lots on either side of Depeyster
street, opposite to the alley, is till preser
ved, showing their apportioment among
the heirs of Col. De Peyster, who owned
the surrounding property, and whose son,
the Hon. Abraham De Peyster, built the
mansion above referred to, in the year
1G95, and occupied it until his death, in
1767. The contract for the carpenter’s
work, which is still preserved, stipulates
that, in addition to the chief payments
specified, the carpenters should receive two
silver goblets,—a feature of the times
quite at variance with the present customs.
Congress on the Slave-Trade.
We find the following in the proceedings
of the House of Representatives on Mon
day last:
Mr, Ethridge submitted tlie follow
ing resolution, which was read for informa
tion:
Resolved, That tills House regards all
suggestions or propositions of every kind,
by whomsoever made, for the revival of
the African Slave-trade, as shocking to
tlie moral sentiment of the enlightened
portion of mankind, and that any act on
the part of Congress legislating for, or con
niving at, or legalizing that horrid and in
human traffic, would justly subject the
United States to the reproach and execra
tion of all civilized and Christian people
throughout the world.
Objection wasmade.to the introduction
of the resolution.
Mr. Ethridge moved a suspension of the
rules.
Mr. Campbell of Ohio, demanded the
yeas and nays.
Mr. Walker asked whether if the House
shall suspend the rules it was the purpose
of Mr. Ethridge to move the previous ques
tion, on the adoption of the resolution to
to cut off debate.
Ar. Ethridge replied that the resolution
contained a self evident proposition, and
he presumed every gentleman had
an opinion on the subject. He sbould’nt
discuss it but would move the previous
question.
Mr. Jones, of Tennessee, said he wanted
Mr. Ethridge to leave out the argument
in the resolution, and said he was as much
opposed to reopening of the African
slave-trade as his colleague. ■ [He was
here called to order, as debate, the
.Speaker said, was inadmissable at the
time.]
Mr. Jones said he would not be gagged*
by either the Speaker or others.
Mr. Orr ineffectually strove to offer a
substitute, simply resolving that it is inex
pedient to repeal the law prohibiting the
African slave-trade.
Mr. Ethridge’s motion to suspend the
rules, in order to enable him to introduce
*his resolution, was agreed to—yeas 140,
nays -53.
The demand for the previous question
was sustained by 3G majority, and
the main question ordered by 41 majori
ty.
Mr. McQueen moved to lay the resolu
tion on the table.
Motion was lost by yeas 71; nays 136.
Mr. Ethridge’s resolution was then adopt
ed by yeas 152; nays 57.
Mr. Orr, under a suspension of the rules,
submitted a resolution that it is inexpe
dient, unwise, and contrary to the
settled policy of the United States to
repeal the laws prohibiting the African
slave trade.
Resolution adopted by yeas 183; nays
8.
Nays—Messrs. Barksdale, Bennet
(Miss,,) Brooks, Keitt, Shorter, Walker,
Wright (Miss.)
Ocean Telegraph.—The feasibility of
connecting distant countries by telegraph
wires laid-on the bottom of the ocean is
soon to be tested, and there is much rea
son for anticipating entire success. Should
England and the United States be thus
united, as they are likely to be at no -dis
tant date, the system will he extended to
other countries. Already a movement to
this effect is in contemplation—not to say
progress. Capt. Raasleff, a native of
Denmark, of the firm of Maillefert & Itaas-
loff, sub-marine engineers, of Hurl Gate
memory, has projecieda system of telegra
phic lines for the West Indies, having
their centre at St. Thomas, the terminus
of several lines of West India and South
American steamers, aud equi-distant from
large commercial ports in the United Sta
tes, South America and the West India is
land. From thence he proposes to extend
a sub-marine cable along the Windward
islands to Lagnayra, in Yenztiela, and the
G tiayanas; another by way of the Bahama
Islands, to Florida, than to connect with
American lines; another, to Porto Rico,
St. Domingo, Cuba and Jamaiea. Thus,
the whole West India Islands and the
Eastern coast of South America will be in
telegraphic connection with the United
States and Europe. The length of wire
necessary to the accomplishment of this
design is but 2,000 miles, and the estimat
ed cost is about $500 per mile, or $1,000,-
000 for the whole work Capt. Raasloff is
sanguine of successs, and is devoting his
entire energies to the realization of the
object. He is connected with a lage bus-
inesss firm in Copenhagen, and expects to
raise the requisite amount of capital in
England and this country. The Danish
government has been the first to aid the
enterprise, by making a liberal concession
of so much land on the island of St. Tom
as as may be needed for a telegraphic stat-
tion, and extending other valuable facil
ities. The Gulf Stream and coral rocks
offer no empediment to Capt. R.’s ambition
The Stream sets uniformly in one direction
whereas, a cable has been successfully
extended and maintained across the Eng
lish Channel, in opposition to violent tides
ebbing and flowing. As to the rocks of
coral, they are soft and friable, and very
different from the angular and flinty rock
of other regions, The most hostile influ
ences must he overcome, in the steady
advance of modem Science, Enterprise and
Ambition.
Hugs at Chattanooga.—According to the data
furnished so far, our up-country frionds are pour
ing down upon us an unprecedented supply of
pork. Let it come—an abundant supply will he
apt to reduce somewhat the current rate of 7.[
cents, which is rather hard exchange in ayear of
short crops.
The Chattanooga Advertiser of the 13th states
that up to Dec. 12th, 295 car loads of hogs had ar
rived at that place, against 166 loads up to the
same date last year. In numbers the hogs by
these arrivals count 18,0o0 against 10,000 last
year. In addition to the arrivals by railroad,about
5,000 had been driven in. The same paper, of the
aOth inst., announces that “drovers are constantly
crossing over the mountains en mule to the markets
of the iower country.” With the largo stock of
last winter’s bacon still on hand, and these fresh
supplies sent forward by our neighbors of the hog-
rai-ing sections, we are certainly in no danger of
starving.
The Advertiser mentions one lot of 1200 hogs
slaughtered in Chattanooga, which averaged 400
pounds each, many of them weighing 600 each.—
The whole number killed at Chattanoogo. up to
the 29tb, was d,000.
Creation of the Human llace.—Dr. Hitchcock, the
eminent geologist, said in a recent discourse de
livered by him in Albany, that geological science
places man among the most recent of created
things. We find the surface of the earth (says
Dr. H) composed to the depth of some eight or ten
miles of rocks. These rocks are full of the remains
of animals and plants. Thirty thousand species of
cm, which differ from any living species, have
beondismtered, yet no human remains are found
reached *' le . loosu soil—alluvium—is
® 01 u " lvcrsa lly acknowledged to
be of n.cent ontrm. riu rpm«ino • .
»fou^°e^rtoSo~l?^° t !’. eran; ? ,al8
■re louna several thousand feet below the surface"
have never be en
one hundred feet below the
m existence when
“The Kansas Question Settled At Last.”
