Newspaper Page Text
The Greorgia Weekly Telegraph.
THE TELEGRAPH.
MACON FRIDAY, AUGUST 20, 1869.
Ike Macon Postmaster.
As some doubts have been expressed about;
the reappointment of Mr. J. H. Washington as
Postmaster of Macon, we telegraphed yesterday
to a gentleman holding a position in the Gener
al Poetoffioe Department at Washington, the
question “who is Postmaster al,Macon?” and
received for answer—“J. H. Washington.”
-y- Affairs tn Ohio.
Aocording to the telegrams yesterday, the
DemocraticExecutive Committee of Ohio, called
together after receiving news of Gen. Rosen-
cranz's declination, took the responsibility of
putting.another candidate in the field without
calling another Convention. This they were
enabled to do by the consent of Hon. George H."
Pendleton to accept the nomination, which he
persistently refused to do, while the original
Convention was in session. If he could then
have been prevailed upon to give his consent to
become a candidate he would probably have re
ceived a nearly unanimous nomination. With
this great and good man as standard bearer of
the Ohio Democracy every effort of that gallant
party will be enlisted to insure success—every
nerve will be strained—every stone turned. On
the other hand the Radicals will he stirred up
to their highest achievements, and we may look
for a contest in Ohio not exceeded in spirit and
determination by that of last Fall.
Enffcnla, Albany and Brunswick Rail
Road Enjoined.
Judge Schley, of the Eastern Circuit, grant
ed an injunction against this road on Saturday
last, at suit of a combination of railroads said
to embrace the Southwestern, Central, Georgia,
Macon and Brunswick and Albany and Gulf
itoads. The points upon which the application
was made were, among others, that the road
was without a charter—had obtained; State aid
by fraudulent representation—that its proposed
route interfered with the chartered privileges
of the Southwestern Railroad.
Democrats In Massachusetts.
A New York Sun Boston correspondent has
had an interview with John Quincy Adam3. The
latter will accept the Democratic nomination
for Governor of Massachusetts if nominated,
though he does not desire it. He approves
Secrectary Fish's foreign policy, does not favor
Territorial expansion, thinks the Democrats will
soon control the Southern States, that the fif
teenth amendment is invalid, that the signs of
dissolution are apparent in the Republican
ranks, that Democrats should accept negro suff
rage and other inevitable results of the war and
nominate John T. Hoffman for President
The Slue Qua Non of Reconstruction. Letter from Indiana.
For the past few months much of our tele- The Eclipse—The Weekly Telegraph—2he Wheat
graphic matter has had reference to interviews
between the President and deputations from the i
“unreconstructed States," on the details of re- i
organization. These details have had reference ;
not alone to points pi law,' or general political j
policy, but they have embraced the President's' ... . „ - , . . T
approval of the candidates to be rnn-soliciting ” eceSS4 5 y f ° r comfo rt here, I
his endorsement of one or the other-of the ; ^ Urn fading eclipse gives me enough light to
platforms upon which they have been placed, these lm eB . Although the echpse has not
and even of the men and the inflnences around been total here ’ fl mere p6nCl1 ° f hgU ™ t0
and Corn Crops—A Large Farm—Price of
Land Ac., Ac. '
Stockwell, Indiana,
Fiftt fan North of Indianapolis
August 7, 1869.
Editors Tdegraph: Seated by a cosy fire,
them.
seen on the Son’s North limb. The chickens
In these interviews it is wortbv of note that went to roost, and everything assumed the ap-
the President, however much he may pride P^nce of approaching Right. The hue of to-
i ... „ ’ . , . . 'tality passed near Louisville, and there were nu-
htmself upon his reticence in general, does not • , . . ’ ..
., . , „ merous visitors at that point to witness it.
fail freely to canvass the bearing of all these , _ , ,... v . ,
- . The people of this region are all anxious to
know more about the South. They deprecate
The American Dental Association
Has just closed its session at Saratoga, and has
decided to hold its next annual meeting at Nash
ville, Tenn. The following delegates to this
body at Saratoga, were elected at the recent
Dental Convention in Atlanta, to represent the
South:
Dr. W. H. Morgan, of Nashville, Tennessee;
Dr. J. R. Walker, of New Orleans, Louisiana;
Dr. T. J. Crowe, of Macon, Georgia; Prof. F.
J. S. Gorgas, of Baltimore.
State Fair.—The committee of arrangements
have reported that it will require an expendi
ture of thirty thousand dollars to put the Labo
ratory buildings and grounds at Macon in suite-'
ble order for the State Fair in November, and
the citizens of Macon are going about the work
in earnest
This large outlay renders more conspicuous
the folly of making the State Fair a migratory
institution. The Executive Committee arrange
ment to held it alternately in Macon and Atlan
ta, was a great and unnecessary blander. It
was called for by no pnblio necessity, and in
volves a heavy outlay of money that conld be
otherwise profitably employed. The State Fair,
to be what it Bhonld be, must have expensive
and permanent buildings that should, with the
grounds, be kept in good order the year round,
and we defy anybody to give a sensible reason
why this labor and outlay should be doubled.—
Atlanta, too, is five hundred miles distant by
railroad from some of the best agricultural por
tions of the State, while all the arguments com
bine to influence the committee to fix the Fair
permanently and immovably at Macon.—Sav
annah Republican.
The Tennessee Election.
The Nashville Banner, of Friday, contains re
turns from ell but twenty-three counties, which
foot up Senter 65,453 in majorities, and Stokes
4,616 in aggregate majorities. Senter’s majori
ty so far 60,937.
Wm. Henby Woods, Cotton Factor and Gen
eral Commission Merchant, Bay Street, Savan
nah.—We invite attention to this card in an
other column. Mr. Woods is a son of the Jun
ior partner of the firm of Young & Woods, Eu-
fanla, and enjoys the benefit of very strong
financial connections at important commercial
points in Georgia and Alabama, as well as
abroad, and a wide acquaintance in Southwest
ern Georgia and Alabama. He has been pur
suing his business as a cotton factor in Savan
nah, for four years, with great success, which
will not fail to increase with years and the pro
gress of the cotton trade. We feel no hesitation
in commending him to the confidence of the
reader. .»•••.
Halt Fare on the Central Road.—The Cen
tral Road, see advertisement of the General
Superintendent, announces transportation to
and from all points on their road at half fare
till 1st October next We believe the road
would make money by declaring half the pres
ent fare forever.
Prices or Wheat.—Messrs. Jones &. Harper,
• of Rome, publish in the Courier of yesterday
the latest quotations from all the leading wheat
markets for prime red. The lowest market
is Nashville—$110@112£. The highest is New
York—$1 60@1 75.
movements, not so much upon the progress of
reconstruction, as upon these probable results
upon the party which he represents, and he
doles out his censure or his approbation just as
he thinks the Radical party is to take profit or
los3 by the combinations to effect reconstruc
tion in those States.
