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About Weekly constitutionalist. (Augusta, Ga.) 185?-1877 | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1870)
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTIONALIST WEDNESDAY MORNING. MARCH. 9, 1870 (From the American Ftock Journal. On Feeding Horses. We have no hesitancy in asserting at the outset, that bat a limited number of horse owners in providing sustenance for the animals under their charge, take into con sideration the efl'ects of food upon the sys tem or the connection of the manger with the stomach, and the subsequent bearing of certain modes of treatment upon the constitution. The system of feeding horses Is diverse and complex; no set formula can be laid down, for with the various qualities of horses it must vary, aud the various circumstances under which they may be required to do their work have also a cou troliing influence. Generally speaking, all horses receive too much hay and not a pro portionate amount of grain, or too much of both. Blow working horses do not re quire so much nutriment of a high quality as those which arc called on to do quick work and perform long distances; but as a rule, all animals which have to do hard work, and much of it, must necessarily be so kept as to have hard flesh, and they can not be so kept unless they are fed on hard grain. The faster and severer the work which a horse is expected to perform, the sounder, more nutritious and more abun dant should be his food. His oats should be increased and his hay diminished. For a gentleman's road horse, in regular work and expected to perform considerable dis tances in good time, a small quantity of hay—say eight pounds per day—is amply sufficient, but as much oats may be given as the animal will eat. Dry hay is indis putably iniurious to the wind ; for ordinary work in their own stables the quantity of hay may be increased three to five pounds, and the allowance of grain reduced to twelve quarts. A good plan is to give a good mash of stewed bran and oats once a week; this will cool the blood, give a kind ly alterative to the system, keep the bowels moderately open and please the appetite of the animal. The use of nitre or drugs of any description should be studionslv avoid ed and only used when prescribed as medi cine. Many more horses than one would imagine have their winds broken by being worked quick and hard, with their bellies distended with hay, grain and water; are foundered from being over fed, while hot, exhausted, and in a state of quasi collapse; are exposed to acute inflammation of the bowels, colic, &c., from being freely water ed and subjected to drafts of cold air, showers of rain, or being, injudiciously ' bathed or washed after sharp work, when’ their stomachs are empty and themselves craving a good dressing and a warm mash. Horses should never be fed within an hour before being put to work, and should then be worked but slowly until the bowels are fully evacuted. Water should never be given to them in large quantities before being put to work, and not at all on their coming off work, while hot, still less when jaded and exhausted. It should be sup plied them often and in abundance, not so much in large draughts at a time, which improperly distend the stomach, as in small quantities at frequently recurring inter vals. New corn is emphatically danger ous as horse feed, and should never be used as such; being heating, it is very apt to cause colic and even acute inflammation.— Old corn may be allowable, bnt should only be given sparingly and cautiously, in the ratio of two quarts where you would give three of oats. Moistening both hay and oats is especially beneficial to the wind and is a good practice. Horses are fond of salt, and small quantities should occasion* ally be mixed with their food. The train ing of horses for racing is, comparatively speaking, limited to a small class of people, and being of little general interest demands but a passing notice under our heading.