The great leader of the black republi
cans in the late contest, the New York
Herald, admits that the Kansas question
settled. The following extracts from its
issue of the 17th instant are interestin
for two reasons—first, because they are
truthful, and that it is a rare quality for an
editorial in that paper; second, they expose
the insincerity and dishonesty of the Fre
mont leaders in the late contest:
‘The Kansas Question settled at Last.—
Governor Geary’s despatch, just sent into
Congress by the President, may be legard
edas the begining of the end of the Kansas
imbroglio. From all accounts it appears
that Kansas is quiet at last; that there on
ly remain a small hand of marauders in the
southern district, and that these are having
a hard time, chased for their lives by a pos
se with an itinerant court ready to try
them when caught. Judge Lecompte seems
to have been dismissed; Reeder is quiet
somewhere, at last; and so, in due time, the
southern marauders and northern specula
tors alike got rid of, the Territory will now
have a chance of rest.
“It has occupied far too large a share of
public attention for some time past. In
sober earnest, what did it matter to the
people of the United States how the small
infant Territory of Kansas settled their do
mestic institutions? * * *
“There is a prospect that, for some time
to come, our only news from Kansas will
refer to the locating of new towns, the
opening of new streets, the clearing of new
farms, the building of mills, the cutting of
roads, and the growing of all kinds of valu
able grain.
“Let us thank God for it! The question
of slavery is unsettled, but it will not re
main so long. Tlie laws of climate and the
probable temper of the people of Kansas in
dicate that, if the people are let alone, they
will probably make it a free State. But if
they should not—if it should appear that
the South has poured in settlers enough to
command a majority of votes—why, we
think, the North could stand it, and the
heavens wouldn’t fall, even though the fu
ture Senators from the State of Kansas
should take sides with the South. But what
ever the future may unfold, our clear duty
in the present—as northern or southern
men—is to let Kansas alone, and neither
by contributions of money for political pur
poses nor by invasions of armed men to seek
to rob the people of the Territory of their
natural and proper sovereignty.”—Union.
tHedUal and Surgical
The Irish journals give an account of a
singular phenomenon in connection with
the extracting of a tooth in the town of
Ballymena. The tooth was a grinder of
large size, apparently sound, and so firmly
seated that it broke off in the effort for its
removal. On examining that portion of
tlie tooth which came off' with the instru
ment, a very extraordinary worm-shaped
animal was found adhering to the centre of
it. On being carefully removed, without
injury, it proved to be five-eights of an inch
long, lively as an eel, of a blood red coler,
and about the thickness ofa woolen thread.
On viewing it through a microscope of
limited power, it appeared to be ringed or
jointed in its formation; no legs were visi
ble, and it moved by erecting its body,
arch like, in the centre, aud projecting
either end at pleasure—appearing to have
a head at each extremity. One of the
heads was large, flat, and broad in propor
tion to the creature’s size, with a capacious
mouth, and two black eyes, set very widely
apart, and projecting from the upper part
of the head. The other head was smaller,
with a lengthened snout, and a mouth
opening from underneath.
The Pharmaceutical Journal, in an arti
cle on tlie phenomena connected with pois
oning by arsenic, says that with regard to
the customary limitation of the search for
arsenic—in cases of suspected poisoning—
to the stomach and its contents, Mr. Buch
ner, the distinguished chemist, thinks that
it is insufficient to justify an opinion when
uegative results are obtained. In one in
stance lie found that arsenic was present in
the stomach and duodenum only in such
amount as to be barely recognizable; still,
when different parts of the intestinal canal
were examined, arsenic was found without
difficulty. The lower part of the intestine
contained a tolerably quantity of slimy
substance, colored yellow by bile, and here
tlie arsenic was found in largest amount;
while in the upper portion of the intestine,
wl ich was empty, like the stomach, the
amount'of arsenic was smaller. Mr. Buch
ner considers it not improbable that in this
instance arsenic had been absorbed and
excreted by the liver into the intes
tine.
Iir Bigelow, of the Massachusetts Gene
ral Hospital, recently performed an impor
tant surgical operation on a girl twelve
years of age. About six months since, a
tumor made its appearance on the hard
palate, and continued to increase in size
til! it nearly filled the mouth, causing, at
times’ suffocation. The little sufferer was
put under the influence of either, and,with
out her being sensible of any pain, nearly
the whole of the superiomaxillary bane,
together with the diseased mass, was suc
cessfully removed.
The Gazette Medicale de Toulouse an
nounces that a Swedish doctor, named
Engelstroem, has introduced a new mode
of treating disease, called tapotopathy. It
consists in striking the parts affected gentle
blows at first, these being gradually in
creased in intensity until the patient can
no tonger bear them. To the pain tbns
caused, an agreeable warmth and indescrib
able beatitude succeed, which cause the
patient to desire a continuation of the treat
ment.
A London physician has invented a novel
instrument, called the spygmoscope, for
indicating the movments of the heart.—
The instrument consists of a small chamber
filled with spirits of wine or other liquid,
provided with a thin Inda rubber wall,
where it is applied to the chest. At the
opposite extremity, the chamber communi
cates with a glass tube, which rises above
tlie chamber. The liquid is put in to the
instrument until it stands in the tube a little
above the level of the chamber; the pressure
of the liquid in the little tube acts upon
the clastic or yielding wall of Inda rubber
and causes it to protrude. When the Inda
rubber chest piece receives an impulse on
its exterior, it causes the liquid to be forced
up the tube. The protruding wall of In
dia rubber is driven inward when it is
brought in contact with that portion of the
chest which is stuck by the apex of the
heart, and a rise in the tube takes place.
The tube is supplied with a graduated
scale to denote the rise and fall with ex
actitude; on the top of the glass tube is a.
collar, to prevent the egress of the liquid;
when employed this collar or valve is left
open for the passage of the air.
Congress,
Presidents Message
Mr. Jones, of Tennessee, said that lie did not
suppose it would be expected that he should
stand here in vindication of the message or in sup
port ot the positions which had been taken by the
President; that duty, or rather that privilege, ap
pertained more directly to other senators. He
would, however, say, as an act of justice to the
President, if it wouid be of any interest to him or
to the country to know what his opinions were of
that portion of the message which relates to the
condemnation or strictures upon gentlemen on the
other side of the house, that the language of the
President was perfectly proper and just in itself,
and eminently truthful. It was a matter of taste
how far he should go in his comments upon theii
conduct But there was another question of far
greater importance to him, and to the country,
than any that might be gotten up on quibbles on
the President’s message. That question was in
reference to the power of Congress to carry slave
ry into the Territories, or to exclude it therefrom.