-This was eminently the case in the authorized
statement by telegram yesterday in relation to
the interview of the Mississippi Dent delegation
with the President. There he treated the whole
affair in a strictly party aspect, and doubted the
the condition of the Maoon Postoffice and say if
a negro should be put in office here he would
find a welcome which would make him ever re
gret the day of his appointment.
They read with eagerness your valuable week
ly journal, and I have heard expressions of the
warmest admiration for the same, which com
pliments I am happy to transfer to its proper
recipient.
The wheat crop throughout Indiana, Illinois
and Iowa is far ahead of anything of the kind
sincerity of the Dent men, because they failed ever before known. Indeed it is unparalleled,
to come up and distinctly identify themselves I speak knowingly. But the com! "What shall
with the radical organization. We understand •*-, sa y *kat? It is a sad story for tiie Georgia
... , , ,, . , .. , . , , planters who depend upon these States for a
that whole authorized narration as designed to £ uppIy . Kains. continnal rains have rained it
notify the world of the establishment of a per- Between here and Chicago, to nse the expres-
fect entente cor diale between the President and sion of an old farmer, “you couldn’t gather
the ultra radicals, as represented by Creswell, enough com to feed fifty head of hogs. From
_ . , _ . _ ,. , . this point southward, a distance of one hundred
Bontwell and Hoar in the Cabinet. The sine and sixty miles, to the Ohio river,the crop is bet-
gua non of sound reconstruction is that the ter, bnt will not yield more than one-half of
States shall identify themselves unmistakably what was expected. And just here I must men-
with the Radical party. d . oa ® fact will rather surprise your Geor-
. , cia planters. About forty miles from this place,
Thus the country is going on the broad track champaign county, Illinois, is a farm of 26,1
of an absolute despotism. It was not enough 500 acres. I would give you a diagram of it, did
that the States should be required to endorse it not occupy more space than yon conld spare
the fifteenth amendment as a condition of re-ad- in J our columns. Six thousand four hundred
, .. ... , acres are now in cultivation. The owner of this
mission, and thus substitute the dictum of a fariQ) Mr. j. T . Alexander, purchased it for the
party autocracy for the will of the people! in sum of §300,000 in August, 1866, with a view
amending the Constitution; bnt it is now open- to making it a first-class stock farm. He now
ly and distinctly made known that the price of has upon it four thousand head of grazing cat-
, . . f . _ . ..... . tie, one hundred and twenty yoke of work oxen,
re-admission to the Union is that the people one blmdred head of horses and about five hun-
sball vote the Radical ticket. Nothing less than dred hogs.
this will be accepted as assurance of loyalty. The cost of the grazing-cattle now on this es-
tate has been about three and a half cents a
Radicalism and Female Labor. pound, estimating them at one thousand pounds
We are reminded by a correspondent of the ea _ch, which is a low average. The labor of
mind and person in women which are absolutely
essential to the physical, mental and moral well
being of the race. - j
The State Fair.
Editor* Telegraph.- Considering that great
Bnt, while such sights may be witnessed in , opposition has been met in the attempt to hold
the West, we have had in the South the stranger the Fair so far from the city as the new Labora-
spectacle of the entire abandonment of field la- j tory, the report of the sub-committee as to the
bor by the negro women. Here is a race of wo- facts and reasons for its final location there has
men, raised and inured to field labor—whom no i been looked for with some degree of interest,
exposure to the sun can blacken, and no field because everybody thinks that unanimity is es-
labor can deform—who do not read—who have • sential to success, and it was hoped that such
very few household cares, and those of the most. facts and arguments would be presented to our
rudimental sort, to occupy their time—who i judgments as would secure it, but what do we
have, in fact, little, to do, except doze away ex- ! find?
istence—and yet all, by one consent, abandon-j First. Spectres! “thirty thousand dollars (one
ing plantation labor—when the world is dam- 1 says fifty,) would hardly be sufficient elsewhere
oring for cotton, at thirty cents a pound, and | f° r the necessary improvements. ’ Less than a
each one of them could earn a comfortable sub- i botter accommodations than our Fairs ever had
sistence, and lay by a hundred dollars a year, by j j n otlr palmy days and as much as is now pro
field labor, if so disposed. j posed, baring the press brick front and the high
Look at this picture—then on that This is ! tower which some old fogies persist in thinking
the grand achievement of Radicalism in Amer- | cessar y to 8Uecess of 811
A white female farm labor peasantry, and i Second. What practical man does not know
a female negro lazaroni, to snore and doze away j that if the city ever puts buildings there, and
existence. It has sent the white women from | gets back half the cost of the material, she will
their domestic purauits into the field, and the j SictoalUshto the city may
negro women out of it, to live in vice and idle- | be set down at a muc h larger figure than that
ness. j mentioned as the third or fifth of the sum it is
*** deemed so much better for the city to sink (yes,
Georgia Teachers’ Association. that is the word, the city understands italreadv!)
Unpopular Engagement.—The New Era says
the measles, in a very malignant state, are play
ing an engagement in that city. That is an un
popular troop, and we suggest to the managers
to terminate that engagement before the meet
ing of the Press Convention.
Eclipse and Frost.—The eclipse at Green
brier -White Sulphur Springs, jn Virginia,
oaused such a fall in temperaturo that frost was
visible next morning.
Rome, Georgia, is moving to construct water
works.
Ex-Pbesuient Johnson, in a speech of over
three hours’ duration, at Blounts villo, Tennes
see, the last he made before the election in that
State, took the most open and unequivocal
grounds in favor of national repudiation. The
bondholders, he said, had already received the
amount of their investments. The greatest
enthusiasm was manifested throughout the ad
dress, ut the conclusion of which three hearty
cheers were given for the ex-President.
The Cotton Chop—Appearance op Blight
in Arkansas.—Memphis, August 8.—Blight has
appeared in the cotton on the river below here
and the planters of Arkansas are alarmed.