— Herbert says it consists, of course, in get ting the ltorse for a short time into the highest possible state of condition; hard ness of flesh, excitement of spirits, bloom of coat, speed of foot and depth of wind, which is effected by combining the most nutritious and stimulating system of feed ing, with such constant and severe exer cise, and such medicinal treatment as, while exciting and raising every power of the animal to the utmost, prevents surfeit, prevents fever, and, for the time preserves an equilibrium, which, however, at best is only temporary, and cannot possibly be prolonged ad infinitum. It is an abnormal condition ; and while it develops the ut most powers of the creature, requires the greatest skill and the most constant.atten tion on t-lie part of the person who under takes to produce it. The Tobacco Interest. —At the Na tional Tobacco Association, in New York, last week, Mr. Salamou, of Syracuse, New York, from the Committee on Resolutions, submitted the following report: Resolved, That while we approve o' the present stamp law, aud of every safeguard calculated to prevent fraud, yet, in our opinion, the necessity of monthly returns and annual inventories have ceased, and therefore they should be abolished, since they subject the trade to an humbling and detestab ie espionage. Resolved, That we urge upou Congress to restore the duty on imported cigars to $3 per pound, and 50 cents ad valorem, which is absolutely essential to protect our home industry against the cheap labor of foreign lands. Resolved, That we urge upon Congress the repayment of the taxes unjustly col lected upon all goods which can conclu sively show that they have paid the tax. Mr. L. H. Frayser, of Richmond, sug gested au additional resolution, calling,' firstly, for a uniform tax of sixteen cents per pound on tobacco; secondly, for the establishment of bonded warehouses where ever the necessities of the trade require them; thirdly, to be allowed two removals of goods in bond instead of one. as now; and fourthly, against the proposed compul sory payment of all taxes at the factory. After a speech by Mr. Frayser, urging his resolution, Mr. Koch, a German, ex plained in the German language to the Germans among the audience not under standing English, the purport of the reso lutions submitted for the action of the meeting. After this explanation, a vote on the adoption of the resolutions was taken and the same were unanimously adopted. Tub Boutii Georgia and Florida Railroad.— R. 11. Hardaway, President of this road, writes to the editor of the Bain bridge Argus: I am glad to say the grad lug of our rail road—f. Urn wheelbarrow work—has reached within sight of Albany, aud the road-bi and is completed for laying the iron to wlthlu eleven miles of that city; and If no freshets or other Providential accidents •*;eur to prevent It, we will run the cars to Hast Albany before the Orel of May. Tin j iron ha* nil I*n>u paid for, and every footoi, it le on hand ready to be laid down. I t have had non h Us contend iguluet 111 build ing ihe road, from abroad and at (tome, but It le placed beyond guy noutlugeiicy now and certain us early completion 1 The Flax and the Frail. AN EDITOR COWHIDED BY BLONDES— THE CAUSE OF THE ASSAULT. On Wednesdsy, the telegraph informed us that W. F. Storey, proprietor of the Chicago Times, was publicly cowhided by Lydia Thompson and Pauline Markham, the well-known burlesqucrs. The follow ing article, which appeared in the Times, the day before, offended the blondes, and hence the assault: The “ Blondes” in a Nutshell.—ls there is any subject entirely repulsive to the public it must be that which forms the refrain of this article ; and if further refer ence is made to it, it is done in the same man ner and for the same reason that gambling and prostitution are discussed in the col umns of this newspaper—that the evil may be properly shown up and effectually cured. Great headway has already been made to ward the accomplishment of this purpose ; and wc venture to predict that, after two or three weeks, the public will be spared the disgrace of the worst possible form of the leg drama, or, if not, that such exhibi tions will fall to seenre the attendance of any respectable man, as they have already driven away every respectable woman. That this batch of women should make an appeal to the public, under these cir cumstances, is simply insulting to the pub lic judgment. That they have marie an unnecessary and lewd exhibition of their persons, such as would not probably be tolerated by the police in any bawdy house ; that they have made use of broad, low, and degrading language, such as men of any self-respect would repudiate even in the absence of ladies; that their enter tainments have been mere vehicles for the exhibition of coarse women and the use of disreputable language, uurelieved by any wit or humor—these things and much more can be proved by any one of respect ability who has attended any of their per formances. These are the charges that have been made, and they are now reiter ated. The women against whom they are made have male protectors with them, who, if they were sensible of any injustice, would cake immediate and direct means for vindication and retribution, instead of making any weak aud senseless appeals to the public in the name of women. These women must either concede the justice of the charges or change their protectors— one of whom, styling himself manager, al lowed himself to be publicly whipped by a newspaper man whom he had insulted" in New York, and afterward whiningly ad vertised his disgrace before a police magis trate. The Reduction in Gold.