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LOCAL DEPARTMENT
ACTS with gentleness and thoroughness
upon the Liver and Uaneral Circulation
—keep* the bowel* in natural motion and
cleanses the system from ail impnritiea. Ney-
L Ueas
in lajkavMHHiMHjrorm!
Torpidity, Enlargement, Dyspepsia, Indiges
tion loss of Appetite, Nausea, Sour Stomach,
Heart Burn,Debility, Low Spirits, Cold’Feet,
aad. Hand*, Costiveness, Listlessnefan. Cholic,
Chronic Diarrhea, and Chronic Chill* and
Fever.
Compounded in strict accordance with skill
ful chemistry and scientific pharmacy, this
purely Vegetable Compound bus. after the se
been Great
Restorative and Recuperant by the enlighten
ed testimony of thousands using it; so_har
moniously adjusted that it keeps the Liver in
healthful «ciion; end when the directions ate
observed the process of waste and replenish
ment in the human system eominnp* uninter
ruptedly to a ripe old age, and man, like the
patriarchs of cld. drops into the i/rare full of
vears. without- a struggle. whenever Death
claims ltisfff*rer oga
tive. a |LiverMe«icrneJciapted to
the e 1 1 c ate
temperament and robust constitution, it can
be given with equal safety and certainty ot
success to the young child, invalid lady or
strongman. • , , ,
For sale by T. 8. POWELL, and J. J.
McDonald.
Read! Read!! Read !! !-It is well
known to Doctors and Ladies, that wo
men are subject to numerous diseases pecu
liar to tbeir sex—such as suppression of the
Menses, Whites. Painful Monthly Periods,
Rheumatism of the Back and Womb, Irregu
lar Menstruation, Hemorrlvage or Excessive
,» Flow,” and Prolapsus Uteri, or tailing of
the Womb. The profession has in vain, tor
yn«Dy years, sought diligently for some rem
edy that would enable them to treat these
diseases with success. At last that remedy
has been discovered, by one of the moat skill
ful physicians in ueorgia. That remedy is
Dr. Bradfleld’s Female Regulator.
Blooming in all her Pristine Beauty Strength
and Elasticity—Tried Doctor after Doc
tor.
Rl'ti.kdok, Ga.. Feb. 16, 1871.
- This is to certify that my wife was an* in
valid for six years. Had disease id the
womb, attended witli headache, .weight in
lower part of the back ; suffered from lan
guor, exhaustion and nervousness, loss ap
petite »nd flesh. She had become so ex
hausted and weak, her friends were appre
hensive she would never get well. I tried
doctor after doctor and many patent medicines
—had dispaired of her improvement,when for
tunately she commenced taking D.'r. J. Brad,
field’s Female Regulator. She is now well,
and three or four bottles cured her. ’ Ira
proved in health, appetite and flesh, she is
blooming in all her pristine bounty /strength
and elasticity. I regard you as her savior
from'the dark portals of death, ami my ben
efactor. May your (shadow never grow less,
and you never become weary in well-doing.
John Stum*.
For sa'e by J. J. McDONALD and T. S-.
POWELX. *
Flavoring "Extracts are of primary iin
portance in 0' okery 1 and ot "all articles oi
this description- 1 t lie highly concentrated
Standard Extracts, prepared l>y Soseph Bur
tiett & Cos., Boston, are pronounced by lean
ing cuisiniers—l J iblci-B>»r Blot among the
limniber—tbe purest jmd best. . •
Human Wrecks.— Every day and hour we
meet with breUen-down specimens of liuui&ii
itv —wreegs that seem past hope pfsalvawe.— ■
At least seven ehilnhs of these might be filled
with new vitality,*by a coarse of Dr Walk
er’s California Vinegar*.Bitters Many are
suffering from the reaction ot yum-polluted
bitt.cn or powerful tninerStls. It is character
istic of Dr. Walker’s Great Restorative that
it neutralizes the effect, ot these miss ca’led
remedies, and accomplishes, iu due time, a
pei feet cure.
SSO,(HU) dollars will he paid for any remedy
which will cure Chronic Rheumatism, Pains
in the Limbs,"Back and Chest, Sore throat,
Insect stings, Croup, Dysentery, Colic, Sprains
and Vomiting, quicker than lJr. Tobias’ Ven
etian Liniment ; established in 1817 ; never
fails. Sold bv all Druggists. Depot, 10 Park
Place, New York.
Svapnia is Opium purified of its sickening
and poisonous qualities. It is a pertedl ano
dyne not .producing headache oi oouslipaii n
of bowels, as is the case wilh other prepara
tions of opium. John Farr, Chemist, New
York,
Natubs GivesUs Truth, hut she does not,
.preserve and purity tVm. That must lie
done with fragrant Sozodmit. * The dental
bone and its enamel casing are made invul
nerable to all destructive influences by the
daily.'use oi this beneficent preparation.