A country paper in New Hampshire makes
an amusing typographical blunder in describing
Butler at the Boston Jttbilee Review. He says:
“When Gen. Bntler arrived on the ground the
band struck up ‘Hail to the Thief who in tri
nmph advances. ”’
w w Tty * 7tC T^- . taking care of them is small—three herdsmen
New York Democrat of the extraordinary change nowh b aving charge of all the cattle on ^ place .
which has taken place in respect to labor, Norih The laboring force consists of one hundred
and South, under the manipulations of radical- and sixty able-bodied men, and the cost of
ism. This correspondent, traveling in Ohio, boarding them averages about thirty-five cents
observed a large number of women at work in P The osage orange hedge is used for fencing,
the fields, Accoutered, ■with broad-brimmed straw and about one hundred miles of this is now
hats and short dresses. As he had never before growing, mostly in the second year. In addi-
seen white women employed in field labor in the * lon > the farm is well fenced with postand board
-T. . - ... „ fence, of which there is now about eighty-five
West, or m any other section of the country, m51 es on the place.
he took the first favorable opportunity to in- Upon the whole, it is abont as well conducted
quire into the reason. as, perhaps, any farm of similar magnitude in
The answer was: Labor and taxes are high— t ^ le . United States.
. . , — . Although railroads sever the State in most all
produce is low. We can no longer carry on flj rec ti 0 ns new ones are continually building,
farms in Ohio and pay onr taxes and existing ami real estate everywhere increasing in value,
labor rates. We must therefore bring onr wo- Lands here rent for three dollars per acre, and
men into the fields and they prefer to labor with * or thirtytoforty How much more valua-
., . ., . . 7 __ ble do we find the lands of the South, and to be
ns than to see the family impoverished. These had too at half the price of what ^ ^ would
ladies, yon see at work bindingthe wheat sheaves cost here. We can't agree with Mr. Dickson’s
and raking up the scattered grain, are onr ideas in regard to emigration—close that out and
wives and daughters, and not hirelings. an PfP?P er ^ t J °* country.
. , . . . .. ,, What would the great West bo without emi-
Thus in America we are fast approaching the , Eyery d b y teUg whnt it ls becoming
condition of Europe in which the active out- -with it. And so with the South. Let the irre-
door labor of both sexes is needed to sustain the pressible negro be done away with, import Chi-
exactions of government and keep the wolf of nese Iftbor, encourage emigration, and tne coun-
■ - „ ■, - ... - „ c . - try will flourish as it has never done before.
want from the door. In the fertile State of You have been in the large railroad depot at
Ohio, the great middling class of agriculturists Indianapolis, in this State. Isn’t it a scene to
are becoming like the peasantry of continental be remembered; a half-dozen trains moving to
Europe, and the gentle sex must he called * ro ’ an ^ a thousand people mixing and
»p» » —' »«»«■»•* SSSSSSSSE K-
of comfortable domestic life and take to rough throng, to stumble upon your esteemed fellow-
hard-handed toil in the production of food. It citizen, Mr. —, the banker, who, with his
Letter from the Chalybeate Springs.
Fresh Arrivals at the Springs—Cupid at Work
Among the Visitors—Love, like Poetry, a spe
cies of Madness—The Authoress of St. Elmo—
E’er Forthcoming Work—The Eclipse and
What is said of it—The Gay Season—The
Beauty and Toilets of the Ladies—Golden
Gaiters and Silver Slippers—Crops—List of
Arrivals, etc.
Chalybeate Springs, Ga., V
August 10, 1869.)
i. Editors Telegraph: The stream of pleasnre-
seekers and invalids continues to flow in this
direction without abatement. A large number
of visitors have arrived daring the past week,
including some of the handsomest young ladies
in the State. Indeed, it would be difficult to
find more beautiful women than some we have
here; and how the gentlemen can avoid falling
in love with a dozen or more of them at the
same time, is passing strange. That the little
rqsy god with his bows and arrows has made
victims of some of them is evident to every one
except themselves. But when a man or woman
is smitten by the tender passion, he or she is
the last one in the world to find it out.
The authoress of St Elmo, once said to a po
etical friend, that she considered poetry a spe
cies of madness and looked upon all poets as
more or less demented. Be this as it may, it is
plain enough that a man becomes a simpleton
the moment be gets in love. It would be un-
gollant to make the same remark of the ladies;
yet candor compels me to observe that when
their sweet little hearts become deeply entan
gled in Cupid's meshes, they are not crazy, nor
yet beside themselves, nor wholly bereft of rea
son—bnt they are assuredly, not exactly them
selves.
I do not mean to intimate that it is foolish in
man or woman to yield to the divine passion.
On the contrary, I consider love a very sensible
thing—a very good thing—aye, a pleasant thing;
and yet T do maintain that as soon as the fever
sets in, the victim becomes in a measure, delir-
It may be the delirium of joy, if you
is needless to say that this cannot be done with- : charming daughter, goes to Niagara, and other
. , , places of interest in the North, for the summer,
out a greater or less sacrifice of that delicacy of ; ^
Corvus.
This body met in Atlanta on the 10th, and j than have imperfect preparations, which it is
! presumed can only be famished by that stu-
there being no quorum, was changed to an Edu
cational Convention. A permanent constitution
was adopted and some thirty gentlemen, distin
guished as professors and teachers, enrolled as
members. The permanent officers elected nre
as follows: President: H. H. Tucker, D. D.,
Vice Presidents: J.M. Bonnell, W. Leroy Brown,
Dr. A. Means; Secretary: B. Mallon, of Savan
nah ; Treasurer: Prof. D. W. Williams, of Ma
con.
Committee of Publication: Prof. L S. T.
Hopkins, Prof. J. E. Willett, W. A. Hemphill.
Prof. Martin V. Calvin, read an interesting
report on a “common school system,” which
evidenced research and thorough acquaintance
with the subject discussed.
The report was made the special order for to
morrow morning, immediately after the reading
of the minutes.
Prof. Bonnell offered the following resolution,
peudous monument of folly, the Confederate
Laboratory. ‘
Fourth. The Macon and "Western Railroad
Company will run trains every hour if nec
essary, for a consideration. So they would to
Howard’s ; but why create that necessity, when
as eligible a position has been tendered, much
nearer, more easily accessible £6 all, and where
all the railroads may engage in the same busi
ness if they want to ? Wagoning machinery is
of course to be avoided, but who but the sub
committee would say that in that respect the
Laboratory is “more convenient than any other
point named ?” Perhaps they don't take the
papers But
Fifth and lastly. We have an appeal to our
forbearance in view of the presumed necessities
of the case, mythical as they are; well that can
not be resisted and so far as we are concerned
all opposition ceases here, but on this condition;
that the Agricultural Association shall itself
charter the train, and give free passage to the
which, at his^suggestion, was laid on the table 1 people, many of whom canneitherwalknorpay,
for future action:
Resolved. That a committee of five be ap
pointed by the Chair,to consider the practicabil
ity and expediency of combining the colleges
and high schools of all the religions denomina-
bnt would like nevertheless to see the Show.
A Schism Among the Mormons.