Much had been said upon both sides of that ques
tion; but, after all, it was not a question for Con
gress or any other deliberative body- to decide; it
was a question to be adjudicated by the Supreme
Court of the United States, aud he hoped in a few
days their decision would be given upon it; and
while he should deeply regret it if that decision
should be against the rights and interests of the
South, yet, regarding the constitution as that
higher law which is above all law, he was ready
to bow submissively to the decision, be it what it
might. If all would agree to submit to that de
cision, this controversy was approaching its end:
and every lover of his country would rejoice to
have a final settlement of this agitating subject
made at this time.
He proceeded to make some allusions to tlie
doctrine of squatter sovereignty, which he con
sidered as one of the greatest political humbugs
of the day. The organization of that phrase had
! „■ en attributed to the venerable senator from
Michigan, [Mr. Cass;] but he believed the term
was first used in derision by Mr. Calhoun. Li or
der to show the dangerous nature of the efforts of
the abolitionists, he read several extracts from
speeches made at different times by prominent
members of the republican party, to demonstrate
that they were laboring for the eventual extin
guishment of slavery within the States. He re
marked that he could not vouch for the accuracy
of these extracts: but if any of them did injustice
to any senator, he should be glad to be corrected,
lie then read an extract from a speech of Mr. Se
ward, which appeared in the “Union.”
Mr. Seward inquired whether the speech was
given in full.
Mr. Jones replied. God forbid that the “Union”
should fill its columns with speeches of that char
acter. He remembered that the senator from New
York bad advertised the the Senate the other day
that Iris speeches had been printed by Itedfield in
three volumes, where senators could find his opin
ions laid down in full if they desired to read them;
but he had no particular relish for that kind of lit-
rature, and did not like to purchase it and carry
it home; so he preferred to depend upon newspaper
extracts.
Mr. Seward said he did not intend to have the
senator purchase the books, but he referred to
them as contained in the Congressional Library.
He had supplied one senator with a copy of his
works at his own expense, and he would give the
se nator from Tennessee a copy, or any other sena
tor who chose to run the risk of accepting them
and desired to read them.
Mr. Jones answered that he never allowed any
man to out do him in generosity, and he would
cheerfully accept the offer of the senator from
New Y'ork, with the proviso that he should
not be required to carry them south of Mason and
Dixon’s line. [Great laughter.] He would read
them here in the District of Columbia, but he was
not sure but that he might get iuto the peuiten-
tiary if lie should carry such books home, lie
nevved laughter.]
Mr. Wade. Then, it seems that you "have no
freedom in the South.
Mr. Jones. We have no such freedom as per
mits men to go there and incite insurrection
among our slaves, aud cause them to murder our
wives and children. Mr. J. proceeded at some
length to show how ungrounded was the oft-re
peated charge of southern aggression. When hi
had concluded his remarks,
Mr. Wilson obtained the floor, and
The Senate adjourned.
for one, was willing to abide by the decisions of
the courts in this point. He would rather trust to
squatter sovereignty to decide thus question than
the present Congress. He was for Buchanan and
Brackinridge, and free Kansas—free to work out
its own institutions, free from the rest;aints thrown
in its way, aud free from fanaticism. He was for
the white people of Kansfcs being free, but the
black-republican party were for making the negro
free.
Mr. Davidsou, of Louisiana, discussed at con
siderable length the power of Congress over the
question of slavery in the Territories. He re
viewed the history of the past legislation of the
country to show that Congress has no power o, er
the question of slavery in the Territories. A great
deal had been said about squatter sovereignty, and
the right of the inhabitants of a Territory to form
their own institutions for themselves. If this
power was not vested in the people of a Territory,
He did not understand the institutions of our gov
ernment. He believed that the people ofaTerri-
tory had no political rights, and could not assume
sovereign power, until they, like Pennsylvania
aud Massachusetts, and like every other precedent,
had adopted a constitution, and were admitted as
a State iuto the confederacy.
Mr. Campbell, of Ohio, remarked that, as three
weeks of the short session had already been con
sumed in debate upon the Presidents message,
and as there were several important bills awaiting
the consideration of the lIoq*e» he should move
the previous question. If gentlemen wished
further to debate the Presidents message, they
could do so in Committee of the Whole on the
state of the Union. He hoped the previous ques
tion would be sustained.
Mr. McMuliin of Virginia, appealed to the gen
tleman to withdraw the previous question. He
bad been trying to get tlie floor all through this
debate, but had not succeeded. He would submit
that the gentleman had been one of the first to de
bate this question, and he liad given notice then
that he should take the first opportunity of reply
ing at length to his remarks; and as but one of his
colleagues had spoken on tiffs subject, he thought
it was right and proper that he shoult^fjo allowed
to speak.
Mr. Campbell declined to accede to the request
of the gentleman from Virginia. He desired to
say that when he took the floor to move the re
ference of the message he had been led aside from
the line of legitimate debate by the gentleman and
fits friends; and the door having been opened by
inetrrogatories, he did not. feel himself compelled
to close the debate: but now that each side of the
House had made some four or five speeches, he
would decline to withdraw the previous question.
And then, at twenty minutes past three o’clock,
the previous question pending, the House ad
journed.
The American Horses in England.—
“Bell’s Life in London” of the 9th ult.
says that an effort has been made to bring
about a match for <£5000 between an
English and an American horse, four
mile.-), weight for age; or to make two
matches, to run one in the spring,
the other in the autumn, for <£5000
each match . A correspondent of the Lon
don “Sunday Times,” writing trom New
market, says;
The American horses here, the property
of Mr. Tenbroeck, under the care of his
private trainer, Mr. Palmer, excite consid
erable curiosity and interest, more
especially from the continued rumors
by our contemporaries of the desire to
bring about a match for a large sum of
money with any English horse at weight
for age, over a large scope of ground. The
string, at present, consists of the following
horses, viz:
Locompt-o, ch., h., by Boston, out of
Reel, 6 yrs.
Prior, ch. h., by Glencoe, out of Gipsy,
4 yrs.
Prioress, b. fi, by Sovereign, out of Reel,
3 yrs.
B. f. by Slane, out of Miss Fairfield,
yearling.
At present they have done no severe
work since their arrival in England; their
daily exercise consists of cantering and
walking, none of them having been at
half-speed gallop; aud if the anxiety to
bring about a match is not met rath cor
responding “pluck” on our side, we shall
be very much deceived; as to present ap
pearances, the pretensions of any of
them are not formidable. Prior is a clean,
short-legged horse, and is very likely the
pet of the lot; though rumor points to Le-
conipte as being the real “Yankee flyer.”
Let it he as it may; we shall like to see
the superiority of the thorough bred horses
which the Americans have brought to this
country at so much expense, tested, as we
feel quite sure, whilst such horses as Fan
dango, Melissa, and Fisherman, are in
training, any one of them will prove quite
competitor enough to test their racing
jualities. We shall take care to remind
our readers occasionally of the progress they
make, and the opinion entertained by good
judges respecting them, llnmov says they
will leave Newmarket in the spring, and
go to Houghton Down, near Stockbridge,
which we very much doubt.