Pratt's Astral Oil.— More accidcnccs
accur from using unsafe oils, than from
gteuinboa's and railroads combined. Over
200,000 families continue to burn Pratt’s As
tral Oil, and no aid ents direct you indi
rectly have occurred from burning, storing
or handling it. Oil House ot Llias. Pratt,
Established 1770, New York,
A Beautiful \Vhite, Soft, smooth and
clear skin is produced by using O. W. Laird’s
•>Bloom ot Youth.” It icmoves tau, 1 reck
les. sunburns, and all oilier discolorations
from the skin, leaving the complexion brill
iant .aud beautiful. Sold af all druggists.
This preparation is entiiely free from any
materials detrimental to health.
Just'The Remkdy Needed. — Thanks to'
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing By nip, we have
lor years been relieved Irifin sleepless nights
of painful watching w;ith poor, suffering,
teething children.
For DyspePsla. —lndigestion, depression
of spirits and general debility ir. tln-ir vari
ous forms ; also, as* preventive against Fe
ver and Agile, and other Intermittent fevera
The Ferro-Phosjilirtraied Efixir ofCalisaya,
made by Caswell, Ha/.ard # &. Cos.. New York,
aud sold by ail Druggists, is the best tonic
and as a tonic for patients recovering .from
l*ver or other sickness, it has no equal.
RigLKY’s Genuine GolMen BeLl Cologne
Water according to the original formula of
I’revost. Paris, So long Bud iavOiable known
to the customers of llavilund, Hanoi am)
Risley and their branches, for Its fine petrna
nent fragrance is now made by H. W. Risley
and the trade supplied by his successors, Mor'-’
gan & Risley, Wholesale Druggists, New
Yofk:
Thueston’B Ivory Pearl 4*doth, pb wnkr.
best article known for cleansing and
preserving the teeth and cUms. Sold by all
Druggists. Price U 5 aud 51) cents per bottle.
F. C. Wells & Cos.. New York.
Carbolic Salvf, unequalled as u Healltig
Compound. Physicians recommend it as the
most wonderful remedy ever know'll. Price
25 cents per box. John F. Henry, Sole
Proprietor, 8 College Place New York.
Christ ad one's Hair Dye. —This magnifi
cent compound is beyond contingency, the
safest and most reliable Dy in existence ;
never failing to impart to the Hair,‘uniformi
ty of color, noursliment and elasticity. Man
ufactory, 68 Maiden Lane. New York.
Cuthbert Prices Current.
COTTON 23(3*13}
Bacon—Clear Sides 8j
lfib “ 14®‘5
Canvassed Hams B}®Bj
* Bhon!ders 7J®?|
Butter —Goshen 3ii@f»>
Country 30® 4
Bbk'sw ix. 23
Candles. 15}®2(l
Coma Rio per 1b... 25®27}
Java ’* *’ '. 28@23
Egg 5,....,.. ' 15
Flour—per bb1.................9 50® 12 fin
Grain—Corn, per bn > i 15@t 20
Rye 1 75®2.W>
Oats 95 a I oo
Peas. 1.25® 15}
Honey....' 10® 124
Lard !2}®ls
Mackerel —Kits 1.75®2.23
Rags—Clean G--tton per lb 2}®3
Sugar—Brown per lb 13@15
C ” “ 14@15}
A “ ...15
• Crushed -,lf^i!lß
Byrui<—per gal 50@75
Tobacco—per lb 60® L 26
Bagging ...... 2fi®24
Iron Ties 7}®to
Don’t be Discouraged.—There
is a lady residing in Sumter county
who has been married for twenty
five years, and.has just given birth
to her first child, a fine looking
boy. '
Mr; Sumner says he stood by the
cradle of the Republican party, but
is not willing to follow its hearse
Let him get out of the hack, then,
and give us his seat. t\ e would
rather attend that funeral than to
go to-the Boston Jubilee. — Couri
er Journal, v
THE CUTHBERT APPEAL
Home Affairs.
, ■' . - " ' ' r i —=
For Salk —A Harr Chance. —A
splendid and fashionable walnut
bed room set. -Also, Wardrobe,
Kitchen safe, dining room furniture,
and cooking utensils, at
A. BLOCH’S.
Outhbert.
Too Late. —The regular install
ment of. “A ton r through Texas,”
etc., came to hand too late /or this
week’s issue. Will appear in our
next.
B&" The Georgetown Base Ball
Club beat the Eufaula Club, badly,
in a match game on the llth inst.
Our boys had better look sharp;
they may not find it as easy a job
to win next time.
Correcrion.—-Tr our notice last
week of the flag presented to most
adept of the Magnolia Club, we
stated was a present from Miss
Cobbie Hood. .We should have
stated it was a present from Mr.
Geo. C. Bancroft, Capt., of the Ist
9, offered.by him as a stimulant to
his men,-and as a mark of -his ap
preciation of their efforts.