Brigham Youngs’s domination over the Mor-
.- , . . jn- b M tt • mons is threatened on the spot Two of the
‘ions m a harmonious system with the State Um- j yotmger sons of the great fouhder of the church,
to secure the permanence, efficiency, j j ose ph Smith, have gone to Salt Lake, and
and the highest measure of usefulness for each i caUed npon p res ident Yonng. They told him
and all. Said committee to report at the next j they had come to organize a new, and non-
meeting of this Association. ^ . polygamic branch of the Chnrch. They asked
f permission to defend their faith, and, by argu-
Educational Convention. , ^ ent from the originftl Mormon books, to con-
President Pennell s resolution was adopted ■ vine© the followers of Mr. Young that they were
in the evening session and also the following by J wrong. The answer may be guessed. Brigham
Prof. Qrr: | Young refused their_ request flatly, and more-
■n n . n1 ... •, ™ . ... . , over warned them that they should be admit-
■ C0 “ mi “ ee ,° o f tbree be “P- : ted neither to the tabernade nor to the ward
pofattg to report upon the best system of edit- ' meet ing houses. The brothers pointed to the
^ "! blt0 ^ Rn i blac ^ : tb S ' example of their father, who, they said, on the
t0 A 0 E l eC ?^w 0mi ^ ' authority of their mother, ne^er practiced poly-
ktdbef ° rtt 1 IW-fc which Brigham made answer that
xr R d J, ^ , r ,. Mrs. Smith was a liar, and had been proved to
I4S2E | !s.»«y_ytaa!f *
it- 1 Peculiar interest attaches to «ie younger of
a r8Soluhon , t0 these brothers, David Hyrom Smith, as he is a
appornt a committee of five to report some plan « <chi]d of p r0 p b eoy.” Just before Joseph Smith
efficient, and Dav f d HyraL prophesied that “the man
??? w&s n °t bom who was to lead this people, bnt
irnnrinVt nrwvnnteii Busb ’^ b * * of Emma Smith should be bom a son who would
^MiSSSSaSStSisSiESSE 1 rr a ^ ° f
v™ 166 . tnrbance. Joseph Smith was killed June 27,
ggfiltfjg. 1 TCfff ; 1844. Oh November 17, of the same yeara son
Adored. nrr hSs ^ 1 was bom to Emma Smith who was" named David
were a^oint*<l MeMrS ’ ° n ’ H ytand ^ortlten Hyrum Smith, in accordance with the direction
m of his father. This is the yonng man who has
fa bearded the lion Brigham iTbisden. It is said
discussed, very ably, fhftf many of the Mormons are secretly weary of
magfaportot questions connected with school SpS tvranny and thrthe"wiU flock to
The Convention then adjourned until In ■*“*?*' °, f <* promise. The
t «■ -« mu j, " ■* 1111111 t) “Gentiles welcome the new comers for the
same reason and moreover because the re organ-
o’clock Thursday morning.
Muscogee Taxablks, foot np 6,990,218;
against 7,213,667 last year."
izers of the churoh are loyal and law-abiding
citizens of the United States, and more - tolerant
than the present rnler.
please, but it is still delirium, and is sure to be
followed br the most extraordinary antics, shew
ing that the sufferer, if pot insane for the (ime,
is at least not exactly a rational being. And
this brings us back to onr starting point, that a
man in love with a pretty woman, always makes
a fool of himself. Hence, too, the suicides and
double murders and other desperate remedies
to which disappointed and crazy lovers some
times resort. Indeed, love beats ether and chlo
roform aid champagne, all hollow.
Speaking of the authoress of St. Elmo, I am
reminded to inform your readers that she has
another novel now in the hands of her New
York publisher, Mr. Derby. The leading idea
sought to be developed in the work, it is said,
relates to divorces. I have not heard which
side she takes in the controversy npon that
much mooted question, but presume she is op
posed to the legal separation of man and wife
for causes occurring after marriage. She pro
bably thinks that if society would come to re
gard the marriage tie as* indissoluble, young
people as well as parents would be more cau
tious, the one in selecting partners for life and
the other in sanctioning these selections. It is
said that her publisher, upon the receipt of the
manuscript, and before he had examined it,
wrote toMiss Evans, or rather Mrs. "Wilson, now,
offering her fifteen thousand dollars for the
copyright, which she accepted. After reading
the manuscript he wrote to her again express
ing himself in the most complimentary and en
thusiastic terms as to its merits. So, Messrs.
Editors, your lady readers have a new sensa
tion and perhaps a great lesson in expectancy.
The weather has been quite cool and nnpro-
pitious of late. For a day or two, fires, woollen
clothing and blankets were in demand. Wheth
er this was the result of the late eclipse, or the
approach of the equinoctial season, or of a frolic
on the part of the wayward clerk of the weather,
we are at a loss to determine. The ladies here
are disposed to ascribe the sudden change of
temperature to the eclipse, which they were un
able to witness. The snbjeot was much dis
cussed, and many of them were prepared with
bits of smoked glass and their own bright eyes
to witness the heavenly phenomenon; bnt the
envious clonds intervened and prevented the
anticipated pleasure.
We are just now in the height of the gay sea
son. It has been many years since a more bril
liant company assembled in the South than that
which was gathered at the ball-room here last
night Many of the ladies’ toilets were superb,
and gotten up with exquisite taste. But unex
ceptionable as the toilets were, they were not
equal to the beauty of the fair creatures whose
unsurpassed graces and loveliness they sought
in vain to heighten and improve. Macon. Grif
fin, Columbus, Montgomery, and, indeed, the
country at large, were well represented, both by
ladies and gentlemen. Savannah, thus far, is
represented only by her beaux.
You wiil pardon* me if I do not imitate the
professional letter-writers of the Northern press
and give the name of the reigning belle of the
season, and describe the dresses of the many
beautiful women here. Indeed, it would be im
possible to. say who is the belle and who the
most beautiful lady at the Springs, where there
are so many who are beautiful and so much ad
mired. Pnblio opinion, however, seems to be
divided between two very handsome ladies from
Macon, both of whom'are a little above the
medium height, graceful, well formed, enter
taining and possessing that rare quality, good
taste in adapting their dress to their peculiar and
diverse orders of beauty. The one is a rich
brunette, with magnificent eyes—now, unhappi
ly, somewhat in eclipse; the*other—well I know
not what terms to use to describe her fresh and
unique style. I can only say, she looks as if
she had just stepped down out of a picture
frame of the last century: so much does her
face remind one of the antique beauties of onr
revolutionary period. There are other ladies
present from Macon quite as pleasant and hard
ly less beautiful than the two alluded to here,
and the gentlemen who accompany them well
deserve the good fortune they enjoy in being
their escorts.