The filly by Slane, is the one purchased
by Mr. Tenbroeck since liis arrival in
England.
House of Representatives.
President's Annual Message.
Tlie House resumed the consideration of tlie
President’s annual message; the question being
on the motion that be referred to the Committee
of the Committee of the whole on the state the
Union, and be printed.
Mr. Quitman, of Mississippi, stated that he be
lieved the remarks of the President on the slavery
question were well-timed and in every respect
true. If he had entertained any doubt as to the
aims and objects of the black republican party, the
developments of this discussion would have entirely
satisfied him that lie had not mistaken them, and
that their designs were of the character to attribut
ed to them by the President. He did not mean to
say that members of the black republican party
entertain such purposes at the present day, hut
that there were distinguished men of that party
who had declared it to be their cardinal object to
destroy the institution of slavery, which was inter
twined with tlie social system ofj fifteen States of
the Union. He did not speak of any intention to
interfere with that institution in the States; for he
had never considered that subject worthy of argu
ment. The North—the whole North—dared not
directly assail that institution in the States, and
if they should do so under our present system,
the South would treat the assault with contempt
and ridicule.
But the question was, whether the citizens of
the minority section of tlie United States were en
titled to an equal participation iu all the blessings
of our system of government—in the Territories,
the common property of the States, in the riglit
of expansion, of extending themselves if the time
should ever conie when their over-redundant popu
lation should make that which was now a bless
ing an evil, lie thanked the President for his
bold, lucid, and truthful arguments upon this sub
ject, for he believed that the spirit which had been
rebuked was to be alone met by open defiance,
lie was not a compromiser or conciliator: it was
a war to the knife, and victory or death was their
motto. The North must succeed in this struggle,
or the South must succeed in defending her rights
and privileges. The black-republican party was
properly an anti-slavery party, waging a war of
opinion upon the institutions of the South. A war
ofopinoin alone was a war to the knife and the
South would not stand beneath such a war in a j
common government, where opinions governed
and resulted in practical political issues.
lie then briefly alluded to the speech made yes
terday by Mr. Walker of Alabama, concurring in
the opinion of that gentleman, that the policy
which had generally been adopted by this govern
ment in relation to Central American affairs had
not been such as our great country should have
adopted. He believed, with Mr. Clay, that it was
our policy, aud that wo were called upon by eve-
•y consideration of our high destiny, to foster and
mcourage the infant States of Central America.! (ha:
Cotton—Progress of Sales.
The New Orleans Crescent last Wednesday, in
noticing the rise in the waters of the Mississippi
aud its tributaries, remarks:
From all accounts at hand cotton from north
west Louisiana will be rapidly shipped to mar
ket. Iu fact, we have heard of only few par
ties either iu Mississippi or in this State who have
been bolding back their cotton for higher prices,
or to dictate terms to buyers what they should
pay for it. But the mass of cultivators or plan
ters have been willing to submit to the immuta
ble laws of supply and requirement. There have
been no combinations or coalitions to run up
prices, to counteract the movements and resolu
tions on the other side of the water, particularly in
that supposed to be last anchored isle, Great
Britain. Whilst spinners in Manchester and
dealers in Liverpool have only been participat
ing in our market this season to very restricted
limits, parties for the continent of Europe have
been operating at the current prices, basing their
purchases on the well grounded assumption that
a real deficiency of growth has been satisfactorily
and fully demonstrated. Not so with the buyers
of the English market. They have through the
fall, from the time the first bah: of cotton was
received in market, been assiduously decrying the
estimates ot the' growth; impeaching every account
from the interior regarding the effects of stroms of
wind and rain, and barely giviug the least particle
of credence to assertions emanating from the most
respectable cultivators, confirmed by the most
respectable and influential factors in our city.
Whilst all this doubt has been husbanded,
buyers for the different markets of continental
Europe have been judiciously purchasing for their
constituents unawed by the thunders of the
Bank ofEngland and its adherents, in creating
what is verily believed to be, a fictitious scarcity
of money. Nor have tho repeated demonstrations
of hostility and ill-feeling towards the great cotton
interests been regarded with other than mirthful
regard by the cotton factorage community of New
Orleans. Whilst we were ruminating on this
news, a distinguished individual salutes us with
the remark, “how is cotton?” Well we could only
reply that Cotton is cotton, and it is likely to
remain cotton, under the present indications of
2,350,000 bales.
The foregoing in all very well, and it may be
that the crop is not to go beyond 2,850,000 bales.
Still we think the planters show their wisdom in
selling at the ruling prices. In our opinion (worth
very little we confess) the next three months aro
much more likely to bring a decline than an
advance on present rates. At all events who sells
now does i cell; lie Who holds may or may not do
better.
To Southern Ilerrhants.
found so low as
surface. But if man had been
fouml Lr 1."mT...T en ? ai . n8 , were fa representatives in Congress it has been still
found at such depths, his remains wouid alse have
been found there: for his bones are of the same
The Slave Trade Project.—The good sense of the
Southern people was never vindicated more signal
ly than by the emphatic rebuke which they have
administered to the attempt to make the revival of
the slave trade an object of sectional policy. With
the exception of the New Orleans Delta and the
Charleston papers, no journal of recognized influ
ence in the South has received the proposition with
any sort of favor. It was emphatically repudiated
by the Savannah Convention; and by the South-
structure as theirs, aud consequently no less likely
to resist destruction.
The five suffrage bill has passed both branches
of the North Carolina legislature, hut it has yet to
to ratified by the people in August next.
more rudely repulsed. So universally is it rejected
that its supporters will not he able to effect any di
vision in the public opinion of the South. Better
far for the interests of the South that its people he
united upon a just aud impregnable position, than
distracted among a multiplicity of extravagant
and impracticable schemes.—Richmond Enauircr,
19th inst.
Holloway’s Ointment and Pills.—Bureaux
of Health, hospitals and dispensaries, have never
accomplished half the good that has been achieved
through the agencies for the sale of these rem
edies. 0 Fortunately for the sick, these agencies
pervade all countries. Every dwelling, however,
should he furnished »itli the preparations, lor they
may be suddenly and impcritively required at any
hour. If universally and aj.propriately used in all
cases demanding medical treatment, the average
duration of human life would be increased, aud
the amount of human Buffering greatly lessened.
The effect of the Ointment on eruptions, ulcers,
tumors, and all kinds of external diseases and in
juries, is a little short of supernatural.
Notable Death.—Mrs. Sarah B. Scott, the second
and last surviving daughter of tho great orator
Patrick Henry, departed this life at her residence
We were the great power upon this continent, and
ought to take upon ourselves the regulation of its
affairs, without reference to the wishes and disposi
tion of the great powers fo Europe.