— The New York World., in an editorial article com menting upon the low rate of gold on Thurs day, says : The most important cause of the reduc tion is one with which the Government has had nothing to do, as it has no coutrol Over the weather and the seasons. The decline in gold has resulted from several causes, of which the most important is the abundance of the cotton crop. Our chief use for gold is in the purchase of foreign commodities, and cotton being as good for this purpose as gold itself, an abundant cotton crop dis penses with an equivalent value in gold for the purpose of foreign commerce. Accord ing to the most recent estimates, the cotton crop of last year does not fall short of 3,000,000 bales; and, as the price is double, this crop is equal in value to 0,000,000 bales previous to the war." We have according ly, at present, little use for gold except for the payment of duties at the Custom House. The supply is in excess of the demand, and, as a necessary consequence, the price falls. It would be absurd to attribute this result to the policy of the Government. The abundance of the cotton crop has operated in another manner. It has car ried into the South large sums of money of which only a part has been returned.— Three million bales of cotton, at the pres ent prices, are worth about $350,000,000. — The planters reserve out of their proceeds the money they will need for tillage, wages and family expenses until the next crop is brought to market; and the deficiency of banks in that section causes much of this money to be locked up in private safes and desks, thus withdrawing it from circula tion and practically diminishing the vol ume of the currency. The effect is, so far as it goes, to lessen the disparity between the value of gold and the value of green backs. Machine Sewing by Electricity.— The New York Times mentions the invention of a small electric battery which has been ap plied to ordinary sewing machines, and operates them very successfully. The limes says: Even two small battery cups are suffi cient to furnish power for all ordinary ma chine work, while the addition of another cup is sufficient to drive the needle at a good speed through eight, ten or even twelve thicknesses of material. The use of nitric acid in the battery, the odor of which was an objection to the old plan of operating by electric power, has been sup plemented by using chromate of potash, which is odorless. The expense of opera ting by this means is about five cents per day. Taken altogether, this invention is one of the most useful ones of the period. It not only renders work easier to the ope rator, but what is far better, it dees away entirely with the liability to certain dis eases with which female machine operators were afflicted by reason of the constant tax on the lower limbs, and must prove to bb a b'essing to them, as well as a great ad vantage to the general public. A Model Office Holder. —A man named Platt Madisgn assumes to represent Lincoln county in the Atlanta Agency. He bus not been In that county since the 4th of July, 1868, and probably never spent a month there altogether in his life. While the Agency is in session he draws nine dol lars per day, and when it adjonrns he goes buck to a $1,300 per annum place on the .State Road. Os course “ loyalty” has uo more burning, shining light, no moi*> ar dent champion in all the land than Madison. The tears stream down his checks, and lie fairly howls with anguish when anybody insinuates that Bullock, Blodgett A Go. are plundering and ruining the Bute, and that all such raiders as Madison ought to he caught and punished. [Afeteon Infograph ill Afeuenger. Philadelphia Moving Booth We had a visit some days ugo from a representative of a large mid wealthy dry goods house In Philadelphia, who came South to examine Into the practicability of transferring one half their business to Bavauuah. Hu re mained here several days, contracted for a hue farm on the coast near thu city, and re turned fully Impressed that lit* cliauge would Us a highly mivaulagoons one. Wa wulcoiue all siicu eapltaliats tuMivanuah | fhnumaA llt/mMi&m W Johnson, charged with t|is killing of isiliesiNsu *'og«n In Atlanta, ha* been rs fussed on SIAUf bail, uudsr Aoksss m/tut A Touching Obituary. A disconsolatC'husband thus bewails the loss of his wife and apostrophises her mem ory: Nomore those mv bSrk“w P “ 1 °, ft my boots ‘ au<l P art iny back ha:r, as only a true wife can No ho°d r and n J*t OSe re P len,s >‘ coal *£**£«* palK Ko lnore win she £ era P^ tuoas storms of winter f away to bnild th c Are, without disturbing the slumbers of the man who doted on her so artlessly. Her en,b ? la,ed . in my heart of hearts. I wanted o embalm her body, but I found cheaper C ° Ul<l Cmbalm hc, ‘ mo »<T much 1 procured of Eli Mudget, a neighbor of mine, a very pretty gravestone. His wife was consumptive, and he had kept it on hand several years, in expectation of her death. But she ralli and that Spring, and his hopes were blasted. Never shall I forget this poor man’s grief when I asked him to part with it. “ Take It, Skinner,” , “i “ teke it, and may you never know what it is to have your soul racked with disappointment as mine has been!" And he burst Into a flood of tears. His spirit was indeed utterly crushed. I had the following epistle engraved upon the gravestone: “To the memory of Tabitha, wife of Moses Skinner, Esq., the gentlemanly editor of the Trombone. A kind mother and ex emplary wife. Terms, two dollars a year, invariably iu advance. Office over Cole man’s grocery, up two flights. Knock hard. ‘We shall miss thee, mother; we .shall miss thee, mother.’ Job printing solicited.” Thus did my lacerated spirit cry out in agony, even as Rachael weeping for her children. But one ray of light penetrated the despair of iny soul. The undertaker took his pay in job printing, aud the sexton owed me a little account I should not have gotten in any other way. Why should we pine at the mysterious ways of Providence and vicinity ? (Not a conundrum). I here pause to drop a silcut tear to the memory of Tabitha Ripley, that was. She was au eminently pious woman, aud could fry the best piece of tripeT evor slung under iny vest. Her picked-up dinners were a perfect success, and she always doted on foreign missions. Queer Freak of a Chicken—The Troubles of a Colored Citizen.— Near Paterson there lives a colored person named James Stewart, whom the commu nity, by common consent, have dubbed Commodore Stewart. He is a talented but eccentric individual, and has a weakness for chickens. On one occasion, being found near a poultry yard under suspicious circumstances, he was interrogated rather sharply. by the owner of the premises as follows: “ Well, Jim, what are you doing here?” “Oh, nuflin, nuflin; jesswalkin rouu’.” “ What do you want with my chickens?” “Nuflin at all; I was only lookin’ at ’em, dey looks 'so nice.” The answer was both conciliatory aud conclusive, aud would have been satisfac tory had it not been for Jim’s hat. This was a rather worn, soft felt, a good deal too large for its wearer’s head, and it seem ed to have a motion entirely unusual iu hats, and manifestly due to some remarka ble cause. It seemed to contract and ex pand aud move of itself, aud (dearly with out, Jim’s volition. So the next inquiry was: “ What is the matter with your hat?” “My hat ? Dat’s an old hat. I’se fond ofdat hat.” “ Well, take it off and let’s look at it.” “ Take dis hat off? No, sab. I’d ketch cold in my head, sartain. I always keep my hat on when I’m out o’doors.” And with that Jim was about beating a hasty retreat, when, at his first step, a low “ kluk, kluk, only too clearly from the region of his head-gear. This was fatal, and Jim was stopped and forced to remove his hat, when a plump, half-grown chicken jump ed out and ran hastily away. The air with which the culprit gazed after it was a study for a painter; it expressed to per fection wonder and plerplexity blended, but not a trace of guilt. Slowly he spoke, as though explaining the matter to himself, and accounting for so remarkable an inci dent : “ Well, if dat ain’t de funniest ting I eb ber did see. Why, dat ar chicken must have dim up de leg o’ mv pantaloons.” The Currency of Texas.— A Texas correspondent of the Columbus Inquirer, who has just gone there, aives many very interesting facts concerning the country. He says: “ The circulating medium is specie, which, to a reconstructed man, is very annoying. When you have any money it weighs your pocket down. I had occasion to send SIOO iuto Navarro coun ty, to pay for some corn, aud had to send it in half dollar pieces. Currency can be passed, but unless the party is posted, or not pressed, at a ruinous discount. In trade, or at regular broker shops, it ranges at about two or two and a half per cent, below the New York quotations. But there is no scarcity of gold and silver here, and all transactions are strictly iu coin.