Among the petite beauties at the springs Col
umbus takes the lead, and we are advised that
the same city will, in a few days, contest the
claims of all comers of whatever age and type
of beauty. _ The best wnltzer, as well as the
most charming and agreeable woman who has
been here this season, hails from the banks of
the Ocmulgee. Her golden colored gaiters have
described many a graceful figure upon the ball
room floor, and made many a manly head and
heart turn giddy. But she has left us! It is
difficult to say which is the best dancer, an ao-
complishedmarriedlady from Macon or a brown
eyed, silver-slippered little widow from the
banks of tho Tombigbee. The former is the
personification of grace and. womanly dignity.
The latter—what shall I say of her ? No pen
less graceful than Sir John Suckling's can do
her dancing justice.
“Her feet beneath her petticoat,
Like little mice stole in and oat,
As if they feared the light.
And oh! to see them dance you'd say, %
No sun upon an Easter day.
Was half so fine a eight.”
Bnt my pen is running away with me, or rath
er the ladies are, and my letter is growing to
an unpardonable length. I had intended to
give your readers some account of this pictur
esque region, its fertile coves and valleys, its
green fields, its mountains filled with ore and its
life-giving mineral waters. But cupid perched
himself upon my pen staff this evening, and it
would not write otherwise than as his imperial
majesty was pleased to direct. It shall ho my
endeavor to do better hereafter.
I will only add now that the crops, both of
corn and cotton, continue to promise an abun
dant yield. Fertilizers have been used freely,
even in the piost remote and inaccessible parts
of the country, and everywhere they seem to
have proven beneficial. Invalid.
LIST or ARRIVALS AT CHALYBEATE SPRINGS SINCE
THE THIkD INST.
From Macon—John P. Fort, Misses Fort,
Mr. Lockett, Miss Holt, Miss Hugnenin, Miss
Gnssie "Watkins, Miss Lizzie Lockett, Robert
Lockett, N. C. Munroe, R. W. Burdell, Mrs.
Evans, M. Kahn, Mrs. Gilmer and 6on, J. A
Pugh, Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Ellis, Mrs. M. J.
Ellis, J. W. Edwards, 0. B. Cole, Jr.; Walter
B. Hill, T. A. Farmer.
From Columbus—Charles T._HoImes, Cliff.
B. Grimes, J. P. Manly, Miss
Mrs. Flournoy, Miss Abercrombie,
Shorter, Lambert Spencer, Henry (3. Bussy,
Robert Thompson, Mrs.. W. L. Tillman, Mr.
and Mrs. W. D. Chipley, Miss Mary .Ingram,
Miss Connie Watt, Mrs. Mary Chambers, Miss
Susie Threewits, W. C. Jeter, A.. L. Harrison,
Thos. Woolfolk, Ben. Fontaine, Nick. Redd, A.
A. Coleman, Mrs. E. C. Buford, Misb HelenW.
Swift.
From Gvifin—Thos. Nall, J. D. George. J.
J. Eagen, J. H. Grant, J. M. Sparks, Miss Ella
Sparks.
From other points—F. D. Chaplin, L. H.
Fairchild, N.O.; J. A- Walden, L. Dickie,Thom
as villa ; Rev. Herbert P. Meyers, Isaac Cherry,
Aquilla Cherry, Talbot county; A. J, Perry
man, T. C. Tell, W.-B. Spain, R. T. Claiborne,
Samuel Sclig, Pleasant Hill; James A. Render,
A. J. Snelson, J. S. Grant, Meriwether county;
John A. Yigal, Laurens county;-Mrs. Hunter
and son, Haynesville, Ala.; Mrs. John R. Bil
lups, Miss Kate Jones, Ala.; J. M. Mathews,
Calhonn county; W. L. Carter, Wm. Leonard,
Talbotton; Miss Walton, Miss O. Walton, Tal
bot comity; W. J. F. Mitchell, Taylor county;
T. L. Fames, Miss F. L. Reese, Ala.; John H.
Dennis, Talbotton ; D. G. Owens.
Letter from Florida.
Passage down the River—Moccasin Slew—the
Marrows—Three Brothers — Apalachicola—
Splendid Buildings—a Perfect Waste—Mag
nificent Residence of Thomas Orman—Iropi-
cal Fruits, etc.
CORRESPONDENCE OF THE TELEGRAPH.
Apalachicola, Florida, )
August 6th, 1869. jT
We left Bainbridge at 10 o’clock this morning
and soon entered the Apalachicola river—a
broad,beautiful stream made by the confluence of
the Chattahoochee and Flint.
The rich plantations on .either side we had
seen covered by dense masses of com and cot
ton, gave way as we descended to a perfect wil
derness of vegetation. The banks of either
side appeared exceedingly rich. Impenetrable
jungles of cane and brush jutted down to the
water’s edge, while the general configuration of
the country was becoming very low. Nothing
bnt swamps, low, inundated, full of cypress,
hung with festoons of moss, could be seen
spreading gloom over vast forests. Only a few
houses are to be seen for one hundred miles,
while many fine plantations lie uncultivated on
the river banks.
. Ever since the war I have heard of “Mocca
sin Slew,” which I perceive we are approaching
very rapidly. It looks impossible we should
enter so narrow a passage; bnt we swing around
and go in like a wedge—a narrow, tortuous cut
of the river, which, in consequence of obstruc
tions during the war, was made through an im
penetrable forest. On the left I see the wreck
of the steamboat Music, and ahead I perceive a
narrow, dangerous current to navigate. Two
miles and a half are made, and we now drift
into what are known a3 the Narrows, a still,
sluggish stream which makes into the main
river, from which we had diverged. The Apa
lachicola becomes a wide, beantiful stream as
we descend, with scenery much more attractive,
as we gaze on the river that stretches away.
Three rivers now appear in the distance, con
verging, which bear the name of the “Three
Brothers.” "We bear to the right and glide down
on the rising wave to the delightful Bay of Ap
alachicola. It is late in the evening when I
catch the first view of the city and the bright
wafers of the Golf that glisten in the sunset.
A crowd of all ages, indescriminate colors and
sex, come rushing to the boat Very promi
nent, is a mulatto negro, with a stick in his hand,
who leap3 on the deck as the ropes are thrown
ashore. This negro is the Marshal of the city.
Capt. "Whitesides informed me we should remain
until 9 o'clock, which would enable those who
desired to stroll over the town to have an oppor
tunity of viewing what once was a prond and
wealthy city.
Ah! thought I, Gloria mundi transit, as I
looked down a magnificent wharf, overgrown
with grass and deserted; once crowded with
cotton and merchandize. Not a vessel in port
or vestige of this once busy mart remains to be
seen. The splendid fire-proof warehouses are
closed—the stores are shut np—the town is de
serted, save by a mixed mass of women, children,
negroes and “Dagos,” who conld not escape the
rain. A few old citizens remain.