The speaker then replied to the resolution con
demning a revival of the slave trade, submitted
by Mr. Ethridge, of Tennessee, on Monday last,
lie did not think that gentleman would undertake
to say that tlu* object of his resolution was simply
to procure the constitutional opinion of the House
upon the subject of the slave trade. It was pur
posely clothed in phraseology which assumed tho
t in-lit of the House, to declare a certain custom im
moral, unchristian, and inhuman. He denied the
power of Congress to pronounce any act or prac
tice immoral or unchristian, and considered the
precedent most dangerous in its tendency. He
was not in favor of tlie revival of the African slave
trade, not because he looked upon it as shocking,
not that lie believed that the transfer of slaves from
benhriited Africa to this enlightened country did
them°orthc world any harm, but because it was
the interests of tlie people he represented, and
against the almost general sentiment of the South.
In conclusion, Mr. Q. elaborately reviewed the
theory of our government and its application to
the practical questions of the day, contending that
sovereignty alone rests in the several States of the
Union; that the States, in their political capacity ns
such, alone have sovereign power over the Terri
tories, until, under the constitution of the United
States, they code it to the inhabitants of the Terri
tories by admitting them into the Union as equals
in the confederacy.
Mr. Branch, of North Carolina, spoke of the is
sues decided iu the last canvass, and alluded to
the statement made by Mr. Cumbrack, of Indiana;
that there were six millions of acres of unimproved
land in tho State of Georgia declaring that if it
aid not been for slave labor the people of that
State would not have been able to bring into culti
vation one million of acres. He would tell the
gentleman that it was by slave labor alone that
The people of tho South were enabled to furnish
their cotton, tobacco, rice, aud sugar to the coun
try. The institutions of the South were attacked;
and if the North should succeed in striking down
slavery, the South, as she went down, would have
the consolation of knowing that those who had
ruined her institutions had adopted a policy that
would prove fatal to their interests.
He then referred to the charge ot northern men
that the South was behind the North railroad im
provements, and instituted a comparison between
the Atlantic States of the Union—the slavehold-
iug and the rion-slavrholdiug States, trom Main to
Georgia, leaving out the northwestern States, be
cause they had received the aid of the general
government—for the purpose of showing ttiat the
South was not behind-hand in this kind of im
provement.
He denied most emphatically that thoro is any
difference of opinion among democrats as to their
construction of the Kansas Nebraska bill. The
democratic party all agreed that the people of a
Territory are left free to regulate their institutions
in their own way, subject only to the constituti on,
but he did not believe that a Territory could legis-
CAUTIOH TO THE PUBLIC.
The whole couutry isfldhded with Counterfeit anil Imita
tion Schnapps; Tin* public should he careful to purchase
only the genuine article, manufactured and imported by
Udolpho Wolfe, which his the name of the manufacturer
on the Bottle, Cork und Label.
For sale by alUhe respectable Grocers and Dru^gests,
Read tlifi opinion of the New York Press.
UDOLPHO WOLFE,2-2 Beaver St., New York.
lFrom the New York Mercury.]
Fraudulent Imitation of Superior Commodities.
Among the many dishonisties of the trade which the moral
sense of the community is called upon to surpress, we
would particularly notice a .most pernicious and inlamous
practice adopted by unscnipulious dealers of imitating and
counterfeiting the exterior appearance and precautionary
labels of populpar drugs,medicameiita, and other articles ol
tl consumption, and thus by seizing upon the well
acquired reputation of nu enterprising trader, palming off
most destructive and worthless compounds, to the sore
i etriment not only of the consumer, but to the character of
the mao who had expended thousands of dollars in bring
ing the genuine article into esteem and demand. These
petty larceny theives are the pest of nil honorable dealers
and traders,and the trade is as much highway robbery as
tlie violent appropriation of their neighbor’s purse in fact,
they are beneath the burglar and highwayman in dignity-
fur these latter felons exhibit a bravery or recklcsness of
character in anywise distinguishing the mercanl iie assassin
who stabs in the dark. Anil ought thev not be rewarded
with punishment commensurate with ihecowaniic-e of their
crime? We were led to these remarks by accidently observ
ing a spurious counterfeit of Udolpho Wolfe’s Schiedam
>olinapps. The labels were imitated perfectly; with the
slight addition ofa few letters to plead technical avoidance
ol the law against counterfeiting; the bottles were very
imiliar, and every thing carefully prepared to impose upon
careless purchaser. Now is not the man who perpetrated
this fraud, a felon, a robber? As?uredly he is; for, as Mr.
Wolfe lins expended large sums to bring his genuine ini
ported schnapps into popular demand, that demand maybe
* It red a part of bts capital in trade, and a fellow
ait of his reputation is as ninch of a thief as if he
had stolen a barrel of Ids schnapps In bulk And to this
crime ho adds a further one of defrauding the community
by giving them a rimious article for the money they Intend
f d to expend for a commodity in which they had confidence:
And, further, every man in the fraud, by dealing sputjous
articles is as much ol an offender as the principle who
planned the imposition. The remedy of Mr. Wolfe should
lie in his holding all concerned up to the contempt of the
community thus swindled by their operations, and uncon*
sionsly imposed upon by their noxious composition. We
trust that Mr Wolfe will obtain names, not only of the con-
rocrors of these counterfeits, but of every man offering
them for sale, and then publish them to the world; lor his
epuiation and the health of the community demand
all parties should be nailed to the pillory of popular
Chronic Diarrhea.
xecration.
(From the New York Dispatch.]
An Infamous Business.
When an enterprising man strikes out anew business, to
the establishment of which he gives his industry, time,
talents and pecuniary means, can anything be more con
temptible than to have another steal in, and, under specious
pretexts, hold out to the public an inferior nrticic: and
endeavor to obtain their patronage? Pray, what difference
is there so far as the honesty of tlie thing is concrned, be
tween purloining the business by which a citizen hopes to
make his bread and stealing the bread itself? A com
mon thief, if he takes without leave, however hungry, a
loaf ol bread from a Inker’s shop* is apprehended and con
detuned lo tK- penitentiary for daring in a surreptious
manner to appease his appetite; but put a respectable
looking coat mi Ins back and a few dollars in liis pocket,
and lie may, with Impunity, nay; even w ith the applause of
his fellows, by knavery, forgery or other infamous means;
take the lousiness of an honest man from him, and go un
scathed of justice. All this is wrong. Some years since a
gentleman of this city (Udolpho Wolfe) Introduced to the
citizens cf the United States a medicated article of gin.
which was hlgliiy approved by professional gentlemen as a
superior* tonic ami deobstruent, :»nd the knowledge of
which he, by advertisement and otherwise, disseminated
throughout*ho country- So soon as tricksters, who pass
id tho busines in the community as honest men. saw that
Mr. Wolfe was likely to have handsome rctunrs foj the time
and money which he hail expended, they set about forging
bis labels and palming off upon the people detestable and
poisonous compounds which they have the hardihood to
call "Schiedam scl»JMf>ps." In some instances they have
gone so far as Wolfe’s name to their villainous
liquids. AsthehorcOTki - ld!hi th6ir risealitiek,
it is time the public in town and country were put upon
their guard. Co’i umers should be shuiethat they purchase
the genuine article,• r else their health may be irreparably
injured by using the horrible stuff that unscrupulous men,
because they c? n buy it cheap, will offer as the genuine
article Pure Srh da in Schnadps can only be obtained at
the stores of respectable merchants and druggists, in town
anil country and at the establishment of Udolpho Wolfe,
Nos. 18.20 and 22 Beaver .Street in this city, where it is
gotten up exclusively. We think it a duty which Mr. Wolfe
owes to himself the community to publish, by name, the
rascals who aretim.* attempting to defraud both bint and
those who would be his customers. He should not permit
hi* modesty to hold hint back from making so rigethous an
expose,
Agents in Savannah.—John B. Moore St Co.