— Some persons must be making money out ol the immigrants who brought currency along with them.” Egbert Smith, living on the line of Wal ton and Gwinnett counties, was killed last week by the limb of a tree foiling upon him. Mrs. Brooks, of Walton county, died last week, aged 90 years. The local paper says she leaves probably more descendants than any other woman in the State. J. A. Clarke, of jSoeial Circle, was run over and his thigh broken, by au omnibus, while going from Monroe to Social,Circle, oil Thursday. Tbe LaGrange Reporter details the melan choly aud accidental death of Mr. E. C. Pittman. He was hunting, and set down to rest, his gun fel! against his breast, and fired, killing him almost insrantiy. The wife of Mr. J. L. Schaub, formerly Miss Geraldine Goolsby, of Macon, died at Eatonton on Friday morning of meningitis She was only sick twenty-four hoars, most of the time unconscious. Fan Parish, (colored) after a preliminary examination, has been committed to Fulton county jail, on the charge of murdering Mailnda Underwood, a white girl found dead in Atlanta several days ago. Evi dence circumstantial. The Savannah Newt reports a shooting affair, ou Sunday, just previous to the departure of the steamer Dictator for Charicxtou, in which Mr. Jus. Gluaaou, the clerk In the warehouse, received a severe wound in Urn left lug from a pistol shot from the hands of thu freight clerk on board ; UIH steamer, Mr, A, N. McNulty, > The Walton Juorntd learn* that a man 1 by the name of Mlmpaon, who resided near Nuwh* rn, Newton county, w*» Mlteri to I hi* gnu* by a party ol dUgoiMe! men, aud I not Oi: iI. <ii,. nlglii ni the 24d oiIMP ■on lt«* in*,l ihe i> pill*il'o for *ou»e year* peat of bring rather a uotrioua character, bat no naoaa ia known why the aaaaaaina tinu waa tommituid SPECIAL JMOTIOJKS. *** ®fiORS OF YOUTH.—A gentleman who inbred i ,r yean from Nerroui Debility, Premature Decay, nod all the effects of youthful Indlecretlon. will, for the sake of suffering humanity, send free to all who need it. the receipt and direction! for making the aimple remedy by which he waa eared. Bofferers wiehlng to profit by the edvertleer'e experience, can do ao by ad dreasing, in per fect confidence. JOHN B. OGDEN, _ tp7 ' clT l« Cedar etreet. New York; THE SEASON AND ITS DANGERS. The human body ia oh It fly composed of Uaaucs and fibree as sensllivc to every change in the the almoephore as the most delicate electromotor, or the quicksilver in a barometer tube. The stomach, *he skin, the nervos, tho lungs and the excretory organs are especially liable to be affect ed by these variations, and tho best defense against their disastrous tendency Is to keep the digestive machinery, which feeda and nourishes the whole system, In good working order. If the stomach Is weak or disordered, neither tho blood nor the bile can be in a healthy state, and npon the fitness of these two importent fluids for the offices assigned to them by nature, and the regularity of their flow, health In a great measure depends. When tho air la heavily laden with chilling vapors, na it often ia at this season of the year, the digestion aboold be an object of peculiar care. If it is weak and languid, the whole pbysioal structure will be en ervated. If itia vigorous, the entire organization will be strong to resist tho untoward and depressing Influence of a damp and vitiated atmospkore. A pure uud powerful ionlo ia therefore especially needed as a safeguard against the diseases moat com mon in tho Bpring, and Hoatetter’s Stomach Bitters being the most wholesome and patent medicine of the class at present known, a oeurseef it is particu larly advisable at this period of the year. The stom ach will thereby ho toned and strengthened, the Hvor and bowels regulated, tho norvous system braced up, and nature put in a state of active defense against ihe malsma which superinduces intermittent and remit tent fevers, rheumatisms, nervous debility, headache, hypochondria and other complaints whtoli are apt to assail the untoned and unfortified organizations. The body is strengthened without exciting the bruin, and consequently no unpleasant reaction follows its reviv ing and renovating operation. dactmblfi JUST OUT. CHERRY PECTORAL TROCHES, superior to all others for Colds, Coughs, Bore Throat, Bronchitis and Hoarseness. None so pleusant. None euro so quick. Manufactured by RUBHTON & CO., ABtor House, New York. No moro of those horrible tasted, nauseating Brown Cubeb tilings. For sale by W. H. TUTT & LAND at Proprietors’ Prices- janfi-d»c3m KF" IMPORTANT.