The flag was made by Miss Hood,
in great taste and neatness, as a to
ken of her appreciation of the pleas
ures of the occasion.
Fixe Cotton. —We were shown
on Wednesday morning last a stock
of cotton, grow n on Messrs. Weav
er & Tumlin’s plantation in Miller
county, which meastured 3 feet 4
inches, and contained 8l perfect
forms, besides several bolls and
blooms. This is tlie finest stock of
cotton we have seen this year, and,
havc«not seen an account of any in
any of our exchanges that equaled
it. Hence we claim the finest cot
ton of the season.
Mr. Weaver assured us it was
an average stock of a 20 acie field,
'and that ijt. was produced without
the use of fertilizers. This speaks
well of his knowledge of farming.
Work Commenced.. —The work
men have commenced . the brick
work on the livery stable lot, and
the walls are going, up. rapidly.—
Glad to see it.
W e have had delightful sea
sons week, and our plant
ing friends begin to Wear a content
ed smile. Crops are generally in
good order and growing finely.
About this season* of the
year everybody needs motley, and,
strange to say. but few have it.—
We never knew au exception to this
rule, in these parts.- ’
lbarn that Itev’. It. J.
Curly, of Dawson, will preach- th«.
Commencement Sermon of Bethel
Female College this year, but have
been unable to learn the day. on
which it will be delivered. We
hope vet to bp able to lay before
our readers the programme for com
mencement week, at this college
An*y information upon the subject
will be thankfully received.
Sawtell wants to sell out the
Cuthbert Appeal. Elam Christian,
the Campion paper-starter of Geor
gia,first set that machine going.—
How would it do for him to t ke
hold of it again.— JSav. Advertiser.
You ai*e somewhat mistaken We
set most of the type, made up the
forms, did the press work, and
mailed the first issufc of the Apical,
in 1866, and have been at the helm
ever sincei
Junk apples and cholera morbus
arc the latest commodities m Macon.
«• Fifteen hundred melons arrived
in Savannah on Saturday last from
Florida. * -
The stores in Savannah, .Colum
bus, and other important places are
dosed at 6 o’clock of an evening.—
How would such ah arrangement
work in Cuthbert ? • • ..
Thk Cause, of the Advance in
CottoN.— The Financial Chronicle
of May 81st, attributes the ad
vances last week to the very small
receipts at the United States ports,
together with the improvement at
Liverpool* which, in a limited way,
revived the demand for export, en
abled the bulls to get a twist on the
shorts. Although the advance is
the result of the r fact that the shorts
have been cornered, the movement
has been helped forward by steadi
ness of the legitimate demand from
American spinners and from ship
pers leading to a rapid reduction
in stocks. The Chronicle thinks
the advance is not mainly due to
speculation.
The Findlay and Craig Eclipse
Press of Macon, beat everything on
the ground, at the Nashville Expos
sitiou In putting bis press in po
sition, Mr. C. E. Findlay had his
left hand badly crushed.
At a game of base ball on Satur
day, at New York, the Athletics
were beaten by the Mutuals by a
score of 3 to 2.
Cherries are selling in Rome at
thirty cents per peck.
A corps of engineers is about to
survey tbe rotft of theHawkinsville
and EHfaula railroad.
The Grazy Women’s Can
didate.
Mrs. Victoria C. Woodhull, the
-candidate of the Equal Rights par.
ty, is out with an address and let
ter of acceptance of some three col
umns in length “formal statement
of a simple fact,” (alluding to the
choice they had made of herself as
their Presidential candidate) had
been received, she forthwith enters
into an elaborate essay on the
wrongs and rights of everybody,
meek and long-suffering woman in
particular. Starting from the broad
basis of.the earliest social relation
ship of men and women, she pauses
to show that the reformers have the
majority among men and only need
to be united to succeed, and then
bears down upon the all-absorbing’
theme of the present political" con
test. Bhe claims the merit of hav
ing been a free*spoken woman, and
advises her supporters, that in be
coming their candidate she must
not be expected to hold her tongue.
Politics, she thinks, mu§t give way
to sociology, and that in turn to oth
er and longer phrases. Her special
function, she says, is breaking down
the old and ushering in the new;
and, in accomplishing this, her spir
itual provisions reveal to hep views
which she looks upon with dread.
She agrees With Horace Greely up
on several points He being a man,
and ineligible to the highest office
on the woman’s ticket, she has for
him no feeling of rivalry or jeal
ousy. Standing upon “a - plat
form which .strike dire directly at
the heart of the system under which
we live,” she gratefully accepts the
nomination, aud pledges herself, by
every honorable mean's, to Secure
the success of the ticket.
Desperate Rencounter — Two
Negroes Killed. —From a young
gentteman from Smithville,, Ga., we
get the particulars 6f a most des
perate and deadly rencounter be
tween two negro nien on the.place
of Mr. John Allen, about two miles
from Smithville, Thursday last.—
Their names were Sumter English
and JohnJon.es. They had had a
quarrel about some work during
the forenoon, after which it ap
pears that both went and arfned
themselves with revolvers, and af
ter the quarrel was renewed by En
glish, when Jones started to walk
off and as lie did'so, English shot
him in-the back. Jones then turn
ed, and, drawing his pistol returned
the shot, hitting English in the side.