A. A. Solomon St Co., A. Buna ltd, M. I. Riley, IP.
W. Goodrich, McMahon $c Doyle, Webster Sf Palmes,
J. N. Connerat, Claghorn Sf Cunningham, Holcomb
Johnson Sf Co. 24. 3 m.
T HERE is certainly no disease requiring so
much nicety in treatment as Chronic Diarrhea:
uo disease that is so easily and quickly re-produced
from tlie slightest of cause, and uo disease that has
so ofteu baffled the skill of the wisest and most ex
perienced meu of the profession. Thousands there
are at this moment that are suffering from it, and
have been for months, and perhaps years; even the
returned volunteer from the wars of Mexico, or ad
venturers from the plains of California, although
the'disease was contracted long months ago, yet
are still suffering from it. although a long way re
moved from the pestilential atmosphere and other
causes that produced it. Thousands there are all
throughout the South, South-west and West, and
in fact throughout the whole United States, that
are suffering from it, discouraged and disheartened,
aud many lost to all hope of evergi-tting rid of it;
and why is this ? why all this suffering and dis
couragement? why so little success in its treat
ment ? and why so easily re-produced, from the
slightest cause, after it has once been checked ?
From either a total disregard, or an entire ignor
ance of its exciting cause and continuance. What
is that cause ? The food that is taken into the
stomach. Why ? Because tlie digestive organs
are not in a fit condition to receive aud digest it;
and why ! Because of the congested and inflamed
condition of the mucus membrane.
The great majority those long continued chronic
cases of Diarrhea are produced either by the food
in a party or wholly undigested state passing from
tlie stomach into the Iower bowels, and there pro
ducing, by its presence, an irritation of the mucus
membrane of the bowels, and their consequent
muscular contraction, or it is produced by the food
after it has been manufactured into chile; this lat
ter, instead of being taken up by the lacteal ves
sels is passed on into tho lower bowels, and, like
the undigested food, produces an irritating diar
rhea. In the first instance, tho stomach, from its
inflamed and congested condition, is unable to
digest the food that is taken iuto it; and the food
not being digested or prepared so that it can enter
the circulation, must, of necessity, be passed on
through the bowels, and its presence there, acting
as any other foreign substance would, produces an
irritation of the mucus membrane with which it
comes in contact, and the consequences are pre
mature and debilitating- discharges from the bowels
by contractile effort being excite.d into action.
In the second instance, when the food has been
digested and converted into chile, the diarrhea is
produced by tho chile; it not being taken up by
the lacteal vessels is passed on into the lower bow
els, and by it presence there produces the same
disturbance as that caused by the undigested food.
Why is the chile not taken up by the lacteal ves
sels ? It will be remembered that in previous ad
vertisements, that I described how the upper bow
el called the duodenum, had its side pierced with
innumerable small artifices, resembling, in some
degree, tho sides of a nutmeg grater—that these
orifices were mere mouths of small vessels called
lacteal, and that the oflice of these vessels was to
take up the food after it had been, by the stomach,
passed into the upper bowel, converted into chile.
It will be remembered that I said that tlie lining
membrane of the stomach and bowels also dipped
into these little orifices or mouths of the lacteal
vessels, and lined them also. And it will also be
remembered that I said these little orifices were
very small. If all these points are remembered, it
will now be very easy to understand why the food,
after being converted into chiie, is not taken up
and carried into the blood to nourish the body,^ts
it should he. I have said that the mucus mem
brane of the digestive organs was in an inflamed
and congestive condition, and every ono knows
that wherever there is inflamation there is more or
less swelling of the part inflamed, and it is very
easy to see that there could not be much swelling
of that lining membrane without closing up those
little orifices which open upon it. So the reason
is now obvious why the chile is not taken up and
passed into the circulation ; it is because the ves
sels whoso office it is to take up the chile, are closed
from the swelling of the mucus membrane of the
digestive organs, into which they open, and the
swelling is produced by congestion and inflama
tion of that membrane. What lias produced this
inflamed state of that mucus membrane ! Causes
almost without number will produce it—pestilen
tial atmosphere, bad water, unwholesome diet,
stimulating food, spirituous liquors, stimulating
condiments, pepper, mustard, cloves, spices, &c ,
&c., will produce this condition of that mucus
membrane.
Now will any one say that in the treatment of
Chronic Diarrhea, our remedial remedies must
be directed to the bowels? No. Where then?
To the true seat of the disease, of course, viz: the
digestive organs. In these organs is tho cause of
the whole trouble, and to this point must our rem
edial agents bo directed, or our patients may take
medicine till Gabriel blows his horn, and then be
no nearer being cured than they wero when they
commenced treatment.
What then are the indications of treatment.’ The
removal of the congested and inflamed condition
of the digestive organs. This being done, the food
will be digested and formed into chile—the chile
will be taken and carried into the circulation, and
thus the cause of the irritative diarrhea being no
longer present, the premature discharges from the
bowels will cease.
What remedy will best fulfill their indications?
Shall we use any of the preparations now before
the people, purporting to be “sovereign remedies?”
No; for the most of them are prepared with alcohol,
or other equally stimulating liquids, and the tak
ing of them would be adding fuel to the flame—
they would produce precisely that same condition
that we are striving to get rid of.
Shall we use calomel, which remedy, now-a-days
stands in highest estimation by the learned of the
profession? No: for nothing certainly can be more
pernicious, not only from its breaking down the
plasticity of the blood, destroying the blood globu-
ies, the strength and very Mfe of man, thereby pre
venting the inherent powers of the body to readily
repair tho mischief inflicted, but by producing by
contact a direct irritation on an already over-cx-
citc-d and highly irritated membrane—the mucus
membrane of the stomach and bowels. What rem
edy shall we use then? So far as my own experi
ence extends, I unhesitatingly say, that the prepar
ation bearing the name of “BLISS’ DYSPEPTIC
REMEDY,”—a remedy that I hare used for years
in iny private practice, not only in this particular
disease, but all others arising from disease of the
digestive organs, and if taken closely, according to
its accompanying directions, I am positive that it
will not fail in effecting a cure, for I have used it
repeatedly in those very worst cases of Chronic
Diarrhea contracted in Mexico and California, and
I do not remember of a single instance in which it
failed to effect a cure. Its action will be found dif
ferent in different cases—in some cases it will not
only relieve at once, but effect a permanent cure
almost immediately—in others it will seem to give
the same relief in a very short time, but requiring
a longer continuance to effect a permanent cure—
in others, perhaps, no appreciable abatement of
symptoms will be discovered for several days, but
by persevering in the treatment, it sooner or later
has the desired effect.