As I walked through the streets, grown np
with grass, I saw many evidences of former lux
ury and grandeur. I was making for the bean
tiful residence of Mr. Thomas Orman—looking
around me as I approached his stately mansion,
I felt as if I had been “let down” in a tropical
region. A fine looking old gentleman met me
at the door: “Mr. Orman, I presume:” ‘Yes,
have a seat, sir. ” I was very much pleased with
his appearance—I knew he was a cultivated
man. We soon walked out in the orange grove,
for I could not sit still where there was so much
beauty around me. I observed the trees were
very full of fruit, and remarked to Mr. Orman,
I thought they were very old. “Thirty years
ago,” he replied, “there came a vessel in here
from Jamaica with a cargo of fine fruit, from
which I procured these seed and plants. X have
abont one acre and a half and will gather 40,-
000 oranges this year, from which I expect to
realize §1,500.”
The Japan plum. Banana plant, and Ramie,
with a great variety of fruits were growing on
the premises. I saw two date trees twenty years
old, which will bear fruit in ten more years,
thirty years of age being required for this pur
pose.
Property of all descriptions has depreciated
to nothing in Apalachicola. The population
was formerly near 4000 but only about 1000 re
main. It is thought if canning of oysters may
be resorted to, together with the unbounded
resources of the fish and lumber market, Apala
chicola may yet revive to some extent. It is
certainly a gloomy looking place now.
“Occasional.”
BY TELEGRAPH.
Supreme Court in Memory
Howell Cobb. ***'
Bottom's Horse Power.
A correspondent at Americas has already writ
ten ns about this invention, and his notice of it
appeared in the Telegraph a few days ago. We
however append the following from the Ameri
cas Courier:
An Important and Valuable Invention.—
Some fifteen or twenty gentlemen of this city
visited the plantation of Col. B. B. Hamilton,
Tuesday afternoon, to witness the working of an
improved horse-power, invented and patented,
by Capt. T. J. Bottoms, of ThomasviUe, Ga.—
The machinery was tested by attachment to a
forty-saw Taylor gin—perfectly new and run
ning a little roughly. It was also the first work
ing of the cogs, pinions, etc., and they were
rough and heavy. But, notwithstanding the un
favorable surroundings—wet weather, damp,
bad cotton, etc. , all present were soon convinced
of the superiority of this over any horse-power
heretofore invented.
All inventions by onr own Southern people,
when meritorious, should meet with encourage
ment from all; and we are satisfied that this in
vention will save to cotton planters the ccst of
procuring it every year it is used for ginning
purposes. When properly adjusted, polished
and in good running order, a majority of those
present believe that as much cotton can be gin
ned with one mole as has heretofore been done
with four—thus saving the use of three mules dar
ing the ginning season.
The Committee appointed by Col. Hamilton
to report npon the trial made the following re
turn :
“One mule ginned, on a forty-saw Taylor gin,
fifty pounds of cotton in seven minutes.*’’
“A part of the committee believe the machine
had gained 100 per cent, in power, while the
other part believe there is a gain of from 160 to
175 per cent.”
Jxo. V. Price, Chairman.
Chas. J. Malone,
W. J. Barlow,
Jesse Stallings,
W. T. Davenport,
Merkel Callaway. Secretary.
Capt. T. J. Bottoms, the inventor, and Dr. J.
W. Huntoon, are the proprietors of this merito
rious patent.
After the trial, upon invitation of Col. Hamil
ton, the partv repaired to his residence, and
proceeded to ‘‘test” the capacity of masticating
‘‘machines” and found them in fine working or
der, consuming a load of watermelons and peach
es in short order.
From Washington.
Washington, August 12.—Gen. Gordon Adams,
District Attorney of the Seventh District of Missis
sippi, has been suspended.
Only Rawlings of the Cabinet is here.
Judge Dent will continue a candidate" for the
Mississippi Governorship, subject to the action of
the Conservative Republican Convention.
Nothing has transpired regarding Canby's inter-
View with the Conservative Republicans for Govem-
or and lieutenant Governor of Texas. He consid
ers both tickets good.
The Cubans have advices of the commencement
of active operations. The Cubans have possession
of two seaports the name of which they withhold—
enabling them to communicate safely with the
United States coaBt. Time twenty horns by mail,
Revenue to-day 8778,000.
Delano is still absent.
The Government has sold the steamer Peqnod to
theHaytien President, Salnave, for five hundred
and twenty thousand dollars.
The Mexican Claims Commission, after perfecting
the rules, adjourned to December; meantime they
can file memorials and written arguments in their
support.
Gen. G. Gordon Adams has resigned.the Attor
ney-Generalship of the Southern District of Missis
sippi.
FROM CUBA. ! - .«<>
The Cabans here have official advices to the 2d
inst. The leaders state that, were belligerent rights
accorded them by the United States, such would be
the effect in Cuba as to enable them to secure pos
session of the entire island, except Havana, within
thirty days. Cabans throughout the island are in
sympathy with the Cespedes Government, and the
disaffection of the Spanish troops would leave the
Spanish Government without an army. It is re
ported that serious difficulty exists in the Volunteer
organization. Four hundred troops from Santiago
de Cuba were captured by Jordan. The force sent
by Talmazeda to relieve them was defeated with a
loss of half their force. It is reported that the
Spaniards were driven from Ciuco Villas district,
with heavy loss. The Cnbans are now in possession
of the entire district. Jordan has accomplished his
purposes everywhere. His troops, are inspirited by
successes and in excellent spirits. A cargo of Blaves
recently landed at Cinco Villas was captured and
liberated. Qnesada’s forces are closing on their op
ponents, who have no troops outside Neuvitas, ex
cept those confined in Puerto Principe.
Customs from the 31st to the 7th, 83,790,000.
First Bale of New Cotton in Alabama
Montgomery, August 12.—The first bale of new
cotton of Alabama was received yesterday afternoon
too late to put on the market, at Lehman Dunn’s
Warehouse, from the plantation of Chapman &
Rives of this county, and was sold this morning
through H. F. Lee & Co., Auctioneers, to Abbott
Stransherger at 58 cento. He will express it to-day
to his commission merchants, LeBarron Bros., in
New York. It classes strict middling of fine staple
and weighed nearly six hundred pounds.