English fired again aiitl Jones re
turned it. Ayd thus they . stood
face to face, about eight paces apart
—English, firing four sluots and
Jones three, and not a shot -on ei
ther side failing to take effect.—
Jones was killed dead on the spot,
and English died of Isis wounds the
next day. t
It is unnecessary for us to add,
that these colored troops “fought
nobly.”— Hlvfjiula ' Times.
V Acw Cure for Tootli
. ache.
We learned yesterday of a nov
el, and as the sequel showed, a
most efficacious cuie for the above
very painful complaint. It appears
that a celebrated dentist, residing
•within a thousand miles of our
office, has in his employ a youth
ful colored Esoiilapius who’s mind
is bent on making important dis*
coveries A few days since, whilst
exploding some mtro-glycerine toi
pedoes, the dentist suggested to
him that that was a most valuable
invention, as by cracking One be
tween the teeth, the toothache
could be very easily got rid of. On
yesterday during the absence of
the Doctor, he had an opportuni
ty of experimenting on the tooth of
a six footed Ogeecheeite, and he
succeeded. The torpedo having
been placed in position, the Brad
lqyite cracked, -and the tooth, a
conclave molecular one, about an
inch in circumference and with a
cavity as large as the crater of
Mount Vesuvius, was driven intq
the upper jaw, followed by a roar
from that darkey’s capacious month
that would have done credit to tlie
chorus at the Boston Musical Fes
t'.val. He danced and leaped and
yelled, and the more he did so, the
colored student followed' until the
noise.attracting the notice of the
passers by, the Doctor was called
in; and such a sight as met his
gaze—blood flowing in streams
from the mouth of a large negro
who was apparently writhing in
the last* agonies, and his office boy
turned lunatic. Mutual explana
tions followed ; the Ogeecheeite re
tired with a face as large as the
drum tba.t a certain Savannah Col
onel was said to swallow during
the war : nnd though the Doctor
states he does not consider science
is benefittecT afiy by the discovery,
yet he must acknowledge it is a
thorough ctire for the toothache.
We would report the tooth as be
ing -a complete wreck. —Savannah
Republican.
Anything to Beat Grant.—An
inebriated Democrat was dining at
a Western hotel the.other day.
“Beef, pork, mutton, veal, or
chicken ?” said the polite waiter.
“I don’t care a d—n,” was .the
reply ; i “anything to beat Grant.”
During the past week the Epis
copal Church at Thomasville, was
entered by means ot a false key,
and the carpet from the aisle and a
cushion from one of the seats sto
len.
If you would be well with a great
mind, leave him with a favorable
impression of-yotf; It with a little
mind, leave him with a favorable
opinion df himself. •
An East Saginaw Mich., paator
declines an addition of S2OO to his
salary, on the ground that it is more
than he wants to do to eollcet the
salary he'already has.
iron product amount
to about 5,000,000. tonß annually;
that of America about 2,0Q0,000
tons.
Five hundred thousand Masons
in the United States; #
The Philidelphia Conven
tion.
Philiddphia. J one s.—Ex-Gov
cruor Claflin, of Massachetts, called
the Republican Convention to order,
shortly after noon to-day, and after
a 'brief speech in eulogy of the Re
publican party, called upon Rev.
Alexander Reed, of Philade'phia,
who delivered prayer. Er Mayor
Morton McMichael, of Philadelphia,
was then elected temporary chair -
tnan, who made .an address of
thanks for the privilege of presi
ding even for a short time over the
Convention, and welcoming, as a
'Philadelphian, all the delegates to
that City, paying the highest trib
utes to Grant, sayiftg that he was
honester, better and truer than his
detractors.
John Nowlin, of New Jersey,
John R. Hubbard, of West Virgin
ia, H. Hotter, of Flordia, were elect
ed secretaries. Committees on
Credentials and Permanent Organi
zation were appointed, and after
wards Thos. Settle, of North Car
olina, was unanimously elected Pres
ident of the Convention.
Orr, of South Carolina, and
Henderson, of Missouri, were his
only contestants. Settle took the
chair and offered brief remarks,
and the Convention adjourned un-*
til 10 o’clock to morrow. Daring
the day speeches were made by
Morton, Logan, Gerritt Smith, Gov j
ernor Oglesby, John A. Gray, a
colored delegate from Arkansas,
and others, all of them in warm eu
logy of Grant, who, it is declared,
will be nominated by acclamation.
There is intense excitement over
the 'vice Presidency. The friends
of Wilson and Colfax are both
working with the greatest vim.
On the question of platform, it is
said the only diversity of opinions
that exist is on the tariff.