It will be understood that I am speaking of
elironic diarrhea—diarrhea oflong standing, and
which has its origin in diseased digestive organs,
and not of the acute form of the disease, for iu this
form I should most certainly meommeud “JA
COBS’ CORDIAL,” as being tMWest preparation
now before the people, and one too, that can be re
lied upon with tlie most unbounded confidence.—
The two diseases are entirely dissimilar and pro
ceed from entirely different causes—the acute form
is a disease purely of the bowels—the chronic form
is a disease *>f the digestive organs, and to which
ourremidial agents must be directed.
W. W. BLISS, 263 Broadway, N. Y.
Bliss’ Dyspeptic Remedy, is put up in
Packages in the form of Powders, with full direc
tions for mixing it in liquid form before taking;—
Each package contains a sufficient quatitv for a
pint of mixture. Retail Price $2 per package,
scut by mail, (pre-paid,) to any part of the Union
on the reception of $2; Fif For sale by Wm. L
White &■ Co.; and James Herty, Miliedgeville, Ga.
Special 9diets.
T HE IIILLEIHICYILLE MALE IYI> I’EJULE
ACADEMY will commence the first Tuesday
in January next, tinder the charge of Mr. and Mrs.
Eldridge.
Dec. 18, 1856. 30 3t.
Notice.
ISS ADAMS
next Dec. 29th.
Vocal Music taught without charge.
M
will open her school Monday
It. Terms as usual.
School next door to the Masonic Hal!.
T HE Exercises of MRS. C. C. MITCHELLS
SCHOOL will be resumed on the Second
Monday of January.
Tuition per session of twenty one weeks, $15,
$20 and $25. Music, $25.
Fancy work of every description taught if u •-
sited, at the usual rates.
R. K. E.—Almost Dead.—Some of the most
heart rending scenes daily take place in our great
cities. Amidst the most severe suffering and sf.
dictions of poverty and disease, there sometime.-,
appears a helping hand. On or.e of the coldest
nights of the bitter cold winter of 1855, a poor fel
low, who was nearly frozen to death, was picked
up out of Broadway, and taken to the Sixth Ward
Station-house. Poverty, not •‘Rum," had driven
him to tho streets for shelter; becoming wearied
with hunger, and dispirited with his miseries. !:e,
unconsciously, fell to sleep, and had not his deso
late aud dangerous situation been noticed by some
kind “passenger on tho street,” “a coroner’s ver
dict’ would have been, “Frozen to Death.” For
tunate, however, for the poor fellow, there was
some life in him. Kadway’s Ready Relief w as
applied, some pourod down his throat, and his
body rubbi-d vigorously with it. It soon brought
back the warm blood to his veins, and set it circu
lating healthfully. It refreshed and invigorated
him, and the poor frozen lump of disheartened
mortality, was once more a live and healthy man.
For Chilblains, Frost Bites, Frozen Limbs, Kad-
way's Ready Relief is a sovereign remedy.
Dresden, Weakly co„ Term., Dec. 31,1855.
I, Jeptlia Gardiuier, of tho above place, do pub
lisb, that for many years I have been afflicted with
Rheumatism, and on tho evening of December
2 .th, 1«55, while walking in my yard, I fell with
great violence on the ice, bruising the knee pan
very badly. 1 further certify that on the above
day, Dr. John J. Benedict, a travelling agent of
Radway & Co., arrived at this place, and hearing of
my heavy fall and the terrible complaint that af
flicted ine, recommended me to apply Radway's
Ready Relief, which I did, and in a very short
time the pain ceased, tho swelling abated, and I
am now able to walk without the uso of my cane,
free from pain. I have tried several other reme
dies, but found no relief. In case of extreme pain,
Railway’s Ready Relief is far preferable to all oth
er remedies; if any one doubts the truth of this
certificate, let them cal! on me at my residence, or
write to me at Dresden, Tenn., and I will give
them full information.
JEPTHA GARD1NIER.
For years Mr. Gardinier suffered the torturing
pains of Rheumatism; he was unable to walk
without the help of a stick. On the 29th of De
cember, he first tried the R. R- Relief—on the 31st
he could walk without any aid and free from paiu.
Let all who are crippled or bed-ridden, think of
this.
Sold by druggists and merchants everywhere.
E. J. White, Ag't, Miliedgeville, Ga. 30 2t
Davis’ Pain Killer.
My Dear Sir.—I desire to state a few instances
of good resulting from the use of the Pain Killer.
The first case that 1 shall mention in which I per
formed a cure was that of a servant boy, who had
his right hand severely scalded by the falling of
toiling oil on it, was in a few days perfectly cured
by the application of a mixture of Cream and Pain
Killer, as directed in such cases. Then my girl
was cured of an obstinate Cough. Lastly, I shall
refer to myself—I took the medicine—not from any
confidence I had iu it; on tho contrary, I took it
with a great deal of fear—however, I must own
that it several times relieved me of cold in tho
chest—and it cured me of a fever—of pain in the
knee—and an ulcer in the mouth. In addition to
the above, a case of cholera was brought to my
notice; a coachman was attacked with this dis
ease, and medicines kept for this complaint were
given to the man without any effect, and, as the
last resort, when he was cold aud speechless, the
Pain Killer was administered, which threw a
warmth into the system and revived h ; s sinking
energy—in short, the man was restored.
R. W. CHILL, Calcutta, India.
Sold by W. L. White & Co., E. J. White, and
Jas. Herty, Miliedgeville. 30 2t
Dalley’s Magical Pain Extractor.—There
never has been a discovery made in Materia Medi-
ca, whereby pain can bo so quickly allayed, and
where parts in a high state of inflamation can be
so rapidly reduced to their natural state, nor where
wounds and sores can be so thoroughly and rapid
ly healed, and decayed parts restored without eith
er scar or defect, than with Dailey’s Magical Pain
Extractor.
In cuts, wounds, sprains and bruises—casuali-
ties to which children are constantly subject—the
action of the genuine Dailey’s Pain Extractor, is
ever the same! How much pain and suffering
may not thus be prevented ! Moreover, life itself is
often dependent upon having at hand the genuine
Dallpy Extractor, and for particulars of which I
respectfully refer to my printed pamphlets, for the
truth of which I hold myseif responsible.