—THOBE WHO HAVE attained to the greatest eminence In the science of Medicine, and who have by a life-long study of, and experience with, the human organism, obtained groat Insight into the origijy and pathology of diseaso, are yet, notwithstanding all their profound and learned theories, confessedly groping In tho darkss to the Jlrti caute of any and all diseases that affect our race. But this much has been clearly elucidatod, and is beoomo an axiom with the learned profession, that by far tho greatest number of our aline ents are directly traccub le to derangement of tho digestive functions, and if “ good digestion wait on appotito,’’ health will be the almost uniform result. Acting upon this axiom, the inventor of DR. HURLEY'S CELEBRATED STOMACH BITTERS has been eminently success ful (judging from the many testimonials that are con stantly pouring in upon, him through the mulls and press), in preparing a remedy to meet and “ nip in the bud” all thiß long list of obscure and distressing de rangements that render “ life scarce worth the living.” We are glad to learn that, tho public bore are be ginning to appreciate these BITTERS npon their In trinsic merits, and that they can be had everywhere. Bee advertisement In anothor column. dec2s-oodlf TJse Russel Coe’s Su perphosphate. It is the Best. HJANHO (_)JD! A MEDICAL EBSAY ON THE CAUSE AND CUBE OF PREMATUKE DECLINE IN MAN, the Treatment of Nervous and Phy sical Debility, etc. “ There is no member of society by whom this book will not be found naefnl, whether such person holds the relation of Parent, Pre ceptor, or Clergyman." —Medical Timet and Gazette. Sent by mail on receipt of fifty cents. Ad dress tbe Author, Or. E. Dh F. CURTIS, seps-ly Washington, D. C. HAMS. HAMS. 6 HHDS. of CHOICE TENNEBSEE HAMS io Tierces “ BEAR GRASS ” HAMS on hand and to arrive. mb3-3 J. O. MATHEWSON. Ayer’s Hair Vigor, For restoring Gray Hair to its natural Vitality and Color. §A dressing which is ot once agreeable, healthy, and effectual for preserving the hair. Faded or gray hair is soon restored to its original color with the gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thick ened, falling hair checked, and bald ness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are destroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed. But such as remain can be saved for usefulness by this application, Instead of fouling the hair with a pasty sedi ment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. Its occasional will prevent ttic hair from turning gray or falling off, and consequently prevent baldness. Free from those deleterious substances which make sortie preparations dangerous ami iujuriotw to the hair, tbe Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, ’ nothing also can be fouud m> desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it done not *oil white eumhrie, and yat laeta long on the hair, giving it u rich glmury lustra and u grateful perfume, Preparad by Dr ( J. (J. Ayar & Cos., PHfiOT 1041. AND ANAIY'IIHAI, t'l/MII.I*, ItOW tilth, MANN. DMIOW *100) W If HAMMETT, Atfttuete, Ag»at. Del •tafgejy Patapsco (riiaiio! We are happy to inform the Planters of Georgia and Carolina that we are iron.*™* fill their orders for this standard fertilizer, which we guarantee equal, at least, to the article sold tef which wThave a W i° “* “ noce9Mry 10 P nbu#h certificates of its snperlor excellent tof which we have a large number), as its reputation is fully established. We oiler no Fro interns, but simply add that we will nse every effort to fill all orders. But as the will plication W ° ttW ****** *° th °*° F,antor * who “> giro It a trial, to nuke an early ap- By reference to the Georgia Farm Journal, ot December 4, 1869, it will be soon that Dr Pm. dmton, of Hancock county, on an experimental plat, where 17 different Commercial Hsasres were tried, the PATAPSCO yielded the largest per rentage, after paying cost Wc are also AGENTS lor Chappell’s Baltimore Auoniated Phosphate, and The Navana Ammoniated Soluble Phosphate, Manufactured under Letters Patent of the United States, granted G. A. Lrenw, Chemist of Pa tapsco Guano Company. The above Fertilizers sold at s reasonable advance on the cost of manufacture, for CASK OR CITY ACCEPTANCE. STOVALL & EDMONDSTON. Manure Depot. THE OLDEST GUANO HOUSE IN AUGUSTA. Established - 1855. Os this