What a Little Oath Cost a
Man.— Some time ago one Michael
Moore, of South Boston, by some
means, came in posession of a piece-
Qf a §SO treasury note, No. 40,
sr3,iof the issued of 1861. This
lie forwarded to. the Treasury De
partment at Washington, accompa
nied with .an affidavit sworn to be
fore a justice of the peace, that
about the 17th of March, 1869, the
remainder, of the note was destroy
ed, and asking the department to
end him for the fragment which he,
enclosed SSO, with accured inter
est. Unfortunately for Mr. Moore,
however, a search in the depart
ment, It is said, brought to light
the identical note from which the
fragment bad been cut; the two
pieces-fitted precisely, and made the
the note complete. The comSe
was that Mr. Moore has been held
in the sum of $1,500 for trial on the
charge of attempting to defraud
the United States Treasury,, and
has also rendered himself liable to
indictment for perjury
The Antiquity.ot the Hu
man Race.
There are few subjects on which
such a variety of opinions may be
held and excellent authority ad
vanced to sustain them, as the prob
able antiquity of the human race.
Here are two very scientific opin
ions, between which the public is
welcome to choose.. Tlie Abbe
Moigus, well known in scientific
and literary circles as the editor-of
Les Mondcs, denies, emphatically,
that there die any scientific ’data
for belief in the existence of mail
upon the. earth previous to the date
which the Scripture assigns, for his
creation. According to tlie Abbe
the soils in which human remain,
have been found, and there have
been very thus far discovered
are movable, not fixed deposits,
that the arguments in favorof man’s
existence prior to the age indicated
by the Bible have already reached
their maximum, and will decrease
hereafter until they are utterly
abandoned.
On' the other hand, Professor
Fiske, of Harvard, in a lecture de*
livered in New York, says :
‘Tho spreading of the human race
implies its existence 1 from a date
long anterior to the great glacial
epoch, which cannot have been less
•than 200,000 years- ago—Lyell
thinks a million years ago—when
it is certainly known that men in
habited Europe and North Ameri
ca. Human .bones and implements
lately discovered are claimed as be
longing to. the Miocene epoch, and
there is a growing disposition
among polaxmto.logists to place the
origin of man as far back as this,
though the demonstration of this
date cannot yet be regarded conclu
sive. The minimum antiquity assig
nation fer the Miocene is five mil
lion.years.
New Laws of Georgia. —The
Legislature at its last session pass
ed two laws, which everybody
should know. One is, that when a,
planter gives a merchant, or cotton
factor a lien on any property or
for supplies to make his crop, that
if said property or crop is sold and
not applied to the payment of
said debt, such guilty party is lia
ble tp be put in jail for one year.
The other law* is to the effect that
ten per cent, interest is collectable
by law when inserted in note. Al
so it has been decided by the Su
perior Courts that verbal liens are
as good as written liens when the
facts can be proven. *
“Senator Brownlow rode in the
procession in knoxville, Tenn., on
Memorial Day. The Chronicle says
he appeared as well as he has for
years,”- We had really began to
flatter ourselves that the combined
ravages of whisky, disease and the
senility of a virulent old age, had
rather got the better of- old Bill.
But the prospects now are that if
the devil wants the old fellow, he
will .have to take him alive.—Har
ris.
“ I will not strike thee, bad man/’
said a Quaker one day, “ but I will
let this billet of wood fall on thee,
and at the. precise moment the “bad
nian” was floored by the weight of
a walking-stick that the Quaker
was known to carry. ' *
Greeley Defends Himself*.
We reproduce the following let
ter from Horace Greeley in reply
to a citation from the Union League
of New York, calling him to ac
count for signing Mr. Jefferson
Davis’ bail bond. It is one of the
many proofs, observable in Mr.
Greeley’s life, of Ills great independ
ence of mind and character. It is
in perfect keeping, with his odd but
honest record :
“ Gentlemen : I shall not attend
your meeting this evening. I have an
engagement out of town, and shall
keep it.. I do not recognize you as
capable of judging or even of fully
apprehending me. You evidently
regard me as a weak sentimental
ist, misled by a maudlin philosophy.
I arraign you as narrow minded
blockheads who would like to be
useful to a great and good cause,
but don’t know how. Your attempt
to base a great, enduring party on
the hate and wrath necessarily en
gendered by a bloody civil war, is
as though you should plant a ccflo
_ny on an iceberg which had some
how drifted into a tropical ocean.—
I tell you here, that out of a life
constantly devoted to the good of
human kind, your children will se
lect my going to Richmond and
signing that bail bond as the wisest
act of my life, and that'it did more
for freedom and humanity than all
of you w r efe competent to do though
you lmd lived to the age of Methu
selah. I ask nothing of you, then,
but that you proceed to your end
by a direct, frank and manly way.
JJon’t sidle offintoamild resolution
of censure, but movs the expulsion
which you proposed, and which I
deserve if I deserve any reproach
whatever. All I care for is that
you make this a square, stand-up
tight, and record your judgment
by yeas and nays. I care not how
few "vote*with me, or how many
vote against me, for I know that
the latter will repent in dust and
ashes before three years have jiassed.
Understand, once for all, that I
dare you, and defy you, and*that 1
propose to fight it out on the line
that I held from the day of Lee’s
surrender. So long as any man
was seeking to overthrow our gov
ernment lie was mv enemy; from
the hour in which lie laid down his
arms he was my formerly erring
countryman. So long as any is at
heart opposed to the national unity,
the Federal authority or to the as
sertion of the equal rights of all
men, which lias been practically
identified-with loyalty and national
ity, I shall do my best to deprive
him of power; but whenever he
ceases to be thus, I demand his
restoration to all the privileges of
American citizenship. I give you
fair notice that I shall-, urge the re
establishment of those now pro
scribed for.rebellion, as I shall feel
confident .that this course is consist
ent-tVith tlie freedom of the blacks
aud the unity of the Republic; and
that I shall demand a recall of all
now in exile onfy so-r participating
in rebellion, whenever the coun
try shall have been- so thoroughly
pacified - that its safety will not
thereby be endangered. And so,
gentlemen, hoping that you will
henceforth comprehend me some
what better than you have done, I
Remain yours, ' ,
Horace Greeley.
Industrial Museum of the
Georgia .State College,
It is proposed to establish in con
nection with the State College, Ag
riculture and the 'Mechanic Arts,
an Industrial Museum,-r- to con
tain models of improved agricuJtu
ral implements and machines, pro
duets of manufacture, and the me
chanic arts generally, representing
as far as possible all ’industrial in
terests. This appeal is therefore
made to. the public, not „alone to
Georgians and the people of the
South, but to all interested in In
dustrial Education, to aid us in this
endeavor, by sending to tbe Muse
um of tho State College whatever
.may illustrate Agriculture, Manu
factures, or any of the Mechanic
Arts,
We solicit models of machines of
any character; models of bridges;
plans and photographs of buildings,
bridges, etc; minerals, specimens of
ores; specimens of woods; products
of agriculture; products of manu
factures; exhibiting as far as possi
ble the various stages of preperation
and generally, whatever may illus
trate the industrial arts.-
Donations will be acknowledged
by publication in tbe Catalogue.
Direct all articles to President
State College,- Athens Georgia,'
marked “for 'lndustrial Museum l”
The authorities of the following.
Railroads, viz:.Georgia, Western &
Atlantic, Atlanta & West Point,
and Central with its connections,
have generously offered to give free
transportation to all articles design
ed for this Museum; and it is expec
ted the other Railroads of the State
will be equally liberal.
All Newspapers favorable to the
cause of industrial Education are
respectfully requested to publish
this card.
- W. L. Broun,
President.'
WnAifSoME People Drink.—An
expert by a, combination of spirits
of wine, cayenne pepper, and blue
stone, turned a gallon of water into
a gallon of whisky-at a cost of just
one cent.
Baltimore, June B. —The cleri
cal committee, by which charges
against Rev. Dr. Huston, of the
Methodist Episcopal Church,- South,
have been investigated, after a ses
sion of deliberation through the en
tire night; at 5 p’clock this morn
ing, declared him not guilty of the
charges.
And now it is claimed that Jo
seph wore the first Dolly Varden
suit. Since it is so suggested, it
looks very natural that Potiphar’-
wife should want it. So you see
that the Dolly Varden was the
cause of Joseph’s great trouble in
Egypt.
Elizabethtown, Ind , is called
Betsy for short.
The Texxcit.y ov Teeth.— When a nation
ns clear-headed a* the Americans once bc
coHie'convlneed, from long experience and
observation, that an article possesses superi
or excellence as a medicine, not all the pre
posterous clamor of all the worthies? nos
trum venders in the rpiiverse can shake tb«ir
belief in its efficiency. 1 ruth is a V?f/ tena
cious thing, as these worthies are begin,’ilng
to discover. Plantation Bitters has too firm
a hold upon tlie popular esteem to be in the
slightest degree effected by the .cold water
diatribes which the advertisers of lermetited
Slops, “ without a particle of alcohol,’’ are
so fond of launching against alcoholic prep
arations. The public knows very well that
"this peerless renovanl aud* tonic does con
tain spirits, but it also knows that they are
of the purest and most wholesome descrip
tion, viz.: fine old SI. Croix, the most ac
tive and beneficial diffuser of its remedial
and invigorating properties throughout the
system which could possibly be adopted.
' Pimples on-’the Face, Eruptions,
Blotches, Scrofulous diseases, and all sores
arising from impure blood, are cured by Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Discovery.