No case of burns and scald, no matter how se
vere, has ever yet, in any one instance, resisted
the all powerful, paimsubduing and healing qua!i-
ihe Dailey’s Pain Extractor.
ties of
No Pain Extractor is genuine unless the box has
upon it a Steel Plate Engraved Label with the sig
natures of C. V. Clickcner A Co., Proprietors, and
Henry Dailey, Manufacturer. Price 25 cents per
box.
I *r All orders should be addressed to C. V.
Clickeuer & Co., 76 Barclay and 222 Greenwich
streets, New York.
Sold by all Druggists and Medicine dealers
throughout the United States. 29 3ra
NOTICE TO THE AFFLICTED!!
A Perfumed Breath.—What lady or gentle
man would remain under the curse of a disagreea
ble breath when by using the “Balm of a Thous
and Flowers” as a deriLritlce would not only render
the breath sweet but leave the teeth as white as
alabaster ? Many persons do not know their
breath is bad, and the subject is so delicate their
friends will never mention it. Poor a single drop,
of “Balm” on your tooth-brush and wash the teeth
night and moruing. A fifty cent bottle will last a
year.
A beautiful completion may easily be acquired
by using the “Balm of a Thousand Flowers.” It
will reuiovo tan, pimples and fn-ckles from the
skin, leaving it of a soft roseate hue. YYet a tow
el, pour on two or three drops, and wash tlie face
night and morning.
Sluicing mode easy.—Wet your shaving brush in
eiilier warm or cold water, pour on two or three
drops of “Balm of a Thousand Flowers,” rub the
heard well, and it will make a beautiful soft lather,
much facilitating the operation of shaving. Price
only fifty cents. Sold by all Druggists. Bf-ware
of counterfeits. None genuine unless signed by
W. P. FETRIDGE &, CO.,
18 Gm Franklin Square, N. Y.
What, or which is the rest, Vermifuge
or Worm Destroyer ?—It is a question daily
and hourly asked by parents, anxious for tbs
health of their children. All who are at all ac
quainted with the article, will immediately an
swer, Dr. M’Lane’s celebrated Vermifuge, pre
pared by Fleming Bros., Pittsburgh, I’a. It has
never been known to fail, and is one of tho saf st
remedies that can be used. A friend of ours late
ly handed us the following statement in reference
to this Vermifuge:
New Y’ork, Sept. 25,1852.
Gentlemen—A young lady of my acquaintance
had been for a long time very much troubled with
worms. I advised her to try Dr. M’Lane’s celebra
ted Vermifuge, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pitts
burgh, Pa. She accordingly purchased and took
one vial, which caused her to discharge an unusu
al large quantity of worms. She was immediate
ly relieved of all the dreadful symptoms accompa
nying this disease, and rapidly recovered her usu
al health. Tho young lady does not wish her
name mentioned; her residence, however, is 320
Fifth st., and she refers to Mrs. llardie, No. 3M.-in-
hatten place.
For sale by E. J. White, James Herty aud Wm.
L. White Go., MilU-dgeville
to,-' Purchasers will be careful to ask for Dr.
M'Lane's celebrated I'ermifuge, manufactured by
Planing Bros, of Pittsburg, Pa. All other Vermi
fuges in comparison are worthless. Dr. M’Lane’s
genuine Vermifuge, also his celebrated Liver Pito.
can now be -j^d at alt respectable Drug-Stores.
None genuine without the sianature of
[38] flf.misg b nos.
rniiE increased demand for BLISS’ Celebrated
JL DYSPEPTIC REMEDY, has induced me to
make arrangements, so that I can now fill all or
ders at the ll'holcsale Prices, to-wit: Single Pack
age $2, Six packages $10, Twelve packages $18.
In all cases I pre-pay postage. Orders solicited.
] have also in store, a fresh supply of Dr. dices-
man's taluahe Pills. JAS. HERTY.
Miliedgeville, Dec. 23,1856.
DYSPEPTICS TAKE NOTICE!!
\\FE have Just Received a large supply of Dr.
}} BLISS’ DYSPEPTIC REMEDY, which
Wood's Hair Restorative.—Prof. Wood, tho
renowned discoverer of the invaluable Hair Re
storative, still continues to labor in behalf of the
afflicted. His medicines are universally admitted
by the American press to be far superior to all oth
ers for causing the hair on the head of the aged,
that has been silvered for many years, to grow
forth with as much vigor and luxuriance as when
blessed with the advantages of youth. There can
be no doubt that it is one of the greatest discove
ries in the medical world. It restores permanently
gray hair to its original color, and makes it assume
a beautiful silky texture, which has been very de
sirable in all ages of the world.—Cincinnati Daily
Sun, April 27, 1854. 28 4t
wo will sell at the Wholesale Prices, when six or
twelve Packages are taken. There is no better
medicine, for tho diseases specified, than Bliss’
Dyspeptic Remedy. Price for single Package $2
Six packages $10, Twelve packages $18. Orders
solicited, and promptly attended to, by
YYM. L. WHITE & CO.
Miliedgeville, Ga., Dec. 12, 1856.
Batchelor’s Hair Dye, warranted to dye
brown or black, so as to defy detection, without
the least injury to hair or skin. It is the admira
tion of the critical, the envy of imitators—never
fades. It is the perfection of the art, as it is the
original. Made and sold, or applied at the Wig
Factory 233 Broadway, New Y’ork. A steel plate
label with Wm. A. Batchelor is on each box of
genuine. All others are conterfeit. 30 4t
Sold by all the Druggists iu Miliedgeville.
( it” Great Cure or Rheumatism.—The Ed
itors of the Richmond Re publican, of Dec. 24th,
1852, says that Carter s Spanish Mixture is no
quack medicine.
They had a man in their press room who was
afflicted with voilent Murcurial Kin umatism, who
was continually complaining of misery iu the
back, limbs and joints ; bis eyes had become fe
verish and wattery, neck swolen, throat sore, an-l
all the symptoms of Rheumatism, combined with
Scrofula. Two bottles of Carter’s Spanish Mix
ture cured him, and, in an editorial notice as
above, they bear.testimouy to its wonderful effects,
and say their only regret is that all suffering win*
disease of the blood are not aware of the exist
ence of such a medicine. They cheerfully recom
mend it. ^ ,
See their certificate and notice in full around tr.e
bottle 2A ^
Clove Anodyne Tootii-Aciif. Drops.—The
excruciating torment of tooth-ache can be speedilv
relieved by this delightful remedy, without fear of
injuring the gums or teeth. Eminent Dentists say
they use it daily in their practice, and that it has
enabled them to preserve many valuable teeth that
must otherwise have been drawn. Try it yourse.t
and recommend it to others.
Prepared and sold by A. B. & D. Sands, lull
Fulton St. New Y’ork.
Price 25 cents per vial.
Sold also by E. J. White, Agent, Miliedgeville.
Sold also by druggists generally. 31 It