one thing you may bo sure : You’ll have poor crops without MANURE. I BEG TO OFFER PURE PERUVIAN GUANO, 2,000 LBS. GASH. SHO LAND PLASTER. CASH S3O ON TIME 25 SOLUBLE PACIFIC GUANO. CASH S7O ON HUE 80 FLOUR OF RAW UNSTEAMED BONE. CASH S7O ON TIME. 80 GROUND BONE. • CABH SOS ONIIME 75 COMPOUND ACID PHOSPHATE OF LIME (For Composting with Cotton Seed.) CABH. SSO ON TIME 57 50 Time Sales are payable by Planters’ Drafts on good Factors, maturing Ist Novomber, 1870, without interest. J. O. MATHEWSON, 285 Broad street. decs-cow*c.lm RUSSEL COE’S Superphosphate of Lime, FOR BALE BY C. H. PHINIZY, Cotton P’actor, -A.gent, ATJGHTSTA. GhA. jan2o-dt*c2m Fishing Tackle. We HAVE JUBT RECEIVED A large and full assortment of all kinds of HOOKS, SILK, GRASS, LINEN, HEMP AND COTTON LINES, Japan and Bamboo Pole*, Spinning and Spoon Bait, Ac. Wo have also bad manufactured a superior quality of HOOK, adapted to our fishing, called here Augusta Bream Hook, To which we would call the attention of those interested. MERCHANTS will be supplied at the very Lowest Prices. PLUMB A LEITNEH. febfi- deod eel m PURL PfcHUVUN GUANO For Sal© by C. H. RUIN IZY, COTTON FACTOR wtiJdiUol Flower Seed. fJt/MT RBOKIVKI), a flit* wroriim ut of Urn (JIfOICJCtfT VIJIWKH NEED, Tb*y are from {(tillable MwaDim n, end ceu lie 4e> ptmded upon Pld/Mil * LKITNKII NMNaeAnDe Buy the Best Super phosphate of Xjime— Russel Coe’s. jin3odtac3ra DR. SHALLENBERQUI’S Fever and Ague ANTIDOTE Always Stops the Chills. This Medicine has been before the Public fifteen years, and is still ahead of all other known remedies. It does not purge, does not sioken tho stomach, 1b perfectly safe in any dose and undor all circumstances, “"A is the only Medicine that will CURE IMMEDIATELY and permanently every form of Fever Ague, because it is a perfect Antidote to ITlnluriu. Sold by all Druggists. novl3-d*ely Buy the Best Super phosphate of Lime— Russel Coe’s. I The symptoms of Uver iMiiiiuivsirsarrKt taken for rheumatism.— The stomach is affected with loss of appetite and sickness, bowels In general costive, some times alternating with lax. The bead is trou- heavy sensation, con siderable loss of memory, H accompanied with palnfnl sensation of having left undone something which ought to have been done. Often complaining of weakness, debility and low spirits. Sometimes some of the above symptoms attend the dis ease, and at other times very few oi them; but the Livor is generally the organ most involved. Cure the Liver with db, sraraoivs* Liver Regulator, A preparation ot roots snd herbs, warranted to be strictly vegetable, and can do no iojury to any one. It has been used by hundreds, and known for the last thirty-five years as one ot the most re liable, ciflcacloas and harmlesi preparations ever offered to the suffering. If taken regularly and persistently it Is snre to cure. I m Dyspepsia, besdaehs, nitnnr i mnn Jaundice, costiveness^lck Khillll ATiiU headache, chronic dlar- UuffUlffllUA. rbcea, affections ot the bladder, camp dysentery, ■■■■■■■■■■■■l affections ot the kidneys, lever, nervousness, chills, diseases of the skin, impurity of the blood, melancholy or depres sion of spirits, heartburn, colic, or pains In the bowels, pain in the head, fever and ague, drop sy, bolls, pain in tbe back and limbs, asthma, erysipelas, female affections, and billons dis eases generally. Prepared only by jr. h. ZEiuk a co>, Druggists, Macon, Go. Price, fl; by mail, $1 25, and for sale, by all Druggists In Augusta. u«v24-dlawAcly COTTOS AID I! Ml HIS. LEATHER BELTING AND HOSE, IVIADEpf best Oak 'fanned LEATHER, ai.d warranted tot quality. Also, on band, supplies of nil kinds (or fur nished to order) fur COTTON and W' OLEN MILLS, RAILROADS MACHINE SHOPS. GRIBT apu HAW MILLS, Ac., Ac. fiver it for sale ol Wool Cartflrxr Mnebineff, from 21 to 48 inches wide, Jack", Looms, Pickers, Bur' Machines, Card Grinders, Wove Wire, ail sizes auc numbers, Ac., ft l l of (be u * l ‘iafirH-ffif-Si.r?- . so.f a.a.!,,-..,1i,. fohl7 2awd*clm RTA •'X GEORGIA, RICHMOND OGPN TY.—Where*., Kills W. Girards?, AdmlnlMi*- wl* o' the mute of Kdsrsrd Olrartlov, deceased, ap plUw to oi" tor IwUore of Dleiuie# on; Th en are, th»r«for«. to oh" uud ndrtwmleh, alt and *tnf4)ar, the Indreditrid "realtor*pfsaiddmwtMwt,to be tin! appear at mv irfftco oil or before the (Iret Mou Up In April me, to *b"W owes, if any they have, wby raid letter* should not be yr mted. <1 ,»n under my band and ofil" tl e e'ieUm , »to**e, ordma/y. W l® f•» WV o4a«, mj *» >or« U.eTr.l M .•••(#> Iu Pelouq.e )««i, t.< »b , # o*e, J •to I." |«b BHMwcStoMiwl I Drawer!. WM*