Dr. Terr's Sarsaparilla and Qcee.Vs
Delight.— No remedy possesses so •many
valuable Mediciqal Properties as this combi
nation of Roots. Herbs and Darks. The
Queen's Delight is aeknow edged by Physi
cians to tie the most powerful remedy known
for Impure Blood, Liver Complaint, Nerv
ousness ; Female Complaints ; Constipation ;
Rheumatism ; Diseases of the Kidneys;
Syphititic Affection ; Skit) Diseases; Chron
ic Complaints, etc. But in this preparation
it is combined with other vegetable products,
which rentiers Its virtues doubly valuable.—
Most diseases bave their origin in the blood,
and as a Blood Purifier the Sarsaparilla and
Queen’s Delight has no equal. It requires
but a trial to convince the most sceptical.
For Female Complaints, whether in young
or old, married or single ; nt the dawn of
womanhood or the turn of life. Dr. Tuft's
Liver Pills are au acknowledged remedy.
Dr. 7Hit's Hair Dye has Ho
bad Odor.
The Bah Room Remedy for weakness of
the stomach is a dose of Rum Bitters. They
are surcharged with Fusel Oil, a deadly ele
ment, which is rendered mors active by the
pungent with which it is combin
ed. If yotfr stomacjiJs weak, or your liver
or bowels disorderisn, tone, strengthen and
regulate them with Vinegar Bitters, a pure
Vegetable Stomachic, Corrective and Aperi
enj, from alcohol, and capable of infusing
uew vitality into your exhausted and disor
dered system. 4w
..
A PitifVl Gosrnitros.r-It is a ea<l tiling
to pass through 1 alf alive. Yet
there are thousand \vh(fed habitual condition
is one of languor and debility They com
plain of no specific disease; they sutler no
positive pain-,'hut they no relish for any
thing which affords mental t r sensuous pleas,
ure. In nine cases out of ten this state of
lassitude and torpor orises from a morbid
stomach. Indigestion destroys tlie energy of
both mind and body. When the waste of na
ture is not supplied by a due and- regular as
similation of the feed, every or. au is starved,
every function interrupted. --
Now, what does common sense suggest un
der these circumstances of depression? The
system needs rousing and strengthening ; not
nterely for an honr.or two, to sink afterward
iuto a mbre pitiable condition than ever (as it
assuredly would dJ if an ordinary alcoholic
stimulant w’cce resorted to,) but radically and
permanently.
How is this desirable object to be accom
plished ?_ The ailSwer to.tliis question, found
ed on the unvarying experience ot a quarter
of a century, is easily given. Infuse uew
vigor into the digestive organs by a course of
Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters Do not waste
time by administering temporary remedies,
but wake the system rp by recuperating the
fountaiu-head of physical strength and ener
gy, the great’Organ upon which all the oth
er organs depend for their nurture and sup
port.
By the time that a dozen doses of the great
vegetable lonic aud invigoraut have bceu ta
ken, the feeble frame of the dyspeptic will be*
gin to fe«l its benign influence. Appetite will
be created, and with appetite the capacity to
digest what it craves. Persevere until the
cure is complete—until healthful blood, fit to
be the material of flesh and muscle, bone and
nerve andbrain, flows through .the channels
of circulation, instead of the watery pabulum
with which jltey have heretofore been imper
fectly nourished.
RSDVEOVAIj !
MY Friends aud; customers will please take notice that I have re
moved my f
Hardware and Tin Establislim ent
to the North West corner of public square.. Store-room recently occu
pied by Allison & Perry. Opposite M. I. Atkins, where I hope to
meet all old and many new customers. Respectfully,
J. 8. ANTHONY.
Just Received
A Large Lot of
PAPER,
PENS,
INK,
BLANK Pooks,
PENCILS,
ETC.
Perfumery of all kinds,
Toilet and Stitidry Soaps.
For sale at tbe lowest prices
by ' j. j. McDonald.
PURE, COOL, REFRESHING,
ICE CREAM SODA WATER '
At T. S-POWELL’S, Trustee,
Druggist, Bookseller and Suitiouer.
CRAWFORD'S PULMONIC
Troches, '
At ’if. 8. POWELL’S, Trustee.
Attention.
BEING about to take a Summer trip ter
business and expecting to be absent sev
eral months. All in want of anything in nsy
line will take due notice, and govern thi fin
selves accordingly, ns I shall positively leave
in a week or two. ALLKN F. HALL.
may3l ts Plwtogrspbeir.
j Bimttton§&; Clough Co/s
-IMPROVED
(CABINET ORGANS
> ANI)
« GRAND COMBINATION
£s§ f
Seiners Patent Qaalifyine Tabes.
rendered
Equal to that of the JBest
Pipe Organs of the Sane
ALL THE LATE IMPROVEMENTS
. Manufactured at Nos. 15,17 &19 Miami A vena e,
DETROIT, MICR
Thirty-five different Btyles for th# Parlor and the Church,
New and Elegant Designs,
The best Material and Woikmunship.
Quality and Voftima of Tone I'nequalled.. \
PRICES, TO SSOO.
(Established in 1850.) AGENTS WANTED IN EVERY COUNTY.
Address SIMMONS & CLOUGH ORGAN CO., Detroit,Mich.
maylOlOm
LOOK HSBLS l
Fresh arrival of New and beautiful Spring an& Summer Millinery
Goods
At MRS. E GIB SONS.
Elegant French pattern Hats and Bonnets, Ribbons, Satins and
Silks, Pure Thread Lace Collars, Hair Goods in endless variety.
And something to complete a ladies outfit,
Will sell ns cheap as the cheapest.
Call and see before purchasing elsewhere.
North side Public Square, next door to Standley’s Rock Building,
tjccl-et • -
■■■■■■" | ——■e——''■■uw—spa W——
Spring and Summer Goods!
HAVING FURNISHED MYSELF with an ant ire Stock of NEW GOODS, I kgain iu
vite tby friends and customers to.ball and see tnc. 1 have Ob hand A full line of
NOTIONS, DRY ROODS, SHOES, H&TS AND CLOTHING,
Drugs, Hardware, Woodware and Crockery ware.
Also, a of tiroCeriesl. •
* *
My Goods are all NEW, aud were
BOUGHT A1? the LOWEST CASH PRICES I
And I feel confident that I can’ sell them as cheap as they can l>« sold in Georgia.
Call and. see me a Respectfully,
mar29tf ’ ISAAC EASLEY.
~ ’ ' ' ' I " Ml
G. 11. & A. W. FORCE,
♦
Wholesale and retail dealers in
BOOTS AND SHOES,
WHITEHALL STREET, •
ATLANTA, GrA.
novlO.-ly:
1 - g-J- i A
New Goods!
I TAKE PLEAStjiiE in announcing to my
and customers in
Spring Vale and vicinity,
That 1 have just received and <vpened my
Stock of
Spring and Goods!
And am now prepared to supply all your
wants in
Dry Goods and Clothing,
HARDWARE AND CUTLERY,
Crookery and Queens ware;
GrocJeriesj
Tobacco, Tintarc, etc.
I have a general assortment of Goods,
adapted to the Wants of all my friends, and
would respectfully ask them to call and exam
ine my Stock and prifcea liefohs going else
where to make their purchase*. If my goods
and prices are not sufficient _ inducements for
?ou to putclrase, the fdult will be my own.—
f you can do as well, or better, with me
than elsewhere, It will afford me pleasure to
wait on yqn. '
Call and see me. J. EDWARDS,
mar29-'Jih Spring Vale, Ga.
'yyf'ALKER S VINEGAR BITTERS,
JjOSTETTER’S
rjVUTT’S M '
RUNT’S “
n
JJOOFLAND’S GERMAN
QURACOA * “
JgNGLISH FEMALE “
For Aale
J. J. MCDONALD’S Drug Store.
ATLANTA CONSTITUTION.
Now is the Time to buuscribe.
I will take pleasure fn receiving subscrip
tions for the above popUAar Journal, and re
ceipting for tbe same. You can thus save the
risk and expense of nuking the remittance,
/tTKIDDOO, Agent.
&EOKGI A. Randolph Countt.—Where
at, Susan A. Fagan administratrix de
bonis non of tbe estate of Elisabeth Porter
deceased, has applied in proper form far let
ters of disnrisarot] from tee said estate. All
Ersons interested are hereby notified to file
efr objections if any they have on or by
tiie first, Monday in Align* next, else letters
of dismission will be granted tbe applicant.
Given nnder my head and official signature.
maj3-3m St. GOKMLEY, Ordinary.
Wants Supplied !
IF YOU WANT
A Sack of Fine Flour, go t
GILLESPIE’S.
IF YOU WANT
A Kit, of* Mackerel,
Go to Gillespie’s,
IF 1 O U WANT
CANDIES, NUTS, JELLIES, Etc.,
GO TO GUfLESPIE'S
IF YOU WANT ** .
Coffee, Sugar, Rice or Syrup*
GO TO GILLESPIE’S.
IF YO UJt BOY WANTS
%
A Top, Drum, Gun or Horse*
SEND-HIM TO GILLESPIE’S.
If your Daughter Wants
A DOLL, WORK BOX, TEA SETT,
BRING HER TO GILLESPIE 8.
If you or your friend want ir
A Fine Cigar or a “littleTtpering,"
COME TO GILLESPIE’S.
finally,
If you wish to save money and be
happy, don’t fail to call on
A. W. GILLESPIE,
And examine his Stock oi Good*
and prices. fob23-ly
J-T
Texas Almanac,
- - ■
187S, .
And Emigrant’s Guide to Texas*
For sale by T. 8. POWELL, Trustee.
FOIL SALE.
AVERT Deiirable Hons- am) Lot east cl
public square, all out houses are good.
Also, four Railroad Dump Carts.
Apply to E. T. DAVIS, Agent.
wayJl-Uut*