Mobile, August 12.—The first bale of new cotton,
weighing three hundred and eighty pounds, was re
ceived to-day. It was classed good style of low
middlings, and sold for forty-five cents. It was
bought by George & Co., Brokers, for Ingersol &
Co. It was from the plantation of C. M. TidwelL
=3=
The Court session of Wednesday wag
to proceedings in hanor to the memory 0 f r**
Howell Cobb. A oommittee, consist, *
Messrs. Sam. Hall, E. A. Nisbet, Wm. ^ '
Wm. Hope Hull and Judge David A.
submitted, as a report, the paper prepaT?'
the Bar in attendance on the Superior Co ''
Bibb county at Macon, oh the 30th of
last, and which was subsequently printed j ■
Telegraph. It is a rapid review of the po ]: H .
military, social and religions life of the flwj
ous deceased, from the pen of the Hon v
Nisbet of this county. After the reading t
report, '.tr~rrz- ?.*ry ®
CHIEF JUSTICE BROWN MADE THE FOILowiy
MASKS. C '"’
Gentleman of the Bar: In behalf at
Court I submit the following reply to
port and. resolutions :
General Howell Cobb was no ordinary
His name will occupy a large space in the p'
ry of his country, and the times in which t|
lived. Richly endowed by nature witp
laAfianl V,7 aV, kn J t_ !£!(;
lectnal strength, which had been dev ]
and cultivated in a very high decree w
eminently fitted for the many r e !_ . ?
positions which, by the free snffmgTV^
countrymen, he was called to fill.
ability and force of character, were aY
dustry and energy, forming a combinatw'v-
seldom fails to achieve success. ,
General Cobb was admitted to the Bar ,
early age, as stated in yonr report 15
menced the active duties of life, m
the Western.Circuit, in this, his native S\ r ’ 5
With.the advantages of a fine personal -7'"'
ance, a mind remarkably active. ) 0 rncil
penetrating, aided by a liberal edumtio-Y
rose rapidly to position and distinction C
nwAfnoainn Vt« vroc caa. tv « **
From New York.
New York, August 12.—The Secretary of War
orders Pratt to be held at Fort Schuyler until fur
ther orders, notwithstanding Judge McCann's de
cision discharging him.
Judge Barnard, at the special term of the Supreme
Court, vacated an order of Judge Peckham, in the
during moBt of the remainder of his life ini'
official positions, of great importance’and I
sponsibility.
In the Congress of the United State: w . ,
he served, during a long period of its pro- 1 ''
history, he not only won rank, as a man, hv y
exercised great control as a leader. ’
La the Executive Chair of his State, his
ministration was distinguished for ability, Ij£
ality, and a vigilant attention to all the'i-t
imposed upon him.
Of the course of General Cobb, dnriiij sp
latter and more thrilling scenes throngh
we have passed, I will not now speak.
requires that" the history of these times, as it
to be transmitted to posterity, shall not'
written; nor the motives and conduct of ■
who acted as prominent a part as did Ge:«
Cobb, to be too freely criticised, till the ps7
and prejudices, which were engendered dat
the contest, have entirely subsided, andris-*
has resumed her sway. When posterity b
seen results, the historian, with the mated
which will be preserved and placed at his «•
maud, will be able to assign his proper posh:
to each of the leading spirits who took pa.-;
the war, and in the construction of the Gate
ment, after the disastrous and crushing 16
of the armies of the South, and the topei
loss of her causel
During the high excitement of the past, i
the great conflict of opinion,, as to what ms j
best that could be done for our almost rn,
section, under all the circumstances by vk
they were surrounded, at the close of thee
war, it was the misfortune of some of us to £
fer widely from Gen. Cobb, and, in the eii
ment of the times, when men had too little &
ity for each other, while sitting in judgn-
npon motives,, those differences may, in sc:
cases, have been productive of personal she:
tion, which led to crimination and recrih
tion. s ii -....
Bnt, all these differences,, which grew <a
conflicting opinions on public policy, in to
jUtical excitement, and produced ska
i tr i a. JAE.J.MUDJHT UISHOF recenuy preacuou m
• “ oln B. eB > Uhn. Tabernacle at Salt Lake, and when he had c
BUen Jjangdon, eluded, Brigham Yonng “improved” on his i
ombie, Jas. H. m onby Tisane and saving, “that the preac
A Methodist bishop recently preached in the
*' ‘ * ~ ‘ 'Con-'
ser-
by rising and saying, “that the preacher
had spoken of tho believer as being received in-
to the bosom of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in
the world to come. Now I conld not help think
ing,” he continued, “that all believers would, in
that case, be received into the bosoms of a set
of polygamists \ ,J
Sosquehana Railroad matter, and issued non- . _ , . .
bailable writs against Fragn. Ramsey and Yan i tloa an J
Yalkenburg for contempt. ; pass away. In the . grave they-are forgot*
Judge McCann had issued warrants for the arrest
of Marshal Barlow and Major Taylor in the Pratt
case, hut the matter ha3 been compromised, the
District Attorney agreeing to bring Pratt into court
to-morrow. ,
From Mississippi.
Jackson, Miss., August 12.—Judge Jeffords, of
the Supreme Court; A. Warner, Secretary of State,
and Judge Speed, of the Criminal Court, with a large
number of minor officers, were to-day removed by
Gen. Ames. Those named are prominent in the
Conservative movement in this State.
m- ptate- aSffiSES3SKSHTS7
ions in this count?. On Big B.ach river their ap- Jn subm ^gi 0I1 t o these afflictive dispensation
tions in this county. On Big Black river their ap
pearance this year is five days earlier than last,
while the crop is at least two weeks later.
And wh6n, under Divine Providence, ore t ”
precedes tne' other, for ' a little while, to tli
habitation which awaits all the living, theyn
never remembered and cherished by any ton
ble and generous survivor.
Geh. Cobb was not only an honorable, uprir
citizen in all the. private walks of life, tot
was distinguished for many noble traits of (ii
acter, and many private and social virtues,
his death Georgia has lost one of her all
statesmen; the Bar one of its brightest on
meats; society one of its most cherished cs
bers, and his intelligent and amiable fac
an affectionate, kina, indulgent husband.'
parent. '"" 1 '"
Bnt relatives, friends and professional as
Providence, and we must all say rev-:.::
“Thy will be done.” '
It affords the court pleasure to testify ’A
j respect for the memory of Gen. Cobb, asir
General News. . „ ^
Philadelphia, August 12.—The Union League j tinguished member of this bar, by direr
Executive Committee met to-cav. Resolutions were i that the- preamble and resolutions be
adopted for aiding their partizms in the election at j the minutes of this court, in comp-n
Philadelphia, Texas and Mississippi. The charter of | or aerei 4 ° “ contained. Ana.
the State Council was revoked, and Mygatt,of Missis- . ———J———*
sissippi. appointed Commissioner to reorganize the
order in that State.
Foreign News.
Madrid, August 12.—Five hundred Carlists are
on the frontier of Catalonia.
Prim, before leaving for Paris, ordered armed
rebels to be shot,
Lisbon, August 12.—The resignation of tho Min
istry has been accepted.
Duke de Lento heads the new ministry.
Glasgow, August 12 Jefferson Davis and Charles
Mackay are here. .
Paris, August 12.—Marshal Niol is helplessly sick.
London, August 12.—The Times to-day, publishes
a letter from Madrid, whereof the following is an
extract: Spain couldn’t be in a worse state. A
change must come. unless the rulers are prepared
for revolution. The Treasury is empty and it is im
possible to collect taxes. Discontent exists every
where.
Prim and hto colleagues have no easy times ahead.
One Car from Sea to Sea.
The Pennsylvania Central Railroad Company
starts two trains a day from New York, the one
via the New Jersey Central to Harrisburg, and,
the other via the Camden and Amboy to" Phila-
delpha, which carry passengers, without change
of cars, to Omaha, Nebraska, a distance of about,
sixteen hundred miles. This stupendous enter
prise is to be followed shortly by improved
family cars, equipped with beds, furniture,
kitchens, etc., for the accommodation of pas-
sengers, and will start at Philadelphia and New
York direct for Sacramento, without change, %
distance of over thirty-three hundred miles.—
The undaunted Pullman is the projector and
proprietor of these moving houses; and he
is devoting all his efforts to render them safe
and commodious. They will be built of, va
rious sizes and capacities. A party or fam
ily of fifteen can hire one for the round
trip, and can control it as completely during
the time they nse it as they would a rented tene
ment Of all the men connected with the great
revolution effected by railroads, none deserve
more credit for independent individual courage
and invention than the Pullman Brothers. They
are still yonng men, the eldest not being forty.
Their sleeping cars in the "West are far superior
to those of the rival companies in the East.
There is not the slightest reason why those of
the latter should not be their equals in all re
spects.—Press.
A New York letter says: The two China
men, Mr. Chung Sue ana Sing .Man, who ac
companied the committee as far as Chicago,
will be in New. York in the course of a day or
two. They represent two of the six houses in
San Francisco who have control of Chinese em
igration, and are coming here with,a view to
the introduction of their countrymen to the
cities of the Atlantic States. It is needless to
deny the fact that the great body of onr work
ing people contemplate the advent of these
strangers with anything but a friendly eye. At
the same time they are prepared to give the
two Chinamen above allnded to a fair hearing.
As soon as they arrive the Cooper Institute -anil
be placed at their disposal, if they wish to ad
dress the citizens.
The Radical negro majority of Antioch Col-
'From Montgomery—CoL Y. S. ^Iurphy,' J. ored Church, Culpeper county, Ya., expelled
R. Smith, Miss Dexter, "Wm. Frazer,'Mrs. Mary every'member of the' church who voted the
Dillard and son. Walker ticket in’the late election.
Drowned.—A little boy, the son of Mr.
Parker, got drowned, we regret to learn, in the
mill-race, at the Athens factory, on Sunday af
ternoon. We are informed that he was on his
way to Sunday School, and stopped at the race,
with other boys, to look for a drowned hog;
and, seeing a switch growing on the other side,
which he wished to procure, stepped on a plank,
to enable him to reach it. The plank tilted,
and precipitated him into the water, where he
drowned—there being nobody present bnt very
His body was recovered in a
The" Aboriginese Used It.—The mediciil t
tnesof roots, herbs and barks which were ee
the “medicine men” of the Indian tribes,
long experience has proven to possess tbe nos 3
dent alterative properties for the cure of Soto
King’s Evil,Ulcere, Cancerous and Indolen-
mors, Mercurial and Syphilitic Affection*, Eto?
ment of the Bones, Tetter, Ringworm, Boi.:-
pies and diseases resulting from a deprave- fl
of the blood, and all female diseases, are coc»
in a highly concentrated form in Dr. Tutu
parilla and Queen’s Delight. It is a very pY- 1
medicine, and deservedly sol-
PAIN KILLER,
We beg leave to call the attention of the f-
to this long celebrated and unrivaled
cine. ’ ' . '
Tho Pain Killer is a purely vegetable cor.; :
and while it is a most efficient remedy for pto. -
a perfectly safe medicine even in the mostts^
ful hands- For snmmer complaints, or auy
form of bowel disease, in children or adult*, it 5
almost certain core, and has without dont: W
more successful in curing the various
Cholera than any other known remedy, or evt--
most skillful physician. In India, Africa. -
China, where this dreadful disease is eve: r --
less prevalent, the. Pain Killer is consilt---
the natives, as well as tho Europeans rcsilf--'
those climates a sure remedy. Sgt
King of Chills never fails..
Substitute for quinine, King of Chffis.
King of Chills cures dumb and shaking cw
King of Chills cures every other day chiih-
augl-lm i- . . . !...-n:' -—
• f “ FRESH AS A-MAIDEN’S BITS’
Is tha pure, peachy complexion which ,
use or HAgan’s Magnolia Balm. It fa to*
cret of beauty. Fashionable ladies in s0C: '-
derstandthis. ,
The Magnolia. Balm changes the rasM
girl into a city belle more rapidly than any 0
thing. s «jj j.- fi a
Redness, Sunburn, Tan, Freckles, Blotchy
all effects of the summer sun, disappear w-*-'
used, and a genial, cultivated, fresh exf**^
obtained which rivals the bloom of youth-
is possible to all who will invest 75 cents
respectable store and insist on getting the Mi- 1
Use nothing but Lyon’s Kathairon to das®
hair. augG^<
ihem^
small boys. __ —.
short time, but life was extinct.—Athens Watch, pains, and is the great remedy
man. Neuralgia.
rkat> THESE LINES AND PONDER --— ^
The best tests of the merits of wy
article is to ascertain what is thought of
where it is manufactured. Such a test
Pyrafuge can well stand, as to-day it fa .
the favorite remedy for chills and fever,
and other diseases of a malarious origin,
of Savannah where it is prepared. F ^
druggists of the city would as much think
without castor ofl In their stores as to be
this popular (and deservedly so) remedy- ^
vegetable preparation free from deleteriousi
and aeta as a tonic upon the entire systeub
invigorating the system, so much so “ to
to throw off disease. Pyrafuge does
or sicken the patient, and can be taken by
elioato, persona without fear. If 8boul Y )a y
at hand, as chills and fever creep op<> ,
stealthily that we are not aware of Its
til if is upon us. A word to the wise ^*£*2
Savannah Sfoming AV*c<• — ' p
KAYTOJT3 OIL OF LIFE ^
ititirf aikI is oreife